Teenage girls losing your virginity pain
Having sex for the first time is a pretty big deal—and while losing your virginity can be the subject of a lot of excitement, but it can also carry feelings of fear or anxiety. Mostly, though, it's hard to imagine what sex will actually be like when it happens— beyond what you learned in sex education class. That's why we talked to 24 people to find out exactly what losing their virginity was like—and what they wished they'd known going in. Before we dive into their real-life experiences, let's set the record straight when it comes to what virginity is. Virginity is defined as never having had sex—but that definition is tricky since people define sex in different ways.


365 Losing Virginity Premium High Res Photos
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8 of the Best Losing-My-Virginity Scenes Ever Filmed
First things first: there is no right or wrong age to lose your virginity. The only factors that matter when it comes to having sex for the first time is that both YOU and your partner are ready, and you're using protection. And while what you see on TV and in the movies might tell you otherwise, everyone's first time is SO different. Don't let anybody — your friends or characters on the big screen — dictate what's normal or not normal.



13 Virginity Horror Stories That Are Super Cringy
Losing your virginity can be awesome but it can also just suck. Sex scenes in movies and TV shows create unrealistic expectations for your first time, so please don't do something because your favorite character did it on Season 2, Episode 12 or whatever. And just because the average age teens are losing their v-cards is about 17 doesn't mean YOU have to lose your virginity at that age. Lose it when you feel totally ready. Case closed.





The concept of " virginity " for people with vaginas has a complicated history, and has often been incorrectly linked to breaking the hymen. Bleeding after sexual intercourse was incorrectly thought to be proof of an unbroken hymen, and thus, proof that a person had not had sex before. The reality, however, is that the state of your hymen has nothing to do with sexual activity.
