No, a tampon can go no further than your vaginal canal. If you struggle to find the tampon then squat and push down to force it down closer to the vaginal canal to make it easier to reach, if you still can't remove it then see your doctor.
You may, particularly if it's large or has been in for a while. If you feel discomfort when sque3ezing your muscles, the tampon probably isn't in far enough.
A woman does not get her period while she's pregnant, therefore, she does not need a tampon.
Yes, I guess so. If he feels comfortable with pulling the tampon out of your vagina.
Yes, a man would know if you have a tampon in when he inserts his fingers into your vagina. He would be able to feel the tampon inside the vagina.
.the tampon fits into the vagina, and the urine comes out of the bladder into the urinary tract, so do not worry, you can urinate without having to remove the tampon.
Use a tampon, and tuck the string inside you. If you're bleeding heavily, use the Supers (the thick ones) and change it about an hour before you go out there: long enough to know that it's in properly and isn't going to leak, but soon enough to be sure that it won't get soaked through and start leaking.
Yes, a period is a result of hormones and wearing or not wearing a tampon has nothing to do with it. Never ever wear a tampon without having a period. Read the warnings on the tampon box because it tells you not to do that.
No, of course not - a tampon would be inside the vagina, urine comes out via your urethra.
No, obviously you cannot get pregnant by a tampon.In order to get pregnant you need sperm to fertilize an egg, sperm normally comes from a penis - thus to get pregnant you'd either have to have sex or have IVF. A tampon is not a penis, a tampon cannot contain sperm, and using a tampon is not sex - thus you can't get pregnant by a tampon.
If the emergency room doctor did an effective speculum exam, then the doctor w2ould not be able to miss a tampon in your vagina. There is nowhere else a tampon can go; the vagina is a dead end. But removal of a lost tampon is not a reason for an emergency room visit. Next time, see your regular health care provider or your local family planning agency. They are better able to provide this kind of care. Routine GYN care is not what emergency rooms are for, and not their specialty.
If you have a tampon in your vagina, your health care provider would have noticed it during your pap smear.
what is wrong with you??