The Only Condom Guide You'll Ever Need

November 15, 2021

Condom

 Condoms come in all shapes and sizes. They are a great way to protect against STDs or even just protect your health during sex. But, when choosing one for your marriage, do you have to settle for something that’s not optimal, or do you have to make the best choice available? The answer may surprise you.

Condoms are a good way to protect your health during sex.


But you don’t need one if you also want to prevent STDs. If you’re worried that you might have an STD, there are a lot of effective ways to protect yourself, and it’s not a question of “if” you use a condom. It’s a question of “when” you use a condom.


Condoms are one of the most important and common ways to protect you during sex. Even though they are not essential, they are nevertheless very helpful. According to the CDC, condoms can stop the transmission of STDs, such as gonorrhea, chlamydia, and syphilis, by 95 percent. This is why condoms are so important for preventing disease.


So not only are condoms essential but so is a good deal of information on where to get condoms.


The CDC advises you to use condoms with a reliable source (like a clinic) where the condoms are tested and tested correctly each time so that you can be certain of the quality.


Condom


The condom guide is definitely one of the most helpful and I find it really interesting to follow the advice. While condoms can prevent HIV, they don't prevent all STDs. Instead, condoms are used in conjunction with other methods to prevent STDs. For example, condoms can be used as a barrier to prevent an STI such as chlamydia.


As a woman, I have to say that I've never used a condom.


I don't like to think about it, I just don't want to think about it. When I do use a condom I definitely don't think about it, I just do it. And this is partly because I don't like the look of condoms. I don't like the big, smooth, red ones that are almost always available in any pharmacy or drugstore.


Condoms are also a great way to protect yourself from the most common STI, HIV. I remember back before I even understood what an STI was. I had a friend with HIV who would get so sick of having to take her meds that she threw up in the shower and refused to have sex with anyone. For me, this was a very sad moment, and I remember thinking to myself how I could just buy a condom and use it to protect myself against a really serious STI.


In the mid-1990s condoms were not so easy to obtain.


While there were a lot of sex shops, the ones selling condoms were all over the place. My college was in a small town where all the major shopping malls were located. I remember one of them had an excellent condom display. It was at the bottom of the escalator. I thought it must be some type of joke, but I went in and found it and took one out.



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