Trusting Your Gut Isn't Enough
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Keywords
grooming, parenting, trust, child safety, instincts, social work, awareness, protection, relationships, evaluation
Summary
In this episode of Known and Trusted, Anna Sonoda, LCSW, discusses the complexities of grooming and the limitations of parental instincts. She emphasizes that many parents do not recognize grooming behaviors because they are conditioned to rely on gut feelings, which are often inadequate for identifying subtle manipulations. Instead, she advocates for a structured approach to evaluating relationships and understanding the patterns of grooming across different age groups. The episode aims to empower parents with better tools and frameworks to protect their children from potential harm.
Takeaways
Most parents who experience grooming-related harm don't say they ignored their gut.
Trusting your gut was never the right tool for this job.
Grooming is a slow exposure, not a sudden event.
Your gut is like a smoke alarm; grooming is carbon monoxide.
Predators rely on systems with high trust and low oversight.
Parents miss grooming because they watch for smoke while risk builds.
You were taught to rely on instinct, not to evaluate patterns.
Protection at a young age lives in conversation or dialogue.
Grooming introduces exceptions, not fear, in children's relationships.
Understanding grooming changes outcomes for child safety.
Sound bites
"I never had a bad feeling."
"Grooming is carbon monoxide."
"You were taught to rely on instinct."
Chapters
00:00 Understanding Grooming and Parental Instincts
04:05 Evaluating Relationships: A New Framework for Safety
07:57 Empowering Parents: Tools for Protection
