Bathing and Showering
As adults, our use of a bathroom is clearly a private experience.
Whether toileting or bathing, we are all taught that we are entitled
to complete privacy. As parents, we need to teach the lessons of
privacy in all life situations to our youngsters.
We have learned that bathing and showering of children needs to be
carefully considered if parents and children bathe together or if
children of the opposite sex are being bathed together. Since being
naked in front of others becomes an issue of sexuality at some moment
in life, we offer the following article for your consideration:
Bathing and Showering: Privacy Concerns
by Debra W. Haffner, M.P.H., F.S.A.M.
reviewed by Robert Needlman, M.D., F.A.A.P.
If you are like many parents, you may have questions about the
sexuality issues related to bathing and showering your children. Maybe
you find it convenient to bathe your young children
together, or perhaps you enjoy taking leisurely baths and showers with
them yourself. But
probably around the time your children turn four to six years of age,
you might start to worry
whether or not these innocent shared baths and showers are still
appropriate.
Sexual curiosity
During the preschool years, siblings, whether they are of the same or
different sex, may "check
out" each other's bodies in the bathtub. If you come upon your
children showing each other their genitals, try to take a relaxed
attitude. Take off your adult lenses. These are not two adults in a
hot tub! They are two children who are displaying normal curiosity
about their bodies.
Instead of reacting negatively or ignoring the situation, you can use
it as a teachable moment.
You could say something like, "I see you both are curious about how
your bodies are different. "Aren't bodies great? But they belong
to each of us, and I don't want you to touch each
other's private body parts."
Bathing with parents
Baths with a parent often present a similar opportunity to talk about
appropriate touching. Some parents become uncomfortable when their
preschooler starts to be interested in the differences between male
and female bodies, or children's and adult bodies, or when the child
tries to touch Mom or Dad's breasts or genitals. This, again, is
normal curiosity; there is nothing wrong with it. But it is up to you
as a parent to set limits: "Those parts of our body are private, and
I'm
uncomfortable with you touching them."
In addition, simply teaching your child how to wash his own body
reinforces this sense of ownership.You also can talk about the
differences between adults' bodies and children's bodies.
Take cues from your children
In the next few years, your children are likely to become more private
about their bodies, and they will probably let you know that they are
not comfortable bathing together anymore. Pay attention to clues such
as being unwilling to undress in front of each other, resisting bath
time,
or seeming embarrassed; this is a signal that the time for shared
baths has come to an end.And if you find that you are uncomfortable
bathing or showering with your children before they are, you can
simply tell them "Now that you're growing up, it's time for you to
bathe alone"--and
then just stop.
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