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Most child sexual abuse isn’t a stranger. It’s someone with access.
This video gives parents a hard-hitting, practical safety framework: body boundaries, “no secrets” rules, grooming red flags, supervision standards, online safety, and exactly what to say if a child discloses.
✅ What you’ll learn:
The boundary rule that protects kids (and why “forced affection” is risky)
Grooming patterns: attention + access + secrecy
Non-negotiable home rules (doors, bathrooms, sleepovers, messaging)
Questions that actually get kids talking
What to say if your child tells you something: “I believe you. It’s not your fault.”
Reminder: Talking about safety does not “put ideas” in kids’ heads. It gives them language and permission to speak up.
If you’re a parent, caregiver, coach, or youth leader—share this. Silence is what abusers count on.
By Derek BakerMost child sexual abuse isn’t a stranger. It’s someone with access.
This video gives parents a hard-hitting, practical safety framework: body boundaries, “no secrets” rules, grooming red flags, supervision standards, online safety, and exactly what to say if a child discloses.
✅ What you’ll learn:
The boundary rule that protects kids (and why “forced affection” is risky)
Grooming patterns: attention + access + secrecy
Non-negotiable home rules (doors, bathrooms, sleepovers, messaging)
Questions that actually get kids talking
What to say if your child tells you something: “I believe you. It’s not your fault.”
Reminder: Talking about safety does not “put ideas” in kids’ heads. It gives them language and permission to speak up.
If you’re a parent, caregiver, coach, or youth leader—share this. Silence is what abusers count on.