TikToker highlights stark differences in sex education for boys and girls in viral video on ‘purity culture’

Purity culture is a religious movement that promotes abstinence for women

Meredith Clark
New York
Wednesday 16 February 2022 10:19 EST
Comments
(TikTok / @thezolyspirit)

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A woman has gone viral on TikTok for highlighting the differences in how girls are taught about sex and their bodies, versus the sex education that boys are given.

TikToker Zoë Tyler’s series showcases the stark contrast in sex education by acting out a lesson on “purity culture” that women are taught at a young age, but flips it to the male perspective.

“If we taught boys about purity the way we teach girls,” Tyler wrote in the video. She begins the scenario by addressing an imaginary classroom of boys, and holds up two differently sized pencils. “Which pencil would you rather be?” she said, adding that the correct answer is the long, unsharpened pencil. “And what do we like about this pencil? That’s right, it hasn’t been used.” The short pencil, on the other hand, has been used a lot, “and probably by sharpeners that didn’t even care about it,” Tyler said. The pencils are meant to represent a person and their value, and that having sex means you are losing your value. “Every time you let a woman have sex with you, even if she says she loves you, you are giving pieces of yourself away that you can never get back,” she said.”

“Purity culture” is a movement among evangelical Christian households, that peaked in the 1990s against the rise of Aids, teen pregnancy, and cohabitation. The subculture promotes abstinence for women by wearing things like purity rings, and forbids sexual activity outside of heterosexual marriage. According to NBCNews, purity culture places the responsibility on women to manage men’s sexual desires by dressing modestly and not tempting them.

Speaking to The Independent, Tyler explained that her inspiration behind the video series was based on her own experience growing up in an evangelical cult. “There are many different ways to approach talking about something like that but the gender reversal felt like the most powerful option — to validate and expose without too much trauma or controversy,” she told us.

Tyler said that she was glad her videos found an audience that could relate to her story. “A lot of people have negative experiences with purity culture and many are just beginning to unpack that (and will continue to do so for decades) so it’s vitality makes sense,” she said.

Tyler’s first video on purity culture gained almost five million views on TikTok, prompting her to post a part two of the series. “Hey Daniel,” she begins the scenario. “Some of the brothers saw you playing outside and are a little concerned about your sweatpants.” She pretends to give the child three sweatshirts to cover up their entire body, and suggests that he throws the sweatpants out in order to protect the purity of his mom and sister. “I know middle school is hard, but you don’t want to devalue yourself with this kind of attention.”

More than half of public schools in America enforce a "strict dress code," according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Many students have challenged their schools’ dress codes for discriminating against female students. In 2021, two students tested their school’s “sexist” dress code by wearing similar outfits, and only the girl got in trouble for violating the rules. In 2019, a North Carolina high school student launched a petition to change her school’s dress code that banned girls from wearing trousers to their graduation ceremony. “As a young woman in 2019, the students expect freedom of dress and choice for their body, but instead, their bodies are over-sexualised and objectified,” she wrote in the petition.

Commenters on TikTok praised Tyler’s series and shared their own experiences of purity culture. “People will think this is an exaggeration but it’s spot on,” said @rachaelakemp. “It’s sad how accurate this is,” said @georgiaproductionstiktok. “The role reversal makes it all seem even creepier,” said @margaretthurber8. “How on earth did the adults in our lives think it was ok to talk to us this way.”

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