25
Jun

Since I was younger I've always had problems with my lower half. Me and my boyfriend get tested regulary. So we’re clean but I’ve this weird thing happening to me recently. When he comes inside of me or if we are having sex underneath my vagina on the skin in between my anus and vigina itches like crazy! I scratch it so hard after sex that I break the skin which really really burns. So the irritation isn't on my vagina but on the skin in between my anus and vagina. I went to the physicians 3 times and no one can figure it out! Am I allergic to his c u m???? I've been tested for STD's over 3 times within the past 2 months and still nothing….If we use a condom then I dont itch, but the condom makes me dry and the inside of my vagina starts to burn because I'm allergic! I've been with my boyfriend over a year now! And I just want to do it and feel comfortable either way. Someone please help!!!!!


Answer:
Yes, it's a fact, you could be allergic to his ejaculation. You can get tested by an allergist, he may have something in him that he's passing to you that, your allergic to. He may even be eating something that goes into his system that your allergic to.

A woman IE: that's allergic to peanuts, her partner eats them, he has the ability to be passing a death sentence on her without knowing it if he eats peanuts before sex.


Answer:
wow , my partner feels the same, i am not sure what it is it started a few years back but now she seems to be less sensitive to it. I believe it could do with food, are you allergic to any foods, maybe the sperm might contain some thing from that food and causing the sensitivity. I know that pineapple makes it worse. Can i ask why he has to *** inside you and not your belly? ( not being pervy at all, but it seems like the best option)

Answer:
yeah you can be allergic to his ejaculation. If you use condoms you should use some lube. I advocate KY jelly because liquid lube can get all over the place. You should talk to a doctor about all this, they could probably recommend a brand of condoms you might not be allergic to.

This entry was posted on Wednesday, June 25th, 2008 at 11:53 pm and is filed under STDs. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or TrackBack URI from your own site.

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