It took me a really long time to find my vagina.
I got my period in Year 8, and didn’t manage to successfully insert a tampon until Year 11. Every month for four long years, I would head into the bathroom, hoist my foot up on the toilet, take a deep breath and try to figure out how to plug my flow.
I was at a total loss. As far as tampons were concerned, I was closed for business. I became convinced that I had some kind of deformity. Whatever the vaginal equivalent of webbed toes is – that’s what I thought I had. Or possibly no hole at all; just a smooth patch of skin between my legs, like Barbie.
And that was part of the problem – I DIDN’T EVEN KNOW THERE WAS MORE THAN ONE HOLE IN THE FRONT! Of course I was confused about what the hell went where; I thought the pee hole was the sex hole was the tampon hole was the only hole. I thought the back had a hole and the front had a hole and that was it, thank you very much.
Who knows how many times I tried to put a tampon up my urethra and not my vagina? My 14-year-old body probably closed up shop out of necessity so I wouldn’t hurt myself while I grimaced over the toilet with a hand mirror and my second box of Libras.
And apparently, I was not alone. I’m 28 now, and a study released this week by women’s health charity The Eve Appeal revealed that only half of the women aged 26 – 35 are able to correctly identify the vagina on a diagram of the female reproductive system. Only half!
Top Comments
did none of you get sex ed in school? i knew there were different holes at age 5, from reading books, and it was confirmed in sex ed in year 6 (10 years old). were you guys not paying attention.... or?
You are by far superior to all - knowing at age 5 congratulations!
I think the assumption that the urethra and the vagina are the same hole is common. In fact, in a number of other species (e.g. cattle and sheep) the urethral opening actually is inside the vaginal opening, on the vaginal wall. So not such a stupid assumption after all.