I used to think that the hymen was easily visible and that I could tell just by looking in a mirror whether or not mine was in tact or, for that matter, if I indeed even had one. Could someone please explain to me if the hymen is something that is on the very outer area of the genitals or beyond what you could see by just looking in a mirror? Also, is it possible that even if my hymen is broken or non-existant that my genital area will accessively tear when I lose my virginity? Thank you for responding.
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it is difficult to describe with words alone.
it is inside, but quite near the entrance of the vagina, I suppose you could see it if you knew what you were looking for, but it is only a fold of skin, but there is no uniform hymen, they are all different. Some womens are more prominent than others. If I describe one to you, yours will probably look a lot different.
Most commonly, it is crescent-shaped, no hymenal tissue at the 12 o'clock position; narrow band of tissue starts at 1 or 2 o'clock going clockwise, is at its widest around 6 o'clock, and tapers off at 10 or 11 o'clock.
it is difficult to see in post-pubescent girls because it folds over itself.
I did not see a noticeable difference before and after I lost my virginity, neither did I bleed, my hymen wasn't very large, neither did it rupture when having sex. because every woman is different, not everyone's is paper thin and breaks at the slightest touch!
but you will not bleed or tear exessively, when a hymen breaks the bleeding is only very slight, and most women don't feel it rupture, because the hymen has very little nerve endings in it. most woman tell that it has ruptured because it bleeds.
it is inside, but quite near the entrance of the vagina, I suppose you could see it if you knew what you were looking for, but it is only a fold of skin, but there is no uniform hymen, they are all different. Some womens are more prominent than others. If I describe one to you, yours will probably look a lot different.
Most commonly, it is crescent-shaped, no hymenal tissue at the 12 o'clock position; narrow band of tissue starts at 1 or 2 o'clock going clockwise, is at its widest around 6 o'clock, and tapers off at 10 or 11 o'clock.
it is difficult to see in post-pubescent girls because it folds over itself.
I did not see a noticeable difference before and after I lost my virginity, neither did I bleed, my hymen wasn't very large, neither did it rupture when having sex. because every woman is different, not everyone's is paper thin and breaks at the slightest touch!
but you will not bleed or tear exessively, when a hymen breaks the bleeding is only very slight, and most women don't feel it rupture, because the hymen has very little nerve endings in it. most woman tell that it has ruptured because it bleeds.
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