It shouldn't hurt at all when you are wearing a tampon, if it does something is wrong.
If it hurts when you sit down it is likely that you have not inserted the tampon far enough, thus as you sit down the vaginal muscles push against the tampon lower down in the vaginal canal. This is common when first using tampons or if you use applicators, next time try non-applicator and push further.
No, it shouldn't hurt.
If it hurts when you sit down or move about it means that the tampon isn't inserted high enough - thus it is located in the narrowest part of the vaginal canal, and as you move the vaginal muscles push against the hard tampon causing pain. Remove the tampon and wait a few hours before trying again, next time be sure to relax and insert as far as possible - it helps to use non-applciator tampons that give you better control to guide into place correctly and insert high enough so not to cause this problem.
No.. You can not even tell you have a tampon it.
It wouldn't hurt the baby, but why would you put in a tampon, if you're pregnant you don't have your period.
the tampon maybe improperly inserted or there maybe other elements such as a tumour or hernia if the pain persists consult a physician
Debt can help or hurt you when applying for credit.
Not usually, unless you inserted it incorrectly.
No, but applying one does.
Pushing down on the plunger of the applicator is what pushes the tampon into the vagina.There are many reasons why inserting tampons may hurt including you being too tense when inserting, inserting at the wrong angle, or using too high an absorbency. It would help if you were to use a non-applicator tampon to improve control and feel for resistance to insert the tampon correctly.
Whether it's normal to feel pain after retrieving a 'stuck' tampon depends on what you mean by it being 'stuck', what you did to retrieve it, and how long afterwards it continues to hurt. If the tampon was 'stuck' because it was too dry then it would have caused vaginal tearing and irritation so would hurt. If the tampon was 'stuck' because you were tense and you had to force it out that would hurt too. If you're experiencing pain days or weeks after removal then you may be looking at an infection.
Yes, tampons can commonly increase menstrual cramps so if you keep experiencing this you may want to consider other options like pads or cups. Tampons can hit your cervix if it is low, or expand into the cervix as they fill with menstrual flow. Also if the tampon is too low down it may hurt as you sit or move about, so make sure the tampon is far enough in as this may be the cause of pain.
Tampon size isn't an issue, remember that your vagina is designed to accommodate things far bigger than a tampon, but tampon absorbency is an issue. Tampons dry-out vaginal tissues causing small tears in the vaginal walls, thus if you use too big an absorbency for your flow then it will have more of a drying effect so cause more tears - thus higher risk of TSS and more likely to cause discomfort. As long as you're relaxed and use the correct absorbency for your flow tampon use shouldn't hurt at all.
It should not hurt your credit score unless you don't pay.
You can if you want to, but it may hurt.
No; it will not hurt you.