When talking about abstinence with my classes, it’s
important to me that they hear people choose to abstain from sexual activity
for lots of reasons and for varying amounts of time – not just because they
aren’t, and until they are, married. Some people choose to abstain for a week
because they have flu, for example, and feel too lousy to be physically
intimate. Sometimes people choose to abstain because they’re in public – and I
take that moment to thank my (older) classes for choosing to abstain during our
time together. It tends to loosen the mood somewhat.
But what happens when a young person is ready to stop abstaining? How
do they make that shift? First time sexual experience is usually a big, emotional step regardless of whether it's taken before or after a wedding ceremony. This is an often
un-thought-about issue in abstinence education, but Making Sense of Abstinence
is thinking ahead for you!
_____________________________________________________________________
SOME DAY: Making the Transition from Sexual Abstinence
Objectives:
Participants will:
1. Recognize that a person’s decision to abstain is likely
to change at some point in time.
2. Examine ways a person could make the transition from
abstaining to not abstaining.
3. Identify ways to protect themselves from unplanned
pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections if they decide to abstain no
longer.
Rationale:
Given the fact that almost everyone will engage in some form
of sexual behavior, including intercourse, at some time during their lives,
young people currently abstaining from sexual behaviors need the information
and skills to make that transition safely.
Of particular concern are “virginity pledge” programs in
which young people make a one-time public or written pledge to remain virgins
until marriage. These programs leave young people without the necessary
knowledge and skills to protect themselves from unplanned pregnancy and disease
if they change their decisions. The reality is that most do change their
decisions. Nearly 90% of pledgers have intercourse before they are married, and
when they do, pledge breakers are much less likely to use condoms than
non-pledgers. Further, with an average of eight to 10 years between first
intercourse and marriage, there is a real need for young people to know
protective information if they do decide to stop practicing sexual abstinence.
This lesson addresses the reality that most young people who
practice sexual abstinence will stop doing so at some time in their lives, and
helps prepare them for a healthy transition to intercourse whenever that might
occur.
_____________________________________________________________________
This last paragraph of the rationale is particularly
interesting and important for sexuality educators. Education should be designed
for life-long learners. We are doing young people a disservice by creating
education programs for them that only provide life lessons for the next two to
three years. Transitions are sticky wickets – and the transition from
pre-sexual-intercourse to post-sexual-intercourse is one of the stickiest. (No
pun intended.)


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