Furry Condom

Furry Condom




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Furry Condom

June 13, 2022 by Zanandi Botes , featured in Lifestyle
The DIY movement has truly brought power back to the people. From homemade sunscreens to upcycled everything—there’s a hack for making almost any store-bought item at home these days. And in the spirit of eco-friendly innovation, here are the best homemade condom options. Share them on Pinterest and help us spread the inspiration.
Condoms are like coats for penises, and your penis deserves the absolute best. Not only is this homemade condom more environmentally friendly (you can wash them by hand!), but it’s also a great way to learn a new craft if you don’t already knit. Just remember to give it a good wash before first use so that the fibers don’t shed into the vagina during sex.
There’s a good reason grade school teachers use bananas to demonstrate how one should properly put a condom on a penis—because bananas are good for dicks. Banana peels are packed with healthy vitamins and minerals (we think) and make for a fantastic biodegradable option . And bonus: You can even mush the actual banana and use it as organic lube.
Now you can get even more use out of your biodegradable sandwich baggies! What’s great about vacuum packing your penis in plastic is that you have full control over the tightness of your DIY condom. Please see the step-by-step image tutorial on our Imgur page.
Balloon boning is making a huge comeback, and rightly so. Usually, at the end of a party or special occasion, any and all balloons will be promptly thrown away—and end up right in a landfill. However, each and every one of those balloons can be untied and repurposed for sex. And should be.
We honestly don’t think we need to explain anything here. Wrapping your penis in layers of bacon should be self-explanatory. A good layer of fat will also act as natural lubricant and, in the spirit of “waste not, want not,” you can cook a protein-rich breakfast after.
DISCLAIMER: We do not take responsibility for any health-related issues stemming from the above tips. But again, please still share them on Pinterest, of course!
We spend a lot of time here on Bunny Ears providing wealthy, successful adults with fashion, health, and spiritual advice to help make them wealthier and more successful in their personal lives. But that doesn’t mean we don’t see you, teens. We see you, and more importantly we understand. Being…
Zanandi also writes for Cracked.com and your dad, probably.
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That was really interesting. I'm in a closed relationship and we are extremely careful about sex. I volunteer with an ambulance corp, and I'm exposed a lot, so I get tested a great deal (although its free XD) and he tests regularly.
I also know furries who have been exposed to STDs and carry them but continue to allegedly have sex. True life ruiners. But like the article said, since the community is so tight knit I was told about the local ones. Which possibly saves my health and my life.
Would the major cons be willing to host panels on this though? Free condoms sounds like a great idea, it plants that original thought of safe sex. Hell, find a company to sponsor it, have a Booth even. Then poll before and after about condom use.
My innermost fear however is that it gets blown off and all I would see are condom balloons floating about.
I really like what Eurofurence did a couple years ago: inserted a flyer into the conbook about how to have safe sex.
I totally agree about the con panels idea. Why not have a something to talk about safe sex at a place where there are tons of furries? And I would totally try to do it myself, but I'm already shy enough without bringing up the topic of sex with strangers. X3
Would the major cons be willing to host panels on this though?
Would the people who need to hear the message go to the panel?
I think the main issue with cons doing a safe sex-type panel is the air of it's-not-about-sex that a lot of groups try to don. I would think many of the conventions (Stateside, mostly, I assume) would be very hesitant to have a panel like this. Whenever I've seen panels that are sex-related, they're always done in a non-serious sort of atmosphere like Furoticon tournaments. I think a con would feel like making a serious panel about having safe sex (particularly having safe sex at the convention ) would emphasize the sexual aspect of it too much.
At the same time, I agree. Safe sex should be common sense, but it never hurts to remind people.
One of the benefits of an exclusive relationship.
Always good to be safe. I have so much respect for Yama for being so responsible and letting people know and sharing his experience.
Great article, and it hits pretty close to home with community reaction to those three letters and some other stuff that I'm not about to go into for the privacy of others. It seems to me that it's quite standard for too many people in general to have unprotected sex with people that they really don't know at all. I appreciate that there has been an uptick in awareness over the years in the community both by word of mouth and the popularizing of artwork that depicts condoms in a positive light. And remember, there are plenty of other STDs. I've heard of too many situations where people lie and/or decieve to be comfortable anymore, and I've gotten to the safe sex or no sex point in my life. Thank goodness I got there before anything serious happened to me or anyone else.
Get tested regularly if you're active. And even if you're not, get tested periodically to make sure that something hasn't developed since the last time you got tested.
It's pretty simple - don't have unprotected sex with random furries and it significantly reduces your risk. Hell, don't have unprotected sex outside of a relationship at all.
If you're happy to go around cons have bare sex with people you don't know and can't possibly trust to inform you then you're going to have a bad time.
This should be aimed towards any community similar to the furry fandom, as we all know there are those assholes out there who know they have an STI/D and will still go out have sex all while informing no one of their STI/D.
I myself, even though I'm lacking of them, tell people about my chronic reoccurring ulcers before we do anything. Why? Well, even though it's genetic, it could still scare someone shitless and end up with me having to get tested to avoid a possible lawsuit.
I never have sex with anyone without confirming they are STD free. I request that they get a blood test and I talk to them for a period of time before deeming it safe. I don't even want to trust a condom with my safety, I need to be totally sure or it isn't happening. Not saying I don't associate myself with people who have STD's. I just won't have sex with them and stay friendly.
EDIT: As a side note to Yama's comments at the bottom, I understand why condoms are important especially if you are having indiscriminate sex. But when you like ejaculation in porn that usually entails not using a condom. It is what makes it part of the glorious fantasy. Anyone who doesn't love bareback is nuts, but again, it is just a drawing.
I think I just read something profound. I used to be a typical fox slut until I slowed down and despised if I didn't change my behavior I would wreck myself.
The transmission rate from unprotected anal sex is around 1% to 10% depending on viral load, dropping to close to zero if you use a condom.
Oh sweet Christ it is relieving to hear that. I'm a virgin, but I also think I might be a slut-in-the-making (I think I have a significantly above average sex drive, no problem with casual sex, may be polyamorous, bit of a philosophical hedonist) and I have no bigger phobias than STDs. Especially HIV.
[Here] ( http://wrongreaction.wordpress.com/2012/08/10/on-safer-sex-part-two-sexually-transmitted-infections/ ) is some good information about STD testing, awareness, preventing yourself and partners, etc.
really all it is is use a condom and maybe pick who you have sex with better. I personally will not have sex with someone unless they are close friends who I know are clean.
Yea it is. A friend was scared into getting an emergency HIV test when a suitor told him that my boyfriend was positive (they were FWBs at the time).
PS that chart is fucking scary too. Big fat dose of reality.
I am now even more afraid of engaging in such things at MFF... in addition to the mild uncertainty of not knowing if I even wish to in the first place or not.
Am I the odd one out? I do not like having multiple partners because one is just enough for me. I am in my first relationship we both value monogamy. So saying that all furries are either incestuous or extremely sexually active is actually quite insulting to me. Especially when someone throws the gay card. That doesn't make me any more sexual than a straight man despite what studies show. This article is actually quite poorly worded and uses offensive language (I know because I am in school for website design and usability).
He doesn't say all furries are, we just are moreso when compared to other communities.
...Why does that offend you, exactly, if you know it isn't true?
We can look at the exact phrase. He's not really making a sweeping generalization so much as pointing out a very prevalent trend:
Now, perhaps my perception could be wrong, but that asserts that MOST (not ALL) of furries:
Like to have sex with other furries (A behavior which propagates itself)
In addition, since statistics show that gay men have a higher infection rate for HIV than straight men, it is a completely legitimate 'card' to throw, especially considering the propensity for the furry community to engage in such things. He's not being judgemental. He's stating facts.


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No, he doesn’t have sex in the wolf suit.
“When I imagined getting a suit, I thought it would be something I would want to do,” says Dominic Rodriguez, director of a new documentary on the “furry” subculture — and a member himself.
“But honestly?” he says. “The suit is so beautiful, it’s so much better than I thought it would be, I don’t want to mess it up. I could just put it on and get [oral sex], though.”
Furries, as they are known, have been the subject of much eyebrow-raising since the community came into the spotlight in the 1990s. Misconceptions and vilifications, many of which are addressed in the film, abound. So what, exactly, is a furry, according to someone on the inside?
“The only definition that I feel like everybody more or less agrees on, as a community, is that it’s anybody who is fascinated by anthropomorphic [having human characteristics] animals,” explains Rodriguez. Many of those in the “furry fandom” enjoy dressing up in animal suits and attending conventions, the biggest of which is the annual Anthrocon in Pittsburgh in late June, where more than 6,000 furries convene.
The initial public portrayal of furries, in everything from a Vanity Fair article to an episode of “CSI” to appearances on “Dr. Phil” and “The Tyra Banks Show,” focused on the kinky aspect of the community — in short, that many of its adherents find the suits a huge turn-on. The 25-year-old director aims to shed a more equitable light on the subject with “Fursonas,” which will be available on iTunes starting on Tuesday. His film focuses on a handful of members of the furry community, most of whom own elaborate costumes (some costing thousands of dollars) and all of whom would like very much not to be seen as freaks.
Still, he doesn’t shy away from talking about sex, the issue that’s dogged (so to speak) the community for years. “There are people for whom it is a completely innocent, sexless experience,” says Rodriguez. “That’s the enjoyment they get out of it. The sexual aspect of the fandom is a huge part of it for me — but I can’t say how big a part it is for people who aren’t me.”
The sexual aspect of the fandom is a huge part of it for me — but I can’t say how big a part it is for people who aren’t me
Rodriguez, who owns a “partial” — meaning his wolf suit consists of a head, arms, legs, feet and a tail — spent four years making the film, during which time he met his boyfriend, who is also a furry. A lion, to be exact. “We’ve been together two and a half years,” says Rodriguez. “I feel like making the movie made me more comfortable with who I am.”
Coming out as a furry wasn’t as hard for Rodriguez as he knows it is for some. “I’m very lucky to have a very accepting family and friends,” he says, “and honestly, I’ve gotten nothing but support.” Still, he says, “I knew my parents would be cool with it — but I didn’t really want to tell them, because it’s embarrassing.”
His interest in furries goes back to his early teens. “It was totally porn,” he says. “That’s not something I’m ashamed of. Furry porn is really beautiful — you can see the artists put themselves into it. It’s the opposite of videos of people f–king. It’s not dehumanizing. It brings humanity into something that’s total fantasy.” Growing up saturated with cartoons and the internet, he says, it isn’t that hard to see why some people gravitate toward being titillated by the idea of being cartoon animals themselves.
“It’s less inhibited — less letting anxiety get in the way,” Rodriguez explains. “People think more, and they have more anxiety. When animals have sex, they have sex and then they’re done. When people have sex they have to think about it. They lose their boner if they get freaked out.”
Rodriguez includes an interview with a furry sex-toy designer in “Fursonas,” whose company, Bad Dragon, makes, among other things, “dildoes in the shape of horse c–ks or dog d–ks.” The company founder, who goes by the name of Varka, is “an artist,” says Rodriguez.
But, he stresses, every furry is different — for many, sex doesn’t enter into the equation at all. Some people find wearing a fur suit to an occasional convention a light hobby; others see it as a lifestyle or even an identity, like one man featured in “Fursonas” who is legally petitioning to have his named changed to “Boomer the Dog.” Some are furries all the time; some are furries once in a while.
“For me, I’ll wear my suit around the house, but I don’t do it all the time,” says Rodriguez, who sees himself as in the middle. “I’ll wear it whenever I feel like it, but not on a daily basis. But there are some people who would say, ‘Oh, we don’t wear the suits around the house, only crazy people do that.’ And there are some people for whom this is absolutely an identity.”
He hopes to capture the elation of a furry convention, where thousands of adherents — many wearing suits, others not — come to mingle at panels, dances and more. Rodriguez sees the events as a great social equalizer. “You’ll have these weird adventures – meeting somebody, hanging out with them all day. You have to find them again and they don’t have their cell phone because they have their paws on. At the end of the day you realize you’ve been hanging out with these people whom you have no idea what they look like. It’s like, ‘Oh, you’re Chinese, wow!’”
There are different varieties of furry: Some wear the suit but continue acting human; some communicate in squeaks or barks or other animal sounds. “I talk a lot,” says Rodriguez. “One of the unwritten rules is if the jaw on your costume moves, you talk, and if it doesn’t, you don’t.”
What does Rodriguez hope to impart to an audience that knows little about the furry fandom — or thinks they’re creepy? “There are people you’re never going to convince, who could watch the whole movie and it doesn’t make a difference because they’ve made up their minds already,” says the director. “I think if I can get anybody who isn’t a furry to even a little bit see these people as people, that’s what I’d want. The world is changing now; we’re having conversations about identity. It’s not the same world it was in the ‘90s when furries were in ‘CSI’ episodes.”
His documentary may be the first on the subject, but he hopes there will be more: “I’ve heard people say, ‘You have the responsibility to give us a good image.’ I was like, ‘Why does this have to be the only one?’”

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