Do You Want To Give Your Child a Healthy Sexuality Education?

Not Sure Where to Start?

Join

Winning Sex Ed

This course empowers caregivers to overcome taboo and provide developmentally-appropriate sexuality education.

Families benefit from learning proactive, shame-free ways to talk with their children about sexuality ~ Early & Often.

Children do not expect you to be an expert.

They simply need to you to be willing to talk & listen.

Are you ready to be the supportive resource for your child?

  • Quality sex education, beginning early in life, can improve the wellbeing of young people in ways that will serve them well into adulthood.

  • Become your child’s “go-to” person for navigating sexuality in today's digital world .

  • Establish yourself as the obvious authority, the person who will listen, and offer honest insights in a safe, nurturing, shame-free environment.

  • Don’t Wait. Puberty is Too Late.

  • "Some parents may stall and never get to this. Some parents have the guts to dive into it. For the people who have guts, I feel like it will be really helpful." -Forest, age 9

When do I start?

What do I say?

When do I start? What do I say?

Start now.

You Can Do This!

Evidence shows children benefit from early, age-appropriate, comprehensive sexuality education.

Parents have the single most influence on a child’s future sexuality well-being.

Sex Ed Paradigm Shift: From Apprehension to Celebration

Imagine this: What if sexuality education was a cherished part of the caregiver-child relationship?

In American culture talking about sex/uality topics feels taboo. And WE ALL WANT TO KEEP OUR CHILDREN SAFE.

Research shows that avoiding talks leaves children vulnerable.

Expand your nervous system’s capacity to connect.

~goodbye avoidance ~

When we understand our OWN formative experiences, we can better serve our children with calm presence, courage, and open-hearted connection.

If you could ‘do-over’ your formative sex education experience, would you?

Sex Ed DO-OVER

Sex Ed DO-OVER

The messages we send our children about intimacy, respect, gender, relationships, our bodies, etc … are deeply informed by our own formative years.

If you could give your child a better, more inclusive, sex ed experience, would you?

Let’s carefully own ourselves so we can better guide our children

Technology has changed the landscape of childhood AND the need for Sexuality Education.

Sexuality is ubiquitous (ads, social media, online porn…)

Children today have to face realities that didn’t even exist during our own childhoods (“stuff” comes up at younger ages)

Technology has changed the parenting landscape too

Are you ready?

 FAQs

  • Evidence shows that children benefit from scaffolded, age-appropriate education starting in the early elementary years. However, it is worth noting that your child’s absorbent mind is mapping out how the world works by watching from day one.

    Sexuality education and technology preparedness are those types of things that sneak up on parents - fast- and we can be caught off guard. The question may actually be, when do I (caregiver) want to be ready for my child’s curiosities?

    If you feel a resonance with these topics and you have a desire to feel more grounded in your approach to children and technology/sexuality, then YOU are ready. If you want to be ready to respond with ease and connection rather than reactionary, or triggered with uncertainty, then you are ready.

  • Great question. First, the primary focus is on a holistic approach to helping the adult feel ready, comfortable with discomfort, and understanding the many ways we teach our children. This program will help expand your nervous system capacity for intimate talks about sex and sexuality. In a short amount of time, you will develop skills, age-appropriate curriculum knowledge and confidence. Ultimately, this program will help you nurture a deep connection with your child.

  • Yes! Please do! That would be amazing! These programs are meant to inspire and boost your heart-to-heart conversations.

  • Honestly, no. It’s not enough.

    I was the sex-ed teacher in 6th grade for 5 years. It was probably the most alive and impactful that I’ve felt as a teacher, but it was not nearly enough for today’s children. They need more than just a download of information - to be quite frank - they have the internet for that.

    Children need relationships. They need anytime access to an unwavering, emotionally-steady, honest adult whom they trust to be loving and never shame.

Contact Tara