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close this bookWhere Women Have No Doctor - A Health Guide for Women (Hesperian Foundation, 1997, 600 p.)
close this folderChapter 12: Sexual Health
close this folderHow Gender Roles Affect Sexual Health
View the documentHarmful beliefs about women’s sexuality

Harmful beliefs about women’s sexuality

What it means to be a woman or a man in a particular community includes beliefs about men’s and women’s sexuality - that is, about sexual behavior and how people feel about their own bodies.

A few harmful beliefs about women’s sexuality that are common in many communities are described below. These beliefs and other harmful effects of gender roles - the lack of opportunity and choice for women, and the lack of value they feel - prevent women from having control over their sexual lives. This puts them at great risk for sexual health problems.

Harmful belief: Women’s bodies are shameful

Mothers and fathers begin to teach their children about their bodies as soon as they are born. Parents do not do this directly. But a baby learns it by the way the parents hold her, and the tone of their voices.


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As a little girl grows, she becomes curious about her body. She wants to know what the different parts are called and why her genitals are different from a boy’s. But unlike little boys, she is often scolded for being curious, and is told that ‘nice girls’ do not ask such things. If she touches her genitals, she is taught that it is dirty or shameful - and that she should keep her sexual parts hidden.


Parents act differently when little boys and little girls touch their bodies.

Her parents’ reactions teach a little girl that her body is shameful. As a result, she will find it difficult to ask questions about changes in her body as she enters puberty, and about her monthly bleeding, or about sex. She may be too embarrassed to talk to a health worker, because she does not know what parts of her body are called or what questions to ask. When she starts having sex, she is less likely to understand how her body feels sexual pleasure, or to know how to protect herself from unwanted pregnancy or sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).

¨ A woman’s body is NOT shameful. Her body is something to discover, love, and value.

Our bodies are not causes for shame. Our bodies allow us to touch and care for others, and to feel sexual pleasure. Our bodies are something to discover, love, and value.

Harmful belief: Women’s bodies belong to men

In many communities, a woman is treated like the property of her father or husband. As a child, she belongs to her father, and he can arrange to have her marry whomever he chooses. Sometimes she will be sold - like property - to her husband or to an employer. Her future husband wants his property to be ‘pure’ and unspoiled by other men, so he expects her to be a virgin. After marriage, he feels he has the right to use her body for his pleasure whenever he wants. He may have sex with other women, but she is to be his alone.

These beliefs can cause great harm. A girl learns that other people make the important decisions about her life - it does not matter what she wants or what skills she could contribute to the community. Because virginity is valued so highly, she may be forced to marry at a young age. Or she may try to remain ‘virgin’ by using unsafe sexual practices. For example, she may have sex in the anus (so that her hymen will not be torn), which puts her at great risk for STDs, including HIV/AIDS. When she starts having sex, she may have little power to discuss family planning methods with her partner or to protect herself from STDs.


Some girls ore married as children to moke sure they will be virgins. This can cause serious health problems for a girl and her babies.

But men do not own women’s bodies! A woman’s body is hers alone, and she should be able to decide how, when, and with whom to share it.

Harmful belief: Women have less sexual desire

A woman is often taught that it is part of her duty as a wife to meet her husband’s sexual demands. But if she is a ‘good’ woman, she will endure sex, not want it.

Again, these beliefs harm a woman’s sexual health. First, a woman who believes she should not think about sex will be unprepared to have sex safely. She is less likely to learn about family planning or about how to get and use condoms. Even if she has the information, it will be hard for her to discuss these things with her partner beforehand. If she can discuss sex, her partner may think she is sexually experienced, and therefore ‘bad’.

Once she is in a sexual relationship, she is likely to let her partner control the kind of relationship they have. This includes when and how they have sex, whether they try to prevent pregnancy or STDs, and whether he has sex with other women. This puts her at great risk for getting STDs.


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But sexual desire is a natural part of life, and a woman can feel as much sexual desire and pleasure as a man.