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- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!torn!blaze.trentu.ca!xtkmg
- From: xtkmg@trentu.ca (Kate Gregory)
- Subject: Re: Toddler Genital Names (was: "Stop Grabbing Your Penis!")
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.173155.20673@trentu.ca>
- Organization: Trent University, Ontario
- References: <9212292010.AA17689@crl.ucsd.edu>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 17:31:55 GMT
- Lines: 39
-
- In article <9212292010.AA17689@crl.ucsd.edu> dolson@crl.ucsd.edu (Mark Dolson) writes:
- >Story: A couple of months ago, my daughter, then 19 months, after pointing
- >at various body parts and identifying them, put her finger directly on
- >her clitoris and asked "Dat?". I automatically responded with the correct
- >term, which she wanted repeated a few times. As I repeated, though, I
- >became less certain whether I was saying the right thing. I want to give
- >Emily accurate information, but also to use the common toddler-approved
- >words (poop vs bowel movement, for example). Somehow, I don't think
- >little girls go around talking about their clitorises (clitori?). Some
- >friends seem to use the word vagina for the whole area, which is fine,
- >I guess, if that's the common vernacular, but it feels strange to me to
- >tell Emily that her clitoris is a vagina, especially with the awareness
- >that so many of us have that they seem all too far apart at times :-).
- >
- We use "bum" for everything covered by underwear. When we need to be
- more specific, we refer to the front or the back of the bum. The
- exception is clitoris, which Beth at first insisted was a penis
- (dis my peanut!) and then proudly told anyone who changed her diaper
- "dis my kris!". She wanted to know what it was and we told her. When
- we feel that "front of your bum" is too confusing, we'll use "vulva",
- a perfectly good word for female genitalia. I really hate using
- "vagina" for the whole area. It's wrong, and I think it is used because
- "that's what goes with a penis, so it's the equivalent". It bothers
- me on some sort of feminist level that I can't explain well.
-
- It is very useful to at least have *concepts* that are clearer than
- "down there". For example "I have an owie on my bum." "Where?"
- Now whether she answers "where my pee comes out" or "my clitoris"
- doesn't much matter in terms of diagnosing the problem, but if
- she can't narrow things down beyond "down there", we have a problem.
-
- And while we're at it, who really uses clinical terms as an adult?
- I have never said "well, think I'll just urinate before we leave"
- or "my goodness I'm spending a lot of time defecating today", though
- I might say I had to pee or had been on the toilet a lot.
-
- Kate
-
-
-