
After intercourse semen drips out of my vagina. What can I do to prevent
this? At the tip of your vagina is the cervix,
which has a tiny hole in the middle through which menstruation
blood and semen can
pass. But it’s so small that only the fastest sperm will enter the womb.
Most of the semen remains behind in your vagina.
This leaks out afterwards. Sometimes as soon as you get up, but it can also leak
out hours later. When you don’t like this feeling you can insert a tampon
after
intercourse
and take it out one or two hours later. By then it has absorbed most of the semen.
But make sure you remove it, otherwise you run the risk of getting a vaginal
infection or TSS.
Another possibility is using a condom,
which will collect the semen. Or you can ask your lover to withdraw his penis
just before he comes, letting the semen end up on your belly (or somewhere else),
cleaning it up afterwards with some paper.