If it was able to get over in the first place it can be put back over when the erection is gone or if need be with the aid of a pressure on the glans by squeezing it in the hand this will push back the blood and reduce it in sise. However if you are having a problem with this all you nee do is spend some time stretching the foreskin gently a Little at a time until it moves backwards and forwards until it slides easily backwards and forwards. you can Google "foreskin stretching exercises" for more details.
As soon as you loose the erection, it will slide back up.
Uncircumcised penises have skin that covers the head (glans) of the penis when it is soft. This skin, called the foreskin, can slide back off the head. The foreskin usually slides back when a man's penis becomes erect. If the head of the penis always shows, even when the man is soft and not erect, then he is circumcised. If the penis head is covered when he is soft, then he is uncircumcised.
By examination of the word 'long' one would assume the question is referring to a foreskin greater than average. Average foreskin covers the glans of the penis completely when soft. When erect average foreskin typically slides back and exposes some if not all of the glans. If a man has 'long' foreskin, by description alone it suggests that the foreskin is of a greater/longer amount than average. Some men with longer foreskins can have an erection with no exposure of the glans. In other cases the foreskin can be long enough to cover the glans during erection with excess at the tip. Typically the position of the foreskin is dependant upon the elasticity and size of the frenum, which attatches the foreskin to the underside of the glans. The more flexible and abundant the frenum is, the more likely the foreskin is able to slide up and down.
Never.
The foreskin of an uncircumsized newborn should NEVER be pulled back; it is a myth and it is dangerous to do this. It should never be forced back by a parent, no matter what the reason the parent has. Keep your hands off of it. Tissues of the glans penis and of the covering foreskin are not yet differentiated, and the foreskin should be left alone. Some physicians consider that an unretracted foreskin can be normal and non-problematic even as late as puberty. Yes, there can be problems with the foreskin, but pathological phimosis (a medically problematic unretractable foreskin) is virtually NEVER a competent diagnosis at birth.AnswerThe foreskin does not retract at birth. Forcing it back at this age can cause tearing and scarring meaning it will be difficult to retract in the future.
If the foreskin cannot be pulled back into place treatment should be sought. If the blood flow to the penis is restricted then emergency treatment is required and if the foreskin cannot be pulled back a surgical cut to the trapped foreskin may be needed
no it will go back slow but it will
No, only if there are medical reasons to why the foreskin can't be pulled back.
foreskin
If your black it should be kinda red when hard and if it is cut that means your circumsized
There is no slide release button on lc9. After the last round the slide locks back, to get the slide forward you have to pull back on it and release. The lc9 is not like many semi autos where the slide can be closed with a button. You have to manually pull the slide back.
The foreskin is not removed during intercourse. The foreskin is a double layer of very sensitive skin that covers and thus protects the glans penis. In the area where it is against the glans penis it is covered with a fine layer of mucous membrane. The foreskin is designed to be able to be pulled back wards exposing the glans penis entirely and then come back to cover it again on its own accord with the aid of the frenulum the ridged band inside the end of it puckers it in such a way as to hold it in place over the head. When you have sex the foreskin is pushed back as a result of the friction of pushing it into the vagina and as the penis moves back and forth so does the foreskin making the movement more pleasurable and less forceful for both male and female.