04/06/2026
Sexual education is not about teaching children to grow up too fast.
For children with special needs, it is about safety, understanding, boundaries, and dignity.
Starting from a young age helps them learn:
• the correct names for body parts
• the difference between safe and unsafe touch
• personal boundaries and consent
• privacy and body autonomy
• how to express discomfort and ask for help
Many children with special needs are more vulnerable to manipulation or abuse because they may struggle with communication, social understanding, or recognizing unsafe situations. Early and age-appropriate sexual education gives them the tools to protect themselves and build healthy relationships in the future.
Sexual education should be simple, consistent, visual, and adapted to their level of understanding, not something taught only after a problem happens.
Every child deserves to feel safe in their own body.
And every child deserves adults who are willing to guide them with honesty, patience, and care.
Understand gender differences since young.
Sexual education should be normalised.
04/06/2026
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