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101 Questions About Sex and Sexuality by Faith Hickman Brynie
101 Questions About Sex and Sexuality by Faith Hickman Brynie










101 Questions About Sex and Sexuality by Faith Hickman Brynie 101 Questions About Sex and Sexuality by Faith Hickman Brynie

This one is different in that it is based on real-life questions collected from middle and high school students. Many guides aimed at this audience treat the topic in a factual compilation. They need reassurance that others are as "curious, cautious, and confused" as they are. Teenagers are inquisitive by nature, and one of their greatest curiosities is about sex. Uses a question-and-answer format to present information about the physical, emotional, and social topics surrounding sex and sexuality. We are sexual beings from birth to death.Īnd that’s what this book is about.Synopsis of 101 Questions About Sex and Sexuality: With Answers for the Curious, Cautious, and Confused Writes author and sex educator Debra Haffner: "Sexuality is about who we are as men and women, and not about what we do with a part of our bodies. Each of us lives because of sex, and sexuality lives in us. There’s no room for nervous twitters or uncomfortable laughter when the subject comes up. Sex is as much a part of health human living as breathing. If this book can break that silence-for even one reader-its purpose will have been achieved. On such an important subject, we are too often silent at home, at church, and in school classrooms. Among 500 adults, 82 percent judged a satisfying sex life as "important" or "very important." Sex came in fourth behind loving family relationships (99 percent), financial security (98 percent), and religion (86 percent). A survey sponsored by Columbia University and the National Institutes of Health asked people to rate the importance of sex and other factors in their lives. As I usually do in responding to questions, I turned to the data that science can provide for answers. That seemed the most fundamental question of all and one that deserved a serious answer. (I’m convinced the questioner was male.) "What’s the big deal?" It came from a student in Chesapeake, Virginia. It just had to provide the framework for the entire book. My favorite question, however, was too good to relegate to a single chapter. They are answered here one by one, with a lot of facts and a few (I hope) well-supported opinions. Nonetheless, as time went on, more and more questions came in from serious and thoughtful young adults. Some schools and teachers who had been eager to help in the past chose not to participate this time. Some questions were silly, embarrassed, or obscene. Unlike other books in this series that dealt with such topics as food and skin, getting questions was difficult. This book began with the collection of questions about sex and sexuality from middle school and high school students.












101 Questions About Sex and Sexuality by Faith Hickman Brynie