Reminds me of True Blood where one of the characters loses her virginity after becoming a vampire. So every time she wanted to have sex, she would have to painfully break her hymen all over again because it kept regrowing.
EDIT: It was Deborah Ann Woll’s character “Jessica Hamby”, so not a minor character.
TL;DR: “virginity” and the state of the hymen are not really related. Bleeding or pain during intercourse is also not usually due to the hymen, but lack of lubrication or forcefulness of the penetration.
Few of us would have been told that it can change with age, that some of us aren’t born with one, or that it might totally disappear by the time we enter sexual maturity anyway. Or that a wide variety of activity can stretch or tear it, from exercise to masturbation to, yes, penetrative sex.
Emphasis mine, this is what I was taught in school
But this doesn’t mean there’s any validity to the idea that you can ascertain sexual activity with a hymen examination. One small study of 36 pregnant teenagers published in 2004, for example, found that medical staff were only able to make “definitive findings of penetration” in two cases. Another 2004 study found that 52% of sexually active adolescent girls interviewed had “no identifiable changes to the hymenal tissue”. A binary idea that either we are sexually active and have no visible hymen, or that we aren’t sexually active and do have one, is simply not accurate.
So TIL, it’s not actually a membrane and is not guaranteed to tear at some point. Really interesting read, and definitely an example of how women’s health research is just riddled with misinformation
Reminds me of True Blood where one of the characters loses her virginity after becoming a vampire. So every time she wanted to have sex, she would have to painfully break her hymen all over again because it kept regrowing.
EDIT: It was Deborah Ann Woll’s character “Jessica Hamby”, so not a minor character.
I know you are talking about a TV show, but most of what we were told about the hymen is a myth https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20220419-how-the-hymen-myth-destroys-lives
TL;DR: “virginity” and the state of the hymen are not really related. Bleeding or pain during intercourse is also not usually due to the hymen, but lack of lubrication or forcefulness of the penetration.
Emphasis mine, this is what I was taught in school
So TIL, it’s not actually a membrane and is not guaranteed to tear at some point. Really interesting read, and definitely an example of how women’s health research is just riddled with misinformation
Thx, but I didn’t want to know that…