One of the recurring themes I hear over and over as I talk with parents
who have attended my seminars is “I was so naïve”. What they’re
referring to is their naiveté (a little French lingo) on how easy it is
for their kids to access porn on the Internet. Parents often think
that porn is locked away somewhere on the web, and you need a credit
card and have to be an adult in order to access it. That couldn’t be
further from the truth. Your kids can access porn by simply typing in
any number or website addresses which are easy to find if your kids
know how to do a Google search (and what kid doesn’t?). These websites
will provide your kids with mountains of porn for them to look at and
watch. Yes, I said “watch” because there are tons of free porn website
where your kids can watch XXX movies. I am talking about hard core,
nothing left to the imagination type movies. Parents are shocked at
what’s available for their kids to see and watch, for free, on the
web.
Some of you are probably thinking, “My kid would never
look at that kind of stuff”. I’ve had several conversations with
parents who thought just that, but came to me for help when they
discovered they were wrong. The statistics are pretty clear. On the
kids side of things 9 out of 10 of them, between the ages of 8 and 16,
have viewed porn online. On the parents side of things 62% of them
are unaware that their kids have accessed objectionable websites. So
you have a lot of kids looking at porn and most parents aren’t even
aware that it’s happening – they’re naïve.
I am sure some
parents reading this may go to church with their kids and are thinking
the statistics above might not apply to them. Unfortunately 68% of
kids at religiously affiliated schools said they had intentionally
looked at porn online. There is no comfort in that statistic.
So
what are parents suppose to do about their kids and porn? How can they
stop the tsunami of sexual explicit websites from flooding into their
homes and stealing their kids’ innocence? I’ll answer these questions
and many others right here so check back. And by the way, you’re no
longer naïve.





