Condoms.
Risk rate is VERY low when properly in place and checked, as it is with a few other methods....but remember that nothing artificial will protect you 100.0%. There's pretty much ALWAYS a risk of pregnancy, even if that calculated risk is very small.
Lol. Job changes and I've moved. My job now frowns upon freestyling on internets. I miss it though. So much has happened in the last few years. Geez... 
Oh and Twitter and "no phone time" (wifey, not wife, her rules) take up the rest of my time lol...

Oh and Twitter and "no phone time" (wifey, not wife, her rules) take up the rest of my time lol...
takin care of Business in
iTrader: (5)
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 30,994
Likes: 4,733
From: Kansas City, MO
gotta admit MAGNUM is the shiznitz....
i am hung average + as well and none of the condoms did it right....either i had to switch them in the middle or something or the other...they never failed to ruin the mood....and i tried everything.....
when i switched to magnums i never turned back....and i was like "what the heck" lemme try magnum XL, am hung well....nah it didnt work out as well as the magnums did....
i am hung average + as well and none of the condoms did it right....either i had to switch them in the middle or something or the other...they never failed to ruin the mood....and i tried everything.....
when i switched to magnums i never turned back....and i was like "what the heck" lemme try magnum XL, am hung well....nah it didnt work out as well as the magnums did....
^ Well, chances are VERY slim she'll get pregnant if it's properly in place and replaced when needed....but as I said, NOTHING is 100% aside from not sleeping together. So even if chances are 1 in 100 people....there's that 1 person for a reason.
a semi permanent condom for the ladies.
i think you can either get one for 5 years or 10.
i think you can either get one for 5 years or 10.
Originally Posted by wiki
The intrauterine device (IUD) is a form of birth control; it is an object, placed in the uterus, to prevent pregnancy.[1] Among modern IUDs, the two types available are copper-containing devices, and a hormone-containing device that releases a progestogen. Currently, there are over 10 different kinds of copper IUDs available in different parts of the world, and there is one hormonal device, called Mirena.
takin care of Business in
iTrader: (5)
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 30,994
Likes: 4,733
From: Kansas City, MO
ohhhhhhhh
I thought it had something to do with the device....but no, its a safety measure for women and std's.
Originally Posted by some pregnancy website
The IUD does not protect against STDs. Couples having sex must always use condoms along with the IUD to protect against STDs.
One of the concerns with the IUD is that girls who have multiple partners and do not use condoms can be at greater risk for STDs, and there's the possibility that these diseases could develop into a pelvic infection. This is true, though, for all methods of birth control.
One of the concerns with the IUD is that girls who have multiple partners and do not use condoms can be at greater risk for STDs, and there's the possibility that these diseases could develop into a pelvic infection. This is true, though, for all methods of birth control.
I was just joking. Who the hell would use that term in casual conversation? 
I'm scared too. I'm definitely not ready to be a daddy and herpes is a friend you have for life. I'd never go raw.... Not while sober anyways. jk

I'm scared too. I'm definitely not ready to be a daddy and herpes is a friend you have for life. I'd never go raw.... Not while sober anyways. jk











but i did hear the nurse say, no multiple partners...