Myths about intercourse!

Myths about intercourse!

Whether it came from idiot friends, awkward parents, or numerous amounts of farm porn, we all have just bad information about sex burned into our brains.

Thankfully, Meri Sathi is here to sort things out for you!

  • Myth: Shoe Size = Penis Size
    Truth: There is no correlation between your shoe size and your penis size! Yes, you read it right- no matter how big your shoe size is or your penis size is, it has nothing to do with each other!
  • Myth: Bigger the penis, better the pleasure!
    Truth: Penis size is more important to a man’s ego than women’s pleasure. The G-spot is located two inches inside the vagina and the head of the penis stimulates the G-spot while thrusting. A big penis often misses the G-spot completely. It may be down to individual preferences but the size has to do nothing with satisfaction!
  • Myth: The first time a female has sex will always hurt.
    Truth: First- time sex should be as likely to hurt as regular sex. However, some reasons that first time sex might hurt include:
    – A female not being aroused causing lack of self-lubrication. This leads to tearing and cuts.
    – A partner, often inexperienced being too rough whether a woman is aroused or not.
  • Myth: You can’t get pregnant the first time you have sex.
    Truth: You can get pregnant anytime you have vaginal (penis-in-vagina) sex. If you’re having sex without birth control, you can get pregnant — whether it’s the first time or the 100th time. It’s even possible for to get pregnant before you have your first period. Bottom line: if you’re going to have vaginal sex, use birth control to prevent pregnancy.
  • Myth: You can’t get pregnant during your period.
    Truth: It’s not super common, but it’s possible to get pregnant from sex you had during your period. This is because sperm can hang out in your reproductive organs for SIX whole days, waiting for one of your eggs to come out.
  • Myth: You’d know if you (or your partner) had an STD.
    Truth: Most people who have an STD never have symptoms. So just because you and your partner don’t have symptoms doesn’t mean you shouldn’t worry about STDs. People with STDs can pass them to others, even if they feel fine. And if left untreated, some STDs can turn into really dangerous infections and even lead to permanent damage (like infertility).The only way to know if you have an STD is to get tested — don’t wait until something seems off. Getting tested for STDs is quick and easy. Call your best friend from now on, Marie Sathi to know more about this!
  • Myth: Doubling the condom helps!

Truth: ‘Double Bagging’, (Wearing two condoms at once) seems like a more effective way to prevent pregnancy but, in fact, it increases the chances. The layers rub against other causing them to break. Using one is enough!