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Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Teaching Children to 'Yell & Tell' When Molested


Child molestation – draining words to any parent – is a hard topic to teach young children. But author Debi Pearl took on the job by teaching children as young as three or four the difference between a caring touch and one that is set to trigger broken hearts.

Shortly after publishing a book for women, Pearl received thousands of letters from young brides who had been sexually molested as children. While trying to answer each letter she realized that preparing children could possibly prevent them from uttering in their adult lives the words, “I never told anyone; I was afraid.”

Through her Yell and Tell series, one for girls and one boys, she hopes to guide children, informing them that he or she needs to “yell so loud and yell so long.”

She told The Christian Post, “You don’t need to scare them or destroy their innocence when training them to yell and tell. More importantly, it opens dialogue. The stories provoke children to want to be like Sara Sue and tell their mom.”

Her book has already fulfilled its purpose with at least one young woman who had been abused since the age of three by her stepfather. While her father banned the book as “unfit for his children” when he found it, she managed to work out a plan that will eventually end the man’s days as a predator.

The discreet story and pictures captures the essence of what a child should look out for when someone “sit[s] you tightly on his lap pretending that he cares. But when no one else can see he touches you down there.”

To read more, click here.

To visit the "Yell & Tell" web site, click here.

Related article: How Pornography Harms Children

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