Names.
Okay, I have to post something so that bad news doesn't stay on the top of my journal for the week that we're at SUUSI. (Laptop was stolen, remember, so no updates from the road.) After packing every imaginable item in the world, however - do you have any idea how much gear three people, one of whom is a toddler, require for a week's active vacation bracketed by a long and tedious car trip? - I am out of energy for posting anything particularly brilliant, so I think I'll just point and rant:
What is with parents who deliberately decide to teach their daughters cutesy names for female genitalia? Especially, for god's sake, "girl parts" - which seems to be one of the most popular options? Should I go back and try to expunge the word "elbow" from Alex's vocabulary, in favor of "bendy parts?" After all, as these euphemizers point out defensively, it's not technically inaccurate.
Also: Something is seriously wrong when women who have actually had a baby come out of their vaginas don't understand the difference between a vagina and a vulva.
Also also: Something is extra-specially wrong with the linguist who claims that, because adult women futz around embarrassedly with euphemisms, it's not linguistically "correct" to teach children the anatomical names, because "it's not what native adult speakers spontaneously generate." What. The. Hell?
What is with parents who deliberately decide to teach their daughters cutesy names for female genitalia? Especially, for god's sake, "girl parts" - which seems to be one of the most popular options? Should I go back and try to expunge the word "elbow" from Alex's vocabulary, in favor of "bendy parts?" After all, as these euphemizers point out defensively, it's not technically inaccurate.
Also: Something is seriously wrong when women who have actually had a baby come out of their vaginas don't understand the difference between a vagina and a vulva.
Also also: Something is extra-specially wrong with the linguist who claims that, because adult women futz around embarrassedly with euphemisms, it's not linguistically "correct" to teach children the anatomical names, because "it's not what native adult speakers spontaneously generate." What. The. Hell?

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I knew about babies coming out of vaginas when I was little, and the word "anus," but not only do I not remember calling my vulva a vagina or a bottom, I have no memory of how I referred to it.
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Shoulderblades.
Hip-bones (ok, maybe that's too racy...)
Tongue (definitely too racy).
Etc.
(We say vulva in our house, and always have. Um, or "bulva").;;
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(I'm kind of depressed about the inability to differentiate vulva from vagina, too... but not as much as I was by the 19-year-old college female who had to have it explained to her in our lounge one night that you didn't HAVE to remove a tampon in order to urinate.)
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I really wasn't clear that this woman believed women only had two orifices just as men do (she thought the vagina served double duty for urine and sexual contact as the urethra does in the penis, and that there was no separate urethral opening). She was moderately horrified when confronted with an anatomy textbook illustration, although at least she was willing to use tampons for the first time after that.
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The one I hate most is "down there." Where? Your vulva? Your knees? Your toes? The earth's core?
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Me, I don't always say "breasts", I often say "boobs" or "tits"; I don't always say "homosexual," I usually say "gay"; I don't always say "piss" or "shit", I'd probably teach a child "pee" and "poop"; and while I think they certainly should know the accurate names of all their anatomy, I've got no problem with referring to the whole thing as "girl parts", "down there", their "personal area", or even their "junk". Why the hell not?
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I use vagina, vulva, penis, butt, and other standard terms for body parts. We do say "pee" rather than "urinate," "poop" rather than "defecate," etc., so it's not all-anatomy-text all the time around here or anything, but I do make a conscious effort not to use the cutesy euphemisms.
First, I've read that kids who don't learn the proper terms are more likely to be victims of sexual molestation. I don't know if this is true or an urban legend (Rivka, you probably actually know this, is it true?) but it's easy enough to just teach them the right words for the parts of their body.
Second, it goes along with my general philosophy towards early sex ed, which I got from my mother. She suggested that I answer all questions about where babies come from exactly the way I would answer questions about the digestive system. If a kid asks where your food goes when you eat it, you just explain it, even though poop is gross and kids find it funny. You limit the level of detail but it's determined by your kid's attention span rather than "OMG we can't tell them about poop YET, what if they tell all the other kids at preschool tomorrow during show & tell?"
As a bonus, it's actually much easier to explain this stuff to a young kid, because a really young kid is just curious. There's nothing prurient when they ask, there's no embarrassment, they just want some factual information.
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I like balls, or testicles, or scrotum. I don't mind vulva or even, as I knew from one family, "cooch," for the outside mound or "vagina" for the inside, but . . . girlparts? That bugs me.
I use "poop" for bowel movements most of the time but am okay with BM. I associate BM, though, with Grandma trying to get us to use proper language, not natural use. Poop, pee. I don't mind "shit" from a child, too, as long as they know that it's one of those things that requires context. I guess I prefer "poop."
I just want to be 1) clear and 2) straightforward. I don't want to be vague or euphemistic.
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It sounds like some folks still think it's indelicate to talk about genitals and such.