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5 answers

wear a condom....

2006-08-05 02:58:29 · answer #1 · answered by cheer8ko 4 · 0 0

All you take a good shower before having sex that is clean sex

2006-08-05 09:59:11 · answer #2 · answered by boy_jam_arch 6 · 0 0

take bath before and after sex.

2006-08-05 10:03:18 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Joy of Safety

By M. Sara Rosenthal, PhD
WebMD Medical Reference from "The Gynecological Sourcebook"

Preventing Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs)

THERE'S A DIFFERENCE between preventing sexually transmitted diseases and preventing pregnancy. Preventing STDs involves practicing safer sex and using prophylactic products, such as condoms. Preventing pregnancy does not necessarily mean preventing infection. Common sexual activities include vaginal intercourse, oral sex (fellatio and cunnilingus), deep kissing (French or wet kissing), mutual masturbation (or petting), masturbation, hugging, body rubbing, and massage. Sex toys (dildos, vibrators, flavored gels) are also part of normal sexual activity. This chapter discusses how to remain safe to avoid the spread of STDs.

What Is Safer Sex?
Safer sex means that you are taking necessary precautions to prevent acquiring a sexually transmitted disease, such as chlamydia or HIV. Exchanging blood, semen, vaginal secretions, or breast milk with someone else can infect you with an STD. While few will go to all lengths to protect themselves, adopting a slowed-down sexual repertoire with partners you don't know very well can work wonders. Here's a list of what is safest (with the least safe listed last):

French kissing (bleeding gums can be dangerous, however)
Oral sex using a latex barrier (this involves covering a woman with a latex barrier, such as a dental dam, a latex condom or latex glove cut open, or nonmicrowavable plastic wrap, or performing oral sex on a man who wears a condom)
Genital stimulation using latex gloves instead of bare fingers
Sharing sex toys with a latex barrier
Genital stimulation with no latex barrier
Oral sex with no latex barrier
Sharing sex toys without a latex barrier
Vaginal intercourse with a condom
Anal intercourse with a condom (anal intercourse is high-risk behavior)
Unprotected vaginal intercourse
Unprotected anal intercourse
There are good romantic substitutes for sexual activity:

Hugging: Go to different locations: hug in water, rain, moonlight, etc.
Full body massage: Light some candles and use aromatherapy to enhance romance!
Shared masturbation: This can be very erotic.
Grinding (or "outercourse"): This is erotic rubbing while fully clothed.
Bathing or showering: Taking a bath or shower together can be very arousing.
Sex toys: Vibrators and dildos are very enjoyable. Use condoms on the sex toys to stay safe.
Dry kissing: Kissing without using the tongue is safe. Use your tongue elsewhere—earlobes, toes, fingers—as long as there are no cuts, scratches, or sores.
Dancing: Slow dance together in private or public.
When Is Unprotected Sex Safe?
Presuming no other high-risk factors, if both you and your partner have been tested for HIV infection, are both negative, and are practicing mutual monogamy, then it is safe to resume normal sexual activity without condoms or other latex barriers, such as dental dams. However, if you're not planning to get pregnant, you'll need to use effective contraception anyway (discussed later in this chapter).

If you and your partner are mutually monogamous and have been together since before 1977, you don't have to be tested for HIV infection and can engage in normal sexual activity without condoms. (The year 1977 is considered to mark the beginning of the HIV epidemic in the United States.)

The problem, of course, is that partners lie about monogamy and may stray without your knowledge, or vice versa. It's common for unfaithful spouses to infect their monogamous partners. If you don't trust your partner, then don't have sex without using condoms. Use safer sex to "test" the boundaries of your relationship by getting to know each other better and uncovering common values, history, and so on. The outcome may prove beneficial for both of you. Seeking counseling may also be an option if you're not sure what to do.

All About Condoms
Mechanical barriers that cover the penis have been used for centuries for protection against both pregnancy and infection, for decoration, and occasionally to produce penile or vaginal stimulation. Such practices can be traced to 1350 B.C., when Egyptian men wore decorative sheaths over their penises. The Italian anatomist Fallopius described the use of linen sheaths in 1564. Protective devices from animal intestines soon followed. There was an actual Dr. Condom (or Conton, according to some sources), who, as physician to King Charles II (1630–85), designed a condom for him. It was not until the eighteenth century, however, that penile sheaths were given the name condoms and became popular forms of "protection from venereal disease and numerous bastard offspring." Casanova (1725–98) was among the first to popularize the condom as a contraceptive, but he was also aware of the protective effect of condoms against sexually transmitted infections. When rubber latex was invented in the 1840s, condoms became mass-produced and were coined rubbers.

Ironically, the early condoms were sold primarily as prophylactics—in other words, as devices to protect against disease. They were available in brothels as well as drugstores, where they were known in slang terms as French letters or capotes. They were also sold in barbershops and other places men frequented. But the quality latex condoms sold today would not become available for several more decades.

2006-08-05 10:04:21 · answer #4 · answered by Lady Geo 5 · 0 0

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHA (clean sex)hahahahaahaha

2006-08-05 10:01:36 · answer #5 · answered by Michael Smith 1 · 0 0

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