A woman who was born with two vaginas has revealed that most men she's slept with can hardly tell.
Annie Charlotte, from the UK, was diagnosed with uterus didelphys as a 16-year-old. The rare health condition means she has two vaginas, two uteruses, and two cervixes.
Now 25 years old, Annie has launched a successful OnlyFans career and claims she's had sex with hundreds of men - but very few have noticed her double vagina.
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She told the Daily Star: "My external stuff is all the same. I have one labia, and then it opens up into two separate vaginas internally, and you have to properly stretch it back to see it."
She added: "I can obviously feel it on myself, and I have asked guys in the past after we've had sex if they could feel it, but they normally don't notice it."
In fact, she claims that 99.9 percent of men she has sex with don't realise she have two vaginas, according to the Daily Mirror.
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Annie opened up: "I've had experiences where I've told [men]: 'By the way I have two vaginas' and they're like, 'What?' There have been times where I've been laid on my bed with my legs in the air as they inspected me."
The Brit says she's been told her second vagina is 'tighter' because it's 'half the size of a normal vagina,' which has prompted men to be 'possessive' about sex with her in the past.
She explained: "My right one is bigger and more dominant than the left, so when I have sex, most of the time it goes in the right.
"Guys get really possessive and weird about it when they hear the left ones tighter and smaller, and they get desperate to try [it], even when I tell them the right feels better."
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The condition isn't without its issues, either, with certain positions proving painful.
Annie explained: "People have come in and hit the wall and, if someone's on top, I do have to angle myself a certain way because otherwise it can be uncomfortable."
Health professionals 'don't seem to know what on earth is going on,' either, Annie claims.
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The content creator said she was told she may not be able to give birth to her anatomy, but has been given conflicting advice.
Annie added: "I was either told that I wouldn't be able to carry a baby to full-term, so I'd have premature babies, or I'd have multiple miscarriages.
"When I was 16, a nurse told me that I was infertile straight away without any diagnosis from a gynecologist."
A gynaecologist told her she'd always have to have c-sections and would 'never be able to give birth.' Annie added: "But then I spoke to another person about it, and they were like 'Nah, you'll be able to, but you'll have to have loads of miscarriages to open up your vaginas'. The medical advice always changes - they just don't really seem to know what on earth is going on."
Topics: Health, OnlyFans, Sex and Relationships, UK News