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When a boy in 1991 learned that girls grow four inches of pubic hair before their first period, that fact became mundane. When a girl learned that boys have no control over their morning erections, that fact became biological, not predatory.

Why 1991 was a turning point for how we taught kids about growing up.

But in 1991, something began to shift. Educators, pediatricians, and even a few brave parents started asking a radical question: Would it be better if we taught boys and girls about puberty together?

If you grew up in the late 80s or early 90s, your sex education likely involved a few key artifacts: a grainy filmstrip with a beeping sound to change the slide, a “hygiene” talk from the gym coach, and the dreaded, segregated classroom. The boys were herded into the library to learn about “nocturnal emissions” (euphemistically called “wet dreams”) while the girls were sent to the home economics room to discuss menstruation and modesty.

The 1991 model proved that By forcing boys and girls to learn about each other's bodies in the same room, it chipped away at the foundation of slut-shaming, toxic masculinity, and female mystique.

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