Better mentors needed to combat rape culture
March 24, 2017
Boys need better mentors to look up to if we want them to have better attitudes towards women say the authors of a new
book on raising boys.
"Some of the sporting and celebrity mentors these boys respect are famed for their laddish behavior; for their drunken
antics; for their cocky, narcissistic attitudes - particularly towards women," says Richard Aston, co-author of Our Boys
- Raising strong, happy boys from boyhood to manhood. "Why are we surprised when they boast about having sex with drunk,
unconscious girls? When they call it a rite of passage?"
His comments follow revelations of offensive Facebook postings by two Wellington College students that are being
investigated by the school.
Richard Aston, CEO of Big Buddy - a mentoring service for fatherless boys - and co-author Ruth Kerr say fathers and
mentors need to step and talk to sons and boys generally about consensual sex.
"We think one really important conversation - possibly the most important one you'll ever have with your boy - is about
consensual sex. He needs to make sure that whoever he is having sex with is a willing participant - not someone drugged
or drunk or depressed. He needs to know that when girls - or boys - say 'no' they mean 'no'. End of story."
"Make sure he understands that if he forces himself on someone when he's horny, he'll feel like shite and that person
will carry it with them for the rest of their life. New Zealand has an appalling rape culture - make sure your boy isn't
part of it."
Richard Aston says the flawed and damaging mythology that when girls say 'no' they mean 'yes' and that 'she really wants
it' is rubbish and needs to be challenged by fathers and mentors. "Tell your boy he's not going to die from a hard on -
he can go and have a wank. Praise masturbation, because it's gonna save your son's arse. He won't go blind or get hair
on his palms. He will not be struck down by an angry god."
ends