Personally I would love to teach an 11 year-old about PE.
I could use the help. Especially with my BTC stretches.
Now, as the sickness of this thought registers in you people, please re-read (or at least review) westla’s and others very sound advice. Advice that the majority of adults posting here support.
Regarding arrogance bennett, it is very possible for someone in a mentor role to be arrogant.
The balance of good versus bad parenting is located between the poles of setting appropriate boundaries and necessary limits and on the other side allowing children to be children and the freedom (and perhaps encouragement) to find their own identities.
But a good mentor or parent also has boundaries that should not be crossed. If you go beyond these, especially with regard to projecting your fears, insecurities and issues onto the child, then you do damage.
The clarity of your thinking on this subject so obscured by your own frustrations it cannot possibly be objective and ultimately is unhelpful and counter productive.
When I was eleven I was collecting Spider Man, wanted to be better at kick-ball and baseball. My penis was what I took a piss with - sometimes it got hard, but I didn’t see any need for that.
Kids need privacy, just like anyone else. If they have questions they need to bring them up. Otherwise you are crossing a line.
Before: I'd like to show you something I'm very proud of, but you'll have to move real close.
After: I\'d like to show you something I\'m very proud of, but you guys in the front row will have to stand back.
God gave men both a penis and a brain, but unfortunately not enough blood supply to run both at the same time. - Robin Williams (: