Key Facts:
- The traditional Birds and the Bees Talk Is Failing Today's Kids
- If You're Still Having "The Talk", You're Already Too Late
- If You Don't Talk About Sex, the Internet Will
- Beyond the Birds and the Bees: It's About Bodies and Boundaries
- Porn Will Teach Our Kids, Unless We Do
- Your Child Has Already Seen More Than You Think
It's time to stop the 'Birds and the Bees' talk – here's why
Remember the "Birds and the Bees" talk? The awkward summons to the lounge room, the formal tone, the averted eyes, the rushed explanation of reproduction and the human body delivered like a mechanical manual. It was factual, uncomfortable and never to be spoken of again.
For generations of Australian families, that was sex education at home. A single, embarrassed conversation, often wrapped in euphemisms with body parts often named using rhyming slang, followed by silence. The thing is silence carries consequences.
When body parts are renamed in baby language and sexuality is framed as something shameful or secretive, children absorb more than biology. They absorb the discomfort, embarrassment and it leads to confusion.
Cut to 2026, and families have changed, and so has the world our children are growing up in.
For 100 years, Interrelate has worked alongside Australian families, from post-war households to blended families, same-sex parents, dual-income homes and now digital-age parenting.
Interrelate is calling for the end of the singular Birds and the Bees talk, and for parents and carers to TALK EARLY and to TALK OFTEN, otherwise children will default to the online world for advice.
Interrelate's Kristy Turnbull, Practice Specialist - Relationship and Sexuality Education said the world has moved on and our conversations must too….
Today's children are growing up in an environment saturated with information through social media, streaming platforms, sexualised advertising, 24/7 news cycles, online gaming chats and more.
Many young people encounter adult themes long before a parent or carer decides it's "time" for the Birds and the Bees talk. They are exposed to imagery and dialogue that previous generations may not have encountered until late adolescence, and they are often left to interpret it alone.
The problem isn't curiosity, it's context. Children are absorbing complex social phenomena, including gender identity discussions, consent language, body image pressures and diverse family structures, while still developing the emotional maturity to process them. If adults wait for "the right moment", that moment may have already passed.
The Shift: Talk Early and Talk Often
Interrelate's approach is simple: stop having one big talk and start having many small ones.
Healthy relationship and sexuality education isn't a single event; it's an ongoing conversation that evolves with a child's age and stage.
It's naming body parts correctly from a young age, answering questions calmly when they arise, discussing respect, boundaries and consent well before dating begins, and normalising curiosity rather than shutting it down. Talking early does not mean overwhelming children with adult information; it means responding developmentally and honestly when questions surface.
Parents and carers don't need to have all the answers – you can't! Children benefit most from knowing they can ask a TRUSTED ADULT. Because in the absence of trusted adult conversations, young people default elsewhere – to search engines, social media influencers, pornography, and peers who are equally misinformed.