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About Dani Gutierrez

Dani Gutierrez holds a Master's Degree in Counseling Psychology, and is pursuing NCC and LPC licensure, as well as a second Master's in Social Work. Originally from Hawaii, she currently lives with her husband and daughter in Alaska, and spends her days balancing her career in behavioral health, her passion for health and fitness, all while trying to figure out how to be the best wife and mother she can be. In her (rare) free time, she enjoys writing, hiking, weightlifting and eating too much pizza. You can follow along with her daily inner monologue at: MommaStrong.Tumblr.com

How to Raise Kids Who Are Comfortable Exercising Consent

by Dani Gutierrez.
(This article is part of the Strong Kids series. Get free article updates here.)

Exercising Consent - MainI think we’ve all been there: the big family gathering filled with aunts and uncles, cousins and second cousins that you haven’t seen in ages, everyone laughing and catching up, the sounds of kids shrieking with playful laughter competing with the happy sound of adults catching up after far too long apart.

If your family is anything like mine, these events are littered with hugs, kisses, and kids roughhousing with each other all over the place.

It’s very happy chaos.

As an adult, I always look forward to the opportunity to connect with my relatives, see how all of the little ones have grown and changed, and relax around my support network.

However, as a child… I often dreaded these types of events.

There was always one uncle who insisted on giving me a kiss, even if I tried to wiggle away from his scratchy beard, an aunt who hugged me a little too long and too tightly for comfort, or a cousin who played a little too rough, even when I didn’t want him to.

And my parents always kept encouraging me to go give another hug or kiss to a relative I didn’t remember or particularly want to be physically close to.

What I learned when my parents made me tolerate unwanted hugs and kisses and told me that Cousin Johnny was being rough “because that’s what boys do” and I had to ”learn to deal with it” and what I later struggled with as an adult was that my “No” — my lack of consent — didn’t matter.

My parents unintentionally taught me to internalize the belief that what I wanted or didn’t want to happen to my body was not as important as the wants of those around me.

[Read more…]

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