🛡️ Teen Boundaries, Consent, and the Law: What Teens Must Know About Sexual Misconduct *coming soon
Course overview
Lesson Overview

1.95 – Why “They Sent It First” Isn’t a Defense: Saying “they sent it first” doesn’t make it legal or okay to share or save intimate content. Consent to send does not mean consent to spread. Many people think mutual sharing cancels responsibility, but it doesn’t. Once you share without permission, you cross into violation territory. Courts look at intent and behavior, not excuses. A person’s decision to share privately doesn’t give you ownership of their body or images. Emotional moments can lead to mistakes that have lifelong results. Even if the sender was your partner, that doesn’t protect you from legal action. Respect means treating private content as sacred, not as property. The best way to avoid risk is to never keep or distribute anything personal without permission. Understanding this helps stop the chain of humiliation and trauma that image sharing causes. Trust is built through respect, not through exposure or revenge. Doing the right thing means deleting, not forwarding.

About this course

An urgent and empowering guide that teaches teens how to set boundaries, understand consent, and avoid the life-changing consequences of sexual misconduct.

This course includes:
  • Straightforward breakdowns of consent, laws, and personal responsibility
  • Guided scripts for how to say “no” or set boundaries in real-life situations
  • Common scenario walk-throughs: dating, parties, texting, and more
  • Emotional tools for processing pressure, fear, confusion, or guilt
  • Legal insights on sexual assault, harassment, and statutory laws

Our platform is HIPAA, Medicaid, Medicare, and GDPR-compliant. We protect your data with secure systems, never sell your information, and only collect what is necessary to support your care and wellness. learn more

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