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Sex educators and health advocates say her experience is far from isolated. Without honest, practical guidance about anatomy, consent, lubrication, pain, and injury, many young people enter their first sexual encounters guessing in the dark. Comprehensive sex education, they argue, isn’t about encouraging sex—it’s about preventing trauma. It means teaching people to recognize danger, communicate clearly, and protect both their bodies and their emotional well‑being, so that a first time becomes a memory, not a medical emergency.