When my son was a baby, I thought nothing of changing my clothes or bathing in front of him. He’s 4 now and nothing has changed. But recently a laminated sign on the door of the women’s locker room in our local YMCA gave me pause. “With boys age 5 and over,” it read, “please use the Family Changing Area or the men’s locker room.” That got me thinking: Is the clock really on? A year from now, if my son spots me undressed some morning, will that image make a lasting impression? Will it scar him in some way? Is that even possible?
CNN addressed the issue last month in a story that referenced studies about the impact of parental nudity on kids. One, they reported, “found no negative impact on adolescents who regularly saw their parents naked at ages 3 and 6.” Ok, great. But another “found that parental nudity when kids were ages 6 and 11 resulted in more permissive attitudes about sex and increased sexual frequency.” Hmmm.
Mom friends I consulted report that they also began to grapple with this question when their sons approached that 5-year mark. A mother of now 6-year-old twins says she opted for privacy as soon as she felt her boys notice that her body looked different than theirs. “I didn’t want to be analyzed every time I got dressed in front of them,” she says. Another girlfriend confesses that she grew more conscious about covering up when her then-5-year-old “started talking about boobies.”
https://ca.shine.yahoo.com/should-your-kids-see-you-naked-143249366.html
CNN addressed the issue last month in a story that referenced studies about the impact of parental nudity on kids. One, they reported, “found no negative impact on adolescents who regularly saw their parents naked at ages 3 and 6.” Ok, great. But another “found that parental nudity when kids were ages 6 and 11 resulted in more permissive attitudes about sex and increased sexual frequency.” Hmmm.
Mom friends I consulted report that they also began to grapple with this question when their sons approached that 5-year mark. A mother of now 6-year-old twins says she opted for privacy as soon as she felt her boys notice that her body looked different than theirs. “I didn’t want to be analyzed every time I got dressed in front of them,” she says. Another girlfriend confesses that she grew more conscious about covering up when her then-5-year-old “started talking about boobies.”
https://ca.shine.yahoo.com/should-your-kids-see-you-naked-143249366.html





