How Does The Fake Blood Capsule Work?
Welcome to the world of hymen reconstruction and fake blood capsule, a booming industry that preys on sexual inhibition, medical ignorance, and cultural anxiety.
According to a common urban legend, if you don't have sex
for seven years, your hymen will regenerate. Needless to say, this is not
correct – it is not the size of a fingernail. It's gone once it's gone.
Traditionally, an unbroken hymen has been simulated with
another piece of material pushed up there in its place. Sites like Bevirgin provide kits that allow
women to impersonate their virginity every time.
An artificial hymen is a fast disintegrating natural plastic
envelope containing a little quantity of red dye – the same substance used for
breath freshening strips. Insert it into the vagina 15 minutes before sexual
activity, then go to work. Natural vaginal fluids begin to degrade the plastic,
and their partner's thrusting completes the process. What doesn't glide out
naturally dissolves within the lady over the next day or so?
People who have used these fake blood pills and hymens say their partners couldn't tell the
difference in the heat of the moment, but the crimson dye was far messier than
genuine blood, getting all over everything.
These kits are not intended to replace the hymen. They're
intended to fool a partner into thinking it's still there during intercourse.
And they do so by using huge amounts of artificial blood.
Unfortunately for them, bleeding when the hymen is broken is
also a misconception for the vast majority of women. One in every 200 babies is
born with an "imperforate hymen," which can cause discomfort or blood
when damaged. After their first intercourse, less than half of women bleed, and
the quantity is generally minor spotting akin to a paper cut.
These prosthetic hymen kits, on the other hand, are
unconcerned. The whole aim of them is to draw attention to themselves, so when
they rupture, they expel a large amount of "blood."
Don't give up if nothing but the actual thing will do.
Several surgeons have devised a technique for surgically "restoring"
the hymen after it has been torn.
The doctor either stitches the two ends together or harvests
a little bit of tissue from the vaginal walls. The process takes around a half
hour. It's a straightforward procedure that costs around $2,500. But good luck
getting your insurance to cover it.
What is the source of our cultural fascination with the hymen and blood capsule? It may be traced all the way back to the Bible. According to Deuteronomy 22:20–21, if a man marries a woman and "no proof of the young lady's virginity can be obtained," she will be dragged to the door of her father's home and stoned to death by the men of her town. What exactly is the "evidence" that the Bible demands? A blood-splattered fabric.
Men are still hunting for that blood thousands of years
after those lines were penned to comfort themselves that their relationships
are clean. And when they don't find it, they're dissatisfied.
Could a little plastic envelope containing fake blood capsule have saved her? Is
it finally time to educate the public that a small piece of skin does not equal
a virgin?
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