Let's be clear on exactly what you mean. If the foreskin can be brought below the head without difficulty, that's as far as it has to go, really. The frenulum, a fold of skin attaching the foreskin to the underside of the shaft near the head anchors the foreskin so that it can't move down all the way. That is normal and healthy.
You are not circumcised from your description. By about 16 or so your foreskin will retract and you should be able to fully expose the glans. Start stretching - NOW. Use your fingers to spread the opening OR and pull down on the shaft skin
The piece of skin that connects the penis head to the shaft is called the frenulum.
The skin on the shaft of the penis extends over the head. All males are born with foreskin and for religious reasons or parents choice some are circumcised, the foreskin is removed.
The answer is simple. Your foreskin is fused to the head of your penis, and that is why it can be stretched of your head. some teens, are circumcised (for, say, religious reasons) so they don't have foreskins. You can be circumcised as a baby for the aforementioned reason, or if an ailment requires the removal of the foreskin
One of the problems with circumcision is that in the case of infants, the area worked with is so small that it is easy to remove too much foreskin then stitch up the lacerated area puling skin up athe shaft of the penis. this leads to unnatural bends and hairy skin being pulled onto the shaft. so in an ideal mutilation there should be no abnormal tightness however it depends on a certain amount of luck at the time the rite was committed. Circumcision is simply removal of the foreskin from the penis. It doesn't have any effect on the tightness of the skin on the shaft or glans.
yes because i know someone who has it under the head of the penis on the lower skin
There is usually a small sticker, usually metallic, it is located near the top of the shaft just below the grip. It should tell you which one it is.
The foreskin (or prepuce) is cut off and removed in circumcision. The foreskin is the structure that covers the head (glans) of a non-erect penis. The outer layer of the foreskin is not distinct from the rest of shaft-skin of the penis. In general though, the foreskin is usually considered the tapered cylindrical double layer of tissue extending from behind the corona (flange) forward to about the end of the glans and returning, and to end at the same distance along the penis as it began (ie, it is defined by circumcision...). From the corona to the ridged band its surface is mucosa; the rest is skin, and it is lined with part of the (involuntary) dartos fascia muscle which holds it against the glans. On erection for most men it unrolls into a single-layered cylinder, mucosa behind the corona, skin behind that, enclosing about half of the shaft. During intercourse it may move back and forth along the shaft. It is richly innervated with Meissner corpuscles, nerve-endings of the same kind as in the fingertips and lips. They are most concentrated in a ridged band running around the inside of the foreskin near the tip, beginning and ending at the frenulum, a web connecting the foreskin to the underside of the glans (head). Unfolded, the total area of the foreskin is about 15 sq in or 98 cm².
.002 per foot of shaft
probably the remnants of the original foreskin. Or it could be an area called frenulum, a web of skin that connects the sliding skin that covers the shaft to just under the head of the penis, just below the urethral meatus. In uncircumcised men the skin I am talking about is the foreskin.
That would depend on how much of the foreskin is cut of for starters you have to understand that the skin that cover the penis starts at the base and directly covers the shaft (the shaft skin) until it reaches to just behind the glans. After that it becomes lose from the penis starting with the section that is called the outer foreskin, This is the skin that you see from the outside covering the glans. then at the end of the outer foreskin at the tip of the penis you will find the ridged frenar band this is the part of the foreskin that pulls the foreskin in around the glans the frenar band is also the area where the erogenous nerve ending finish, After the frenar band the foreskin doubles bac under itself and at this point gains a fine cover of mucosal tissue where it is in contact with the mucosal tissue of the Glans this tissue reduces the need for lubricants both during sexual intercourse and masturbation the inner fore skin goes a small distance past the sulcus (where the glans join the shaft of the penis) the result is that an intact penis looks like it has the same skin from base to tip with the foreskin fitting snugly over the glans until it closes or nearly closes at the end. A partial circumcision would mean that the frenar band would be removed along with the associated nerves. And without the nerves there would be a lot of sensation lost. Then without the effect of the frenar band pulling the end of the foreskin together you would have a loose tube of skin hanging there that would retract or not as the situation at the time dictates. ..
A rubber band boat works much like a rubber band airplane. First you need to build the boat itself. Then you need to make a propeller. The propeller shaft needs to run through the inside of the boat, not below the boat. With the prop below the water. The propeller shaft should not go the full length of the boat. About halfway through put a loop in the shaft. Then to the front of the boat attach a rubber band. Then run the rubber band through the loop in propeller shaft. Now twist the prop and the rubber band should twist around and around. When it's good and tight let go and the propeller should spin. Allowing the boat to move forward in the water. Mind you the shaft needs to be a thin piece of metal, as it will be difficult to make it water tight.