Sexy Sex Ed with Tanya Turner

Did your school offer sex ed? If you grew up in the U.S., there’s a good chance it didn’t — or that the information you received was incomplete, unhelpful, or even… inaccurate. Tanya Turner is changing that — by bringing “Sexy Sex Ed” workshops to teens in Kentucky.

Katel LeDu
Strong Feelings
3 min readSep 16, 2019

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Tanya started Sexy Sex Ed when she realized how many teens weren’t getting honest, inclusive, and consent-base sex ed anywhere else. Now she’s bringing her interactive workshops to all kinds of groups, including adults. When she’s not teaching consent-focused sex ed, you can find Tanya spouting “smut and socialism” on the Trillbilly Workers Party Podcast, advocating for Appalachian arts and media at Appalshop, or…maybe even handing out condoms in a parking lot.

Tanya Turner, creator of Sexy Sex Ed

Sex ed is not doing its job if it’s not encouraging and motivating people to share knowledge. So, my goal every time I lead a Sexy Sex Ed is that the information ripples out from there and people are sharing what they’re learning.

We talk about:

  • Why so much of sex ed should really be “Communication 101.” “A lot of the workshop is how to talk to other people — how to talk to yourself, really — how to listen to your body, and how to trust your instincts.”
  • When and how we should really start educating kids about sex. “It’s never too early to start talking with kids about what love feels like, and consent, and language for their body parts.”
  • The value of learning about your own body. “You can’t trust a doctor to know everything going on with you. A doctor is only as powerful, and strong, and good for you as you are able to communicate with them. And you have to be able to listen to your body.”
  • …And learning about everyone else’s, too. “I feel like all people have a responsibility to understand the anatomy of all other people so that we can help each other and support each other.”
  • Why bringing sex ed to Appalachia matters so much. “Rural sex education has actually decreased by 20% in the past ten years, so we’re getting less than we used to and we weren’t getting much to begin with.”

Plus: Sara and Katel go deep on the sad state of sex ed across the United States, wave a middle finger at abstinence-only education, and get to know the Dildo Duchess.

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Katel LeDu
Strong Feelings

CEO at A Book Apart. Founder of Liminal Bloom. French lady.