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By
Kendall @ Planned Parenthood
|
June 1, 2011, 10:13 p.m.


I was just told that the man I’m interested in likes anal sex. Is this common behavior for heterosexual males? I can’t seem to find any information on knowing more about anal sex beside that it is a common sexual activity. Please fill me in.
Anal sex is normal for some couples — straight or gay — and not for others. Whether you have anal sex depends on what makes you and your partner comfortable.
Most people mean anal intercourse when they think of anal sex. It happens when a man puts his penis into another person’s anus. Some men and women enjoy anal sex, and others do not. About four out of 10 people have tried anal intercourse. Other kinds of anal sex include touching the anus with hands, fingers, or the mouth.
Like unprotected vaginal sex, unprotected anal sex is high-risk for many sexually transmitted infections, such as chlamydia, gonorrhea, herpes, hepatitis, intestinal parasites, HIV, HPV, and syphilis. Use latex or internal condoms during anal intercourse to reduce the risk of sexually transmitted infections. Use Sheer Glyde dams or other plastic barriers to reduce the risk of infection when having other kinds of anal sex.
Planned Parenthood delivers vital reproductive health care, sex education, and information to millions of people worldwide.
Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Inc. is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit under EIN 13-1644147. Donations are tax-deductible to the fullest extent allowable under the law.


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Red Hot Explicit Erotica Press , 11 февр. 2021 г. - Всего страниц: 41
Google не подтверждает отзывы, однако проверяет данные и удаляет недостоверную информацию.
In this scorching collection of five first anal sex stories, girls get it in their tiniest, tightest holes for the very first time, and boy do they get it! There’s office first anal sex, BDSM, group first anal sex, and more! It’s an anal sex extravaganza, and it’s only a click away!
1. Molly Gets Punished: An Office Domination Erotica Story
When Molly is called into Mr. Baker’s office, she finds out she’s been caught spending a great deal of time on the phone with her boyfriend. Mr. Baker isn’t happy about it, and she’s right on the verge of losing her job. She’s willing to do anything, and anything is exactly what it will take to save her job as Mr. Baker binds her hands and teaches her to submit.
2. The Hippy Bent Over: A First Anal Sex BDSM Erotica Story
You saw me there at the grocery store. You saw me and decided you’d have me. You saw me, a poor hippy girl and you decided I should be one of your possessions, that you should be able to just tie me up and take me however you wanted. You wanted something special. You wanted to bend me over and give me my first anal sex experience, taking what I gave no other man. You wanted it, you took it…and I can’t believe how much I needed you to do it.
3. Bent Over for My Husband’s Pal: A Tale of First Anal and First Double Team Frolic
Amy’s feeling pretty insecure as her ten year class reunion approaches, and nothing her husband Eric can say is working to make her feel better. Finally, he plans a special night. She thinks it’s romantic time together with candles, roses, wine, and chick flicks. He knows better. His insecure wife is about to find out how much men want her and like her. Alec is the proof. He likes Amy. He likes her mouth, he likes her pussy, and he really, really likes her untouched little ass. When a friend decides on wife sharing, a hot time is sure to follow! Amy is about to experience her first double team.
4. Bent Over the Boss’s Desk: A Very Rough First Anal Sex Short
I just got hired for a great new job in charge of a group of copyright specialists. I was really happy with my position, but my employee Chase most definitely was not! He wanted to see me in an altogether different position…bent over my desk! Before the day was out, he’d had me every way possible, with deepthroat, very rough sex, and a hard and rough first anal sex experience!
5. Banged in Blueberry: A Rough and Reluctant Gangbang Erotica Story
Gwen is tired of her small town life. Everything has been planned out for her. Graduate. Get a Job. Get married. Nothing exciting happens to her, and she’s tired of it all. Her desire for a way to overcome the boredom of small town life is about to put her right in the midst of an awkward situation. In this case, her search for adventure will put her in a factory filled with young men enjoying a late night party, and she’s just become the entertainment. It’s a crazy gangbang filled with rough sex and boys everywhere.
Warning: This ebook contains very explicit descriptions of sexual activity during various first anal sex encounters. It includes bondage, group sex, reluctant sex, rough sex, oral sex, mmf ménage sex, double team sex, spanking, office sex, double penetration, domination, submission, semen swallowing, deepthroat, and cum facial humiliation. It is intended for mature readers who will not be offended by graphic depictions of sex acts between consenting adults.
In My Ass for the First Time: Five First Anal Sex Erotica Stories
Red Hot Explicit Erotica Press, 2021

https://www.thebody.com/article/making-gay-anal-sex-less-painful
You should know: The answer above provides general health information that is not intended to replace medical advice or treatment recommendations from a qualified health care professional.
I am a homosexual male who has only had anal sex once. And it hurt me real bad. Was it supposed to or not? Also, my partner did not use a condom but he said he pulled out before he came. Should i be worried and get it checked, also considering, i may not exactly know if he is clean or not? Thank you for your time.
As a gay male having anal sex, it appears you still have much to learn and I sincerely hope you learn it quickly! Most importantly, unprotected anal sex places you at great risk for STDs, including HIV. HIV transmission can occur via pre-cum (prior to ejaculation). I would recommend you get HIV tested three months or more after your last potential exposure. I also suggest you review the information in the archives of this forum and its related links pertaining to safer sex techniques. I'll print some information from the archives below. The bottom line on keeping your bottom safe from HIV is to use latex or polyurethane condoms!
As for keeping your bottom comfortable during backdoor action, you'll need to learn techniques for relaxing the anal sphincters. In addition, remember, "lubrication is your friend." Check out "The Joy of Gay Sex" or any "how to" gay sex guides, books or manuals for additional pointers on more comfortably tolerating "pointers."
Sexual contact is the most common route of HIV transmission. By December 2001, 51% of all HIV infections among adolescents and adults reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) were sexually transmitted (35% by male homosexual contact, 11% by heterosexual contact in females, 5% by heterosexual contact in males).(1) Worldwide, heterosexual transmission is the most common route of HIV infection. Given the importance of sexual transmission in the HIV epidemic, many HIV prevention strategies have focused on identifying and promoting safer-sex practices. As the name implies, these practices are thought to be "safer" than other sexual practices in that they help reduce (but do not necessarily eliminate) the risk of transmitting HIV from one sexual partner to another.
Clinicians and health educators often have the unique opportunity to discuss topics of an intimate nature in a professional setting. With this privilege comes the responsibility to be respectful and nonjudgmental. In some cases, the goal of safer-sex education may be to help someone minimize risk to him- or herself; in others, it may be to help someone minimize risk to others. The goal of teaching safer sex is to provide not only information, but also counseling to help individuals or groups to make the most appropriate choices for risk reduction.
Not everyone will open a discussion about safer sex with a health care provider. For example, some people may not ask about safer sex because they do not perceive themselves to be at risk. Others may be too embarrassed to open the discussion. It is incumbent on health care providers to perform HIV risk assessment as an integral part of the medical history, and to provide HIV prevention counseling as an integral part of patient education and anticipatory guidance. Risk assessments and appropriate counseling should be performed periodically to facilitate not only initiation, but also ongoing maintenance, of risk-reduction behaviors.
Development of effective antiretroviral therapy (ART) has resulted in optimism for many HIV-infected patients. As efforts to develop even more effective treatments and preventive vaccines continue, it is critical to continue aggressive prevention efforts as a vital component of the battle against HIV. Although ART can result in dramatic reductions in HIV viral load, it is not a cure for HIV disease; thus prevention should still be the first line of defense. In addition, although theoretical models have suggested that ART may combat the HIV epidemic on a population level, models that assumed steady or increased levels of safer-sex practices were more likely to predict reduction in new HIV infections than models that assumed decreased levels of safer sex.(2) ART may reduce, but cannot be expected to eliminate, the potential for an infected individual to transmit HIV to an uninfected individual.(3) Therefore, even individuals receiving effective ART should, at a minimum, initiate and maintain prevention practices with uninfected persons or persons of unknown HIV status. In addition, ART is available only for a small proportion of the world's HIV-infected population. Thus, prevention remains the main line of defense for these individuals.
This chapter reviews the evidence that has led to the development of safer-sex guidelines, and concludes with specific recommendations for safer-sex practices.
Evidence for Sexual Transmission of HIV
Researchers can consistently culture or otherwise detect HIV not only in blood, but also in semen (4-6) and cervical secretions (7-9) of infected persons. Infectious HIV exists in saliva,(7-13) tears,(14) and urine (15); however, it has only been recovered from these fluids at extremely low titers. In addition, no report has documented cases of HIV transmission by these fluids. Hence, saliva, tears, and urine are highly unlikely sources of HIV transmission.
Infectious HIV has also been isolated in breast milk, and transmission from HIV-infected mothers to nursing infants has been well documented.(16) Breast milk is not commonly encountered during sexual intercourse. However, should individuals accidentally or intentionally come in contact with HIV-infected breast milk during sex, care should be taken to avoid mucosal contact.
Epidemiologic Studies and Case Reports
Epidemiologic evidence in support of male-to-male,(17-28) male-to-female,(29-43) and female-to-male (31,33,36,39,40,42-44) sexual transmission of HIV infection is abundant. The risk of HIV infection among women who have sex with women appears to be largely attributable to other risk factors (sex with men, injection drug use).(45-48) Female-to-female sexual transmission per se is uncommon, with rare case reports of possible HIV transmission by this route.(49-54) A 2003 case report suggested that sexual practices that can expose sex partners to each other's blood, such as the shared use of sex toys or vaginal penetration with hand ("fisting"), are a possible route of female-to-female sexual transmission.(54)
Number and Selection of Sexual Partners
Results from early epidemiologic studies of HIV infection in homosexual men revealed that sexual activity with many different partners carries a high risk of HIV infection.(18,21-23) Many of the published reports of heterosexual transmission present no detailed data regarding this risk factor, presumably because the researchers examined transmission from HIV-infected persons to their monogamous sexual partners.(29,30,33,34,37,38,41) Researchers who did specifically analyze this issue were unable to demonstrate an association between number of sexual partners and risk of HIV infection, perhaps because the median number of partners was relatively low in these studies (1-4 partners in 5 years).(32,35,36)
Early research on selection advised that the choice of a partner was the most important determinant of transmission of HIV during a sexual encounter.(55) Current research has shifted emphasis from an explicit concern with absolute numbers of sexual partners to a model that situates an individual's selection of sexual partners in the context of the population seroprevalence, the likelihood that an individual has been tested for HIV, the likelihood that the test result was accurate, the likelihood of infection through insertive or receptive oral, vaginal, or anal sex, and the degree to which condom use reduces the probability of transmission during these acts. The model shows that individuals can reduce their risk by choosing a partner who has tested HIV negative, choosing a safer-sex act, using a condom, or some combination of these factors. For heterosexuals, whose population prevalence was modeled at 1%, choosing one risk-reduction behavior substantially reduced the absolute risk of HIV infection. However, for men who have sex with men (MSM), whose population prevalence was modeled at 10%, the choice of only one risk reduction behavior did not significantly lower the absolute risk of HIV infection.(56) As these models draw their assumptions from the epidemiology of HIV in developed-country settings, the applicability of their conclusions to high-prevalence heterosexual epidemics in the developing world seems limited. It is therefore important in high-prevalence settings to continue to encourage risk reduction behaviors that include both safer sex practices and HIV testing.
When both sexual partners are HIV positive, it is still reasonable to consider safer-sex practices to reduce the likelihood of infection from other sexually transmitted diseases, such as herpes, gonorrhea, chlamydia, syphilis, and hepatitis B and C viruses.
Case reports have confirmed that HIV-positive individuals can acquire different strains of HIV through sexual exposure.(57,58) Acquisition of a new strain of HIV in an individual who is already HIV-infected is known as superinfection. There is not yet a clear understanding of the probability of superinfection at the individual or population level, nor do we fully understand its impact on the long-term health of HIV-infected individuals. Superinfection may cause acute viral syndrome, and transmission of drug-resistant strains may reduce options for future ART,(59,60) suggesting a role for continued vigilance and safer-sex decision making by HIV-infected individuals even when both partners are infected.(56)
Risk Associated with Specific Sexual Practices
Epidemiologic investigations of HIV transmission provide substantial evidence that some sexual practices are associated with a high risk of HIV transmission, whereas others are not.
Heterosexual intercourse is presumed to be the most common mode of HIV infection worldwide. Studies of male-to-female and female-to-male transmission provide strong epidemiologic evidence that heterosexual transmission of HIV does occur via penile-vaginal intercourse.(31-41) Vaginal sex during menstruation may increase the risk of transmission from an infected female to an uninfected male,(40) but probably does not increase the risk of transmission from an infected male to an uninfected female.(43,55,56)
The efficiency of heterosexual transmission of HIV and per-act risk of infection are the subjects of debate in the epidemiologic literature. Early epidemiologic studies on heterosexual transmission in Western countries established that male-to-female transmission in the vagina was significan
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