Cum - In vagina
Ejaculation inside the vagina. Short Explanation: Choose "Receiving" if you consent to internal ejaculation in the vagina, and "Giving" if you are the one ejaculating. Your role selection should reflect your established D/s dynamic.
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Start Your ChecklistVaginal Internal Ejaculation
Internal vaginal ejaculation represents one of the most intimate physical connections between partners. This practice requires careful consideration of pregnancy and STI concerns while offering profound emotional and physical satisfaction for many couples.
Intimacy and Connection
Many couples describe internal ejaculation as more connecting than withdrawal or condom use. The physical sensation of release and warmth creates intimate moments. Power exchange may frame this as claiming, completion of service, or ownership demonstration. The vulnerability of unprotected sex itself enhances intimacy for some.
Pregnancy Considerations
Unprotected vaginal ejaculation can result in pregnancy. Couples must make conscious contraception decisions—hormonal birth control, IUDs, or acceptance of pregnancy risk. Timing around fertility windows (for either conception or avoidance) requires understanding menstrual cycles. Discuss family planning openly.
STI Safety
Vaginal ejaculation can transmit STIs in either direction. Testing before fluid bonding provides essential information. Ongoing testing may be appropriate depending on relationship agreements. Make informed decisions together about protection levels.
Frequently Asked Questions
How reliable is contraception for allowing this safely?
Hormonal methods and IUDs are highly effective (over 99% with perfect use). No method is 100% effective except abstinence. Discuss acceptable risk levels together.
What about breeding kink without wanting pregnancy?
Many enjoy "breeding" fantasy while using contraception. The psychological elements—language, timing, intensity—can be enjoyed regardless of actual pregnancy intent.
Does internal ejaculation feel different for the receiving partner?
Many report feeling warmth and pulsing sensations. Some feel nothing different. The psychological knowledge often matters more than physical sensation.
How do we transition from protected to unprotected sex?
Testing for both partners, discussion of exclusivity, and contraception decisions should precede the transition. This represents a significant relationship milestone deserving explicit conversation.
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