Corona Bottle In Pussy

Corona Bottle In Pussy




🛑 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Corona Bottle In Pussy
4 Comments Download Save Share Report
54 sec Stackhouse4 - 6.8M Views -
2 min Elquetesomete - 493.8k Views -
54 sec Timetwofuck - 260.5k Views -
10 min Theintermission - 13M Views -
6 min Itzbatmanmf - 2.9M Views -
9 sec Babyboyy18 - 1.1M Views -
3 min Pomporn29 - 579.4k Views -
75 sec Lobomexa - 159.4k Views -
2 min Headlover87 - 1.7M Views -
80 sec Mipackyoutuber - 4.4M Views -
11 sec Lyon Mack - 867.4k Views -
4 min Easyhell - 628.1k Views -
5 min Itzbatmanmf - 2.6M Views -
10 min Wutangelared - 229.4k Views -
11 min Shaiden Rogue - 23.1M Views -
15 min Certified Choppa - 2.8M Views -
33 sec Mackcummings - 3.6M Views -
68 sec Drizle93 - 10.2M Views -
8 min Fuckboy70000 - 5.4M Views -
8 min Mommy Got Boobs - 109.8M Views -
6 min Mini Stallion - 13M Views -
8 min Naughty America - 1.3M Views -
12 min Dicknmilf - 854.3k Views -
2 min Titsloverbr - 1.6M Views -
14 min Ass Traffic - 1.7M Views -
74 sec Inpossibleoreo - 67.7M Views -
3 min Champrainey1983 - 69.8M Views -
8 min Nyna Ferragni - 191.6M Views -
11 min Brazzers - 18.5M Views -
9 min Sweetiefox - 20.4M Views -
5 min Ryanclips - 101.5M Views -
37 min Hentarigo - 908.6k Views -
XVideos.com - the best free porn videos on internet, 100% free.


The power of the V might be coming to your vanity sooner than you think.
This video file cannot be played. (Error Code: 102630)
NEW YORK, NY – AUGUST 31: Musician Rihanna attends the RiRi by Rihanna fragrance unveiling at Macy’s Downtown Brooklyn on August 31, 2015 in New York City. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images)
NEWARK, NJ – AUGUST 25: Singer-songwriter Erykah Badu attends 2019 Black Girls Rock! at NJ Performing Arts Center on August 25, 2019 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Gilbert Carrasquillo/Getty Images)
This video file cannot be played. (Error Code: 102630)

Get The ESSENCE Magazine by subscribing below
subscribe now

Do Not Sell My Personal Information
Today is National Fragrance Day and we couldn’t think of a better way to celebrate than to talk about vaginas. If that seems odd to you, it may be because you’ve forgotten that the scent of a woman was a hot topic of conversation before we began talking solely about the spread of the coronavirus.
When Heretic’s $75 candle called “This Candle Smells Like My Vagina” sold out on Goop in hours (likely because people thought that it was inspired by Gwyneth Paltrow’s vagina), we thought it was a bit odd. But just weeks later, Erykah Badu’s $50 incense “Badu’s Pussy” sold out in merely 19 minutes on her site Badu World Market .
It was mind boggling to me that anyone would want to relax to the smell of another woman’s vagina. But then again, when you look at Erykah Badu’s roster of ex-lovers, it’s understandable why you might be intrigued by the potency of her pussy. If I had to imagine, I’d guess it smells like myrrh and persimmons, or red clay and jackfruit. Earthy and colorfully unique. Gwyneth Paltrow’s? Jasmine rice and privilege (you know, from all that steaming).
But, more than anything, I wondered why vagina scents were selling out like the latest drop from Supreme? Are we so obsessed with celebrity that we’re willing to pay anything to get close to them? Or, are we, as humans, naturally curious and drawn to this powerful biological organ? Is vagina truly poised to be the hottest new scent of 2020?
“Trying to bottle an essence, the scent of a certain part of the body or what that part of the body is supposed to represent is something that’s been going on in fragrance for a long time,” said Elenni Davis-Knight, Director of International at Milk Makeup, who previously worked as a fragrance marketing manager for Revlon, and sales for Givaudan, the largest fragrance house in the world. She has the type of trained nose that can easily identify what fragrance you’re wearing and can even pick up the different notes in it.
“It’s is always about engaging either the person who’s wearing it or the person who smells it, in some sort of emotion and feeling, which is why fragrance is so powerful. It brings back memory or a feeling,” she continued. “The smell of a woman, or that part of a woman, it’s always been fetishized, even outside of the fragrance industry. So to have it be something that can evoke power makes sense. Pheromones are a real thing.”
If you asked your friends — close friends, no doubt — if they believe pheromones are real, you might be met with a mix of responses. While scientists and medical professionals around the world have confirmed the existence of pheromones, whether or not the average person can pick up on them is highly debated. But that doesn’t stop women from believing in their potency, which leads to brands trying to bottle their effect through certain smells.
Based on a survey of 200 women, Poshly found that 77 percent of beauty consumers say pheromones play a role in attraction and 59 percent would be interested in buying or creating a fragrance based on their personal pheromones. Among Black consumers, 64 percent believe pheromones play a role in attraction, and 64 percent would be interested in buying or creating a fragrance based on their personal pheromones. To that end, in 2010, an artist named Judith Prays began throwing pheromone parties to help people find romantic matches based on their scent.
Whether or not you believe in the power of pheromones, the power of fragrance on people’s behavior has been proven. It’s the reason why mass chains like Victoria’s Secret, Subway and Starbucks pump scents through their vents that trigger your brain to do something, according to David-Knight.
So, should we expect lingerie stores to evoke the scent of sex by pumping “Badu’s Pussy” through the vents in order to get us to buy more fancy panties? Probably not. Even if perfumers could find a way to bottle the smell of vagina, there’s no one particular smell that could be identified as such. Gynecologists have confirmed that every woman’s personal scent is distinct, and can vary based on a plethora of factors, including diet, physical activity, and PH.
But, if you do a Google search of ‘What contributes to the smell of your vagina,’ you’ll be met with stories on stories about Bacterial Vaginosis, other vaginal infections, and vaginal odor. Apparently if you put the words ‘smell’ and ‘vagina’ together, it translates to odor.
It’s exactly why Shan Boodram , certified intimacy educator, author of The Game Of Desire , and host of Quibi’s Sexology with Shan Boodram , debuting April 6, is excited about the idea of vaginal scents being popularized.
“It’s just changing the conversation that we have around women’s vaginal anything, but especially women’s vaginal fluids,” she said. “Even 10 years ago [the narrative was] that it stinks, it’s awful, you have to douche, vaginas should smell like jolly ranchers. They should smell like lilac, or they should smell like anything else outside of their natural smell because a natural smell is fishy or it’s coppery or it’s pungent. Those are the terms we used to hear. So getting to a place now where people are celebrating it as a positive smell that people want to purchase. I think is an improvement in either case.”
Boodram, who once did an experiment to see if wearing her own vaginal fluids on her pressure points would make her more attractive to those in her immediate vicinity (the conclusion: yes), doesn’t necessarily think that trying to bottle the scent of one’s vagina will catch on.
“I don’t necessarily think that Erykah Badu incense or Gwyneth
Paltrow’s candle probably even smells like a vagina, just like flower perfume
doesn’t really smell like a flower,” Boodram said. “It’s taking a hint of that essence
and then repurposing it into something that would work in the perfume industry.
If you ever put your nose to an actual flower, not a lot of perfume really
smells exactly like that. But it might have the same familiarity to it. So I
think that the scent is more about the familiarity of it.”
Even Gwyneth admitted that the Heretic candle smells like roses and bergamot. So, if I wanted to make an air mist called Shalwah’s Snatch, it could essentially smell like Prosecco and orange slices, since I clearly drink too many brunch mimosas. It’ll still have an essence of me, but it just might not sell out on Amazon with my modest social media following.
But even if it turns out that the popularity we’ve seen around vagina-influenced products is due to the celebrity attached to them, it’ still changing the narrative. There was once a time where you wouldn’t read the word “vagina” written this many times in a piece of content outside of a medical journal or study.
And there was no room for the rise of product lines like Perfect V, Queen V, Kitty Candy, Happy Girl, and Flamingo’s Mons Mist. So if high-priced vaginal-scented home products are the way to get the conversation started, then I’ll be the first to invest.
“The vagina is very mysterious to people who don’t have one, and the power that it holds,” Davis-Knight finished. “So it wouldn’t surprise me if women thought, ‘I’m going to make a pussy perfume that’s just for me.’ I don’t know if it’ll be an actual trend because it’s very personal, but it’s kind of bad ass, honestly.”
ESSENCE.com is part of ESSENCE Communications, Inc.
Essence may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.
©2022 ESSENCE Communications Inc. All Rights Reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Essence.com Advertising Terms


By clicking Sign Up, you agree to our
Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

To support Essence’s continued operations, we use cookies to keep the site running and deliver more relevant ads to you here, and by our partners on other sites thru data sharing.

18 Things You Should Never Put In Your Vagina
If you have to ask, the answer is probably no.
7. Yeast infection home remedies, like yogurt-soaked tampons
9. Anything you've just used for butt stuff and haven't yet cleaned
All the best health and wellness advice, tips, tricks, and intel, delivered to your inbox every day.
Will be used in accordance with our Privacy Policy .
Discover new workout ideas, healthy-eating recipes, makeup looks, skin-care advice, the best beauty products and tips, trends, and more from SELF.
You've all heard horror stories of that one friend's-cousin's-classmate who put some random object inside her vagina during a heated moment and ended up in the hospital with an embarrassing story—and maybe even some serious physical damage. So what's actually dangerous to put in there? We talked to a few health professionals to break it down. Here's what to steer clear of...
Some women like to use douches to clean the vagina, but in actuality, this is totally unnecessary. It can also be dangerous because, according to Dr. Alyssa Dweck , M.D., a gynecologist and Assistant Clinical Professor at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, it can cause "a horrible imbalance of the typical bacteria that is supposed to be in the vagina and actually cause an infection." Douching is a known culprit when it comes to pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and bacterial vaginosis . If you're worried about keeping your vagina clean, the best thing you can do is wash your vulva with soap and water when you take a shower, being careful not to put any soap inside your vagina. See a doctor if you think something smells off. Ultimately, your vagina is self-cleaning, so it doesn't need your help to make it cleaner.
Yes, steaming your vagina at the spa is totally a trend these days, and yes , it's exactly what it sounds like. "They sit on a specific type of spa with no underwear, on special chairs that have herbal infused steam coming out of them, and they steam their bottom," shares Dweck. "And while any sort of warm treatment could feel good and enhance blood supply to the area, we've seen some burns come out of this and irritation from the types of herbs, so I would use significant caution of that. I'm not sure how effective this is to do anything anyway."
"If you're using household oil as a lubricant, you need high-grade quality oil, not what you use in your kitchen to fry food," says Dr. Raquel Dardik, M.D., a gynecologist and Associate Professor of Gynecology at NYU Langone Medical Center. "And you want to use oil that is pH neutral, so for example, almond oil, coconut oil, olive oil, probably okay." What you don't want to use is tea tree oil, which can cause scary chemical burns: "it's incredibly caustic and will cause a vaginal burn, so probably not okay."
"All that stuff has sugar which will change the bacteria and yeast proportions which can cause infections. Those substances can also be irritating to the vaginal skin, so it might seem like a good idea at the time, but you may have either vaginal irritation or a vaginal infection afterwards," says Dardik.
"I would not recommend putting it inside the vagina," says Dweck. "It's really tough to get this stuff out, especially if it's causing a reaction. Fair enough for sexual play if you want to put this stuff on the vulva or other portions of the body and get an erotic experience—that's fine. But I wouldn't advise putting it inside."
This is occasionally thought of as an easy form of lubricant, but according to Dweck, Vaseline or any other type of petroleum product can actually be source of infection in the vagina.
According to Dweck, "Sometimes when people have a yeast infection and they feel like [yogurt on a tampon] is a more natural way to treat it. Probably not a great idea. Bacteria and yeast love dark, moist places so I think that could be causing of infection." If you suspect you have a yeast infection, get checked out by a doctor and if she gives her okay, treat it with Monistat, an easy over-the-counter treatment, instead of yogurt.
For starters, the old wives' tale is a lie: vegetables cannot take root inside your vagina and grow. There are some major concerns with putting veggies in there, though, according to Dardik. "Vegetables have pesticides, so you're putting pesticides in your vagina which I don't really recommend, and you can have them break off and have little bits and pieces that stay there for rather unhealthy amounts of time which, again, I don't recommend. But nothing takes root, it'll just rot."
"We see 'vaginal pH havoc,' if you will, break out from [using a toy in the vagina that has just been used for anal play]," says Dweck. "If you want to use a toy in the anal area, first of all, remember that it has to have some sort of a retrieval device, a string or something along that line. My husband happens to be a colon and rectal surgeon, so I hear of toys getting stuck in the colon because there is nothing to remove it. If you want to switch back and forth between vaginal and anal play then I would definitely wash the toy in between, and you may want to use a condom on some of the toys as well."
"The blood supply to the inside of the vagina is so rich that even the smallest cut can cause incredible amounts of bleeding and although it's a forgiving area and typically will heal, that's not a chance that you really want to take," says Dweck.
"I can only imagine a handle getting stuck inside the vagina or some trauma being caused, so I can't really condone that," Dweck insists.
"I've heard of the practice of putting alcohol on a tampon and putting it into the vagina for advanced absorption and getting a buzz off of that," says Dweck. "I would say that sounds like it would be horribly uncomfortable and can cause damage to the vaginal mucous so I definitely wouldn't advise that."
Yes, the phone vibrates, but it doesn't belong inside you. "I mean there's a battery in there, that could certainly be a problem," says Dweck.
This can definitely traumatize your lady parts in a flash—just ask this woman who tried it and ended up on Sex Sent Me To The ER !
Dweck experienced a horror story of her own when a patient came to her office after inserting a whipped cream aerosol container, complete with an attached cap, into her vagina ("because the shape of the top of it was a little bit phallic.") Terrifyingly enough, "a couple hours later we were in the operating room removing it because it had caused so much trauma."
Lest we forget about vagazzling , the hottest trend of 2010 (and don't you worry, it's still kickin' in 2015), Dweck is here to remind us to be careful about the placement of those nifty rhinestones, because the glue used in the process can be an irritant. "Vagazzling is probably not an issue on the outside [of the vagina] but don't put it on the inside. Some people have sensitive tissue and they get a reaction to the glue." Case in point: keep the rhinestones in the same place you might normally put a landing strip, and nowhere else.
If that vibration of a toothbrush floats your boat, "use it clitorally rather than inside the vagina so that it's external stimulation," says Dweck, though as a general rule, she doesn't really recommend you put any household items in there. That's what vibrators are for!
"This is rare, I've seen it once in my 24 years of practice," says Dweck, "but probably one of the worst experiences that I ever had was someone putting a small tiny animal in their vagina as part of their sexual play, so obviously I think that's totally out." Enough said.
The ultra-simple solution to avoid putting household no-nos in your hoo-ha? Get yourself some quality sex toys . "Women are very comfortable nowadays going and getting a vibrator," says Dr. Dardik. "They don't really feel like they need to sort of, you know, experiment with what's at hand...All the vibrators or dildos [that are of quality] are made from sterile material that doesn't hold bacteria, so they can be cleaned, they're safe, they don't change the vaginal pH, they don't attract bacteria, so they're the better option."
Be picky when choosing a toy, and opt for a high-end product from a trustworthy company, because some sex toys could leak chemicals called phthalates , which may be harmful to your health. If a brand new toy smells strongly of chemicals (that indescribable "new plastic" smell we all recognize) when you first open it, it's a strong indicator that it could be made with phthalates, which you should take into account when deciding whether and how you want to use it. If you plan to put the toy inside your vagina, first be sure that there are no instructions on the packaging that say "for external use only"—and if you do spot any, take them seriously. Try quality sellers like Babeland , Good Vibrations , and The Pleasure Chest (they sell toys online as well as in brick-and-mortar stores in case you'd like to shop from the privacy of your couch) to find toys and sexual health information you can actually trust. If you're on a budget, affordable sex toys made by Trojan are available on Amazon and at local drugstores. (And check here for some SELF-approved toy suggestions based on your preferences!)
SELF does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Any information published on this website or by this brand is not intended as a substitute for medical advice, and you should not take any action before consulting with a healthcare professional.
© 2022 Condé Nast. All rights reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agre
Lara Croft Monster Porn
Charlotte Escorts Service
Youtubeporno

Report Page