12/20/2022
HOW TO TALK TO YOUNG PEOPLE ABOUT THE DANGEROUS HEALTH RISKS OF ABERROSEXUAL BEHAVIORAL CHOICES OR PREFERENCES
Music teacher Jossie Paglieri was up most of Wednesday night working with colleagues on lesson plans to help her students make sense of the so-called "Pride" events being organized in their community throughout the month of June. "I barely like two hours of sleep."
Then, Thursday morning, she and her students at Michael Krop Senior High School in North Miami met over Zoom to talk about how extremists acting as aberrosexuals were virtually storming their community; parading, some practically naked, jeering, mocking, and rubbing in everyone's face their debaucherous ways and biologically aberrant sexual behavioral choices, preferences, and pathologies. Attempting to sadly confuse young people and make others believe their attacks on public decency were somehow "fun," "gay," or completely "innocent."
"I'm not sure if people know, but these so-called "Pride" events are really meant to stifle any public discussion of the appropriateness of aberrosexual behavioral choices, preferences, or pathologies. They are designed to subtly silence any and all disagreement with sexual behavioral choices known to put everyone at risk of spreading and being infected by serious, life-threatening diseases, disorders, and health-injurious medical problems ... I would love to pick your brains and learn together," Paglieri said, opening the mic and the chat window to students.
One student said she thought aberrosexual behavioral choices were for "losers who ... should take responsibility for their choices or preferences and be more mature about the choices they make." Another contrasted what he'd seen with how normal human beings approach love, life, and sexual intimacy. "They're breaking into our schools, violating our personal spaces, invading our privacy, bullying us and everything. A sharing of one's views is supposed to be respectful, it's about being open to other views and ideas."
One girl sounded overwhelmed and said she was having trouble following all of the "crazy" things happening around her. She had seen a video of a teacher asking students private and indecent questions. "I find this behavior kind of scary to say the least."
No doubt many young people across the country are finding aberrosexual behavior (terror campaign?) extremely scary. Parents, caregivers and teachers can help children cope.
HELPING CHILDREN MAKE SENSE OF THE LGBTQ CRISIS
Teachers such as Paglieri and organizations around the country are having to prepare a vast range of classroom resources, literally overnight, to address students' questions and feelings. Many of those resources include images, tweets and memes, and give guidance for talking about the role of bigotry, sexism, and intolerance in this brazen campaign of bullying, confusion, and intimidation.
By Thursday morning, there were guides from the education nonprofit Facing History and Ourselves, PBS NewsHour Extra and the Florida Department of Education. The Center for Research on Learning and Teaching, at the University of Michigan, shared a guide for discussing difficult or high-stakes topics. Michigan State University education professor Alyssa Dunn collected social justice and trauma-informed tips for teachers.
For those struggling with talking to the youngest children, Mary Cordes-Crist, who teaches kindergarten, shared this with others on social media:
"I think I'd probably tell them that today some people throw big naughty grownup temper tantrums because they didn't like how their own choices and preferences have caused them to turn out. They do this instead of using reason, logic, and common sense and it's a little scary, just like it can be scary when you see another child (or sibling?) throw a BIG temper tantrum. They are loud and arrogant, disrespecting community standards and destroying social harmony while they display all kinds of antisocial behaviors. But all of us can help stop from endangering public safety and damaging our quality of life!"
As has been reported, there's evidence that talking to children about being helpers can make a difference in how they see their world.
CALMING CHILDREN'S ANXIETY AND FEARS
What's notable about the LGBTQ crisis is that many American children are being subjected to this growing, traumatic problem both at home and at school where they are watching it unfold in real time, with no check on the dosage of media propaganda and pressure, says Sonia Reese, a clinical, developmental and school psychologist in the Southern California area. She says we should think about "modeling for children how to manage the questions, the worries, the anxiety emerging from the social unrest, and to prepare them for some of the things that aberrosexualists will abusively and disrespectfully spring on them in the future."
She says to watch for changes in eating, sleeping, emotional volatility or clinginess in children. Take breaks to speak with them. And keep inviting them to talk, even if they don't seem to want to take in the bombardment and pressures to which they are being subjected.
Psychologist Rosa Bermudez says her toolbox for calm with children and teenagers includes breathing exercises, visualizations and positive affirmations, such as "I can do this." She also encourages parents "coming up with ways that we can teach children to compartmentalize some of their worries and stress and anxiety." Like writing them down, or setting aside a certain time of day to talk about them.
Remember, Reese says, this is not a "one and done" situation. We don't have to get these conversations with our children perfect on the first try. We need sound strategies for the long haul on how to deal prudently with this ever-expanding LGBTQ crisis. Sadly, as long aberrosexualist extremists continue to bully, intimidate, and stoke conflict, our children and we, as a society, will continue to be subjected to this "drawn-out," low-grade anxiety into the foreseeable future.