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Yesterday evening, as I was
folding laundry on my bed, my eleven- year-old son walked
into my room and said, "Mom, I'm having one of those
funny feelings again." He looked pale and taut with tension.
He paced around my room, breathing nervously.
"What happened?" I
asked. Did you see something on T.V. or on the computer?"
"No, its nothing like that.
It was.... just the headline of a story in the teen newspaper
supplement. I threw it in the garbage and I don't want to
talk about it.
"I just want to know how
you get thoughts out of your head that you don't want to think
about. Grandma told me you count backwards from 15 over and
over until you're not thinking about it. Or what about meditation?
Isn't it supposed to erase your brain?"
"No, it doesn't erase your
brain. But maybe you should tell me about it -- not because
I need to know but because you need to talk about it."
"I can't. I just want to
forget it." He began fidgeting with the pillows on my
unmade bed. "I'm too old to be telling everything to
my mom. Nobody else I know needs to." Now he was pulling
the sheets and blankets into place.
"How would you know? They don't
tell you, just like you don't tell them. Anyway, this is the age
when kids start having a lot of funny feelings. I remember I did
at your age. Your body and mind are starting to change and that
makes you feel strange sometimes."
"Well how long does this last?"
he asked, feigning nonchalance.
"Probably off and on for
the next couple of years. Then it starts calming down."
"Oh great," he said. "You
mean I have to wait another two years to stop having these feelings...?
"You know, I think I'm
feeling better." He tucked in the corner of the blanket
and then jumped to the next corner.
"You look pretty sick to
your stomach about this."
He looked at me in reluctant
agreement.
"It's just like being nauseous,"
I found myself saying. "When you vomit you get rid of
it. But if you ignore it, it might go away in the short term,
but it'll come up again.
"If you talk about what's bothering
you now, you'll get it out and then little by little you'll start
to feel better. But if you hold it in, it'll keep coming back."
It seemed to me that he thought what I said was simultaneously
reasonable -- and overwhelming.
"I think I have to go to
the bathroom," he said as he slipped through the door.
SCARED BY INTERNET PORN
The "funny feelings" started
about a year ago when he had inadvertently clicked into a porno
web site, whose address was oddly similar to that of Cartoon Network.
The experience was not titillating or thrilling as it had been
to some of his friends, but scary and grotesque.
My husband and I had checked out
the site later that night and were quite disturbed. This was a
far cry from our own childhood sneak peeks into a Playboy or Penthouse.
Here one could find every variety of sexual act and perversion.
At the time, my husband had explained to him that there was bad
taste in portrayal of the human body just as there was bad taste
in food, like a tuna sandwich made with globs of mayonnaise.
Over this year, "funny feelings"
have cropped up for him now and again: an image in a movie, something
he saw or heard. For the first time in years his shadowed silhouette
now often appears at my bedside in the middle of the night. For
my son, the world has suddenly become a more malevolent place.
And so, I ask myself, how and to
what extent can we protect our children? Following our porno web
site experience last year my husband and I downloaded a software
program that automatically blocks this and other material deemed
inappropriate for children. We've talked with our son about "chat
-room safety," that you never really know whom you are talking
to. When we subscribed to cable television last year, we ordered
the box that allows you to block any channels you don't want.
In fact, of the 30 odd channels available, we chose six for our
family television and blocked the rest, including MTV and the
movie channel.
CAN WE PROTECT OUR KIDS?
Still, television movie promotions
and commercials are racier than ever. Newspapers are readily available.
And even if I'm around in the after-school
hours, and I know more or less where
my children are, whom they are playing with and what they are
doing....it's only more or less. Short of building them a protective
bubble or burying all of our heads in the sand, I ask myself,
"What more can I do?"
"OK mom, I'll tell you,"
he said when the bed was perfectly made and and there was
nowhere else to pace, "but then I don't want to talk
about it anymore.
"The headline said, 'Father
Rapes Daughter.'" I skipped past my own sadness about
the way children can be hurled so brutally over the cliff
of innocence and groped for something to say. "Yeah,
that makes me feel weird too. I guess they have to print those
articles so that other kids know they're not alone if something
like that happens."
"I know, I know," he
said waving the conversation away, his body deflating in relief.
It seemed enough for now just
to get it out. Verbalizing didn't make it go away, but transported
it from nightmarish chaos to the safety of here, now, him
and me. Maybe we'd return to the discussion at another point
in time, or maybe not. It was important for him to see that
I wasn't shocked or disapproving. My door was ajar and he
could open it if he needed to.
"How about a shower?"
I said.
"Yeah, " he said, pleased
to move on.
"And then a bowl of pasta
with cheese?"
"Yeah, good."
In fact, sheltering our children
is not always within our power or even in service of their
needs -- their need to be aware of, educated about and ready
to face a not so benevolent world. It's terrible to encounter
something shocking and feel as though you're suddenly and
unexpectedly fighting a monstrous ocean current, gulping and
gasping for air. Maybe the best we can do is help them ride
the waves of intense emotional reactions: repulsion, fear,
hatred or even passion, while they wait to reach solid ground
again.
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