The author is raised by weird hippies without electricity, likes Lord of the Rings, and complains at the end about having the wardrobe of a teenage boy, which was an entirely personal decision that nobody else forced or encouraged at any point.Name two things that happen that aren't these two specific things you always bring up
Hell, point out the point of that singular bubble of dialogue you get mad at
Banning shit because you think it might be bad without you knowing what it actually *is* is bullshit. You're raising fragile adults with zero critical thinking skills
Similarly, the end result of the blowjob scene is disappointment by the author, because how else does pursuing lesbian blowjobs end, another decision by the author that was at no point forced or encouraged by anyone else. The book is the life's story of someone whose parents did not help to understand anyone else, who consequently deliberately fled social norms, only to repeatedly end up miserable, while at no point noticing the pattern that normal things were leading to joy and contrarianism was leading to conflict with others and self-loathing.
Reading this book doesn't give someone critical thinking skills. Reading books in general doesn't give people critical thinking skills. You need critical thinking skills in advance of reading a book like this, because the author isn't going to tell them that the whole book is self-inflicted and easily avoidable pain, a person reading has to be able to identify that pattern and reach that conclusion for themselves. A child without critical thinking skills can't do that. Children don't critique, they imitate. That's the point of age-restricting things.