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A few months ago, BlogHer contributing editor Jenn Satterwhite wrote about male babysitters and asked if we have reached gender equality. She cited Carmen of Mom to the Screaming Masses who does use male babysitters and who justified her decision in a blog post that received a flurry of comments, some in support and some in disagreement.
Now Kathryn of Daring Young Mom writes about her unease after she left her two young children at the daycare center of her local gym. When she dropped the kids off a young woman was in charge of them; when she returned the young woman was gone and two young men had taken her place. Kathryn complained to the gym's management:
"Then I dropped the gender bomb. In general, we have a family policy against leaving our children alone with men. [The management] looked uncomfortable."
One major difference with these two stories is that Carmen chose her male babysitter while Kathryn didn't. And if given the choice, Kathryn would never choose to let her children be watched by either a man or a teenaged boy.
Can you support Kathryn for making the decision to be safe rather than sorry? In her post she cites statistics that indicate "a child is nearly 19 times more likely to be molested by a male than by a female." And with stories in the news like this one involving a fifteen-year-old Florida teenager who was caught on videotape forcing his two eight-year old charges to perform oral sex acts on him, it's easy to think that she's right.
But what about men and boys whom we know? Consider the statistic that reveals "29% of child sexual abuse offenders are relatives, 60% are acquaintances, and only 11% are strangers." When my brother-in-law disappears around the corner with my three-year old daughter at the mall, should I be worried?
If my husband and I were to make the decision that our children will not be left alone with a male babysitter, then wouldn't it also be prudent of us to disallow *any* male--including other dads, uncles, neighbors, coaches, teachers, clergy, grandfathers--to be alone with our kids?
Should all men be treated as potential pedophiles?
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BlogHer Contributing Editor Mary Tsao also blogs at Mom Writes.
Image credit: Carlye's Probability Land















