Everyone needs a good embarrassing story to pull out at the right moment – but spending a night in the hospital while doctors remove an unconventional item from your vagina is not one of them.

A scenario best avoided at all costs, certain items can cause serious health issues and could be harder to remove than they initially appeared.

If you're planning on some you-time, make sure you use one of the millions of safe, certified products available online and in adult stores.

Read on for a list of items that should never, under any circumstances, find their way into your vagina.

What should you never put in your vagina?

Avoid these at all costs…

Tea tree oil

Tee tree oil can cause chemical burns and could well cause damage to the vagina.

Any kind of oil being used as a lubricant needs to have a neutral pH and be of very high quality. So, if you're looking for a safe lubricant your best bet is to use proper sex lubricant from a certified producer.

Douches

Using a douche to clean can cause an imbalance of the bacteria usually found in a vagina and could lead to infection.

Conditions called pelvic inflammatory disease and bacterial vaginosis are both commonly linked to douching.

Chocolate syrup

Anything with sugar can change the bacteria in your vagina and could well lead to a yeast infection, irritate the skin or both.

The outcome of this then is likely to be nasty irritation or an infection, so it's best avoided at all costs.

Whipped cream

  • A Place in the Sun fans baffled as couple wants 'more English' Greek home

The same sugar issue applies once again here, but just add dairy.

While it may be a well-known sexual act to put whipped cream on your body, it is very important you make sure it doesn't find its way inside it.

This is, like syrup, is a great way to get an infection so make sure you avoid it.

Vaseline

Vaseline is a petroleum-based lubricant, while designated sex lubricants tend to be water-based.

Stick to water-based if you want to avoid any complications.

Fruits and vegetables

Most fruit and vegetables spend their time growing being repeatedly sprayed with pesticides so if one finds its way into your vagina there's a good chance it will be bringing its lovely bug killer with it.

If it's enough to kill a bug it's probably enough to cause some issues in the human body too.

You also run the risk of it breaking while inside which could lead to smaller fragments getting stuck and causing infection.

Anything that hasn't been cleaned properly

  • Danniella Westbrook is set for another surgery weeks after intensive care stint

The existence of purpose-built sex toys means people can enjoy whatever they want whenever they want it, but that's only as long as what they use is clean.

Sex toys that have been in other parts of the body, or someone else's, should always be washed first.

Even if they haven't it's still a good idea to give them a good wash before getting going.

Any sharp objects

This one really doesn't need much explanation. The skin in the vagina can, like any other bit of skin, be cut.

Cuts to the vagina could not only be incredibly painful but also get infected.

To make matters worse, the vagina can bleed huge amounts.

A hairbrush handle

  • Heartbreak as 'too young to die' mum-of-10 loses two-month battle with Covid

Things that get used every day are likely to gather dirt over time, with any nooks and crannies having the possibility to harbour a whole host of germs.

Alcohol-soaked tampons

It might seem like a funny way to get drunk, but it can cause damage to the vaginal mucus so alcohol-soaked tampons are best avoided.

Your mobile phone

The vibration may have an air of temptation, but your phone is one of the most unclean things in the home.

They go everywhere and are touched throughout the day, often regardless of the cleanliness of the holder's hands at the time.

This means that phones can harbour a huge number of germs and so, like the hairbrush, avoid them at all costs.

An electric toothbrush

Like a phone the same rules apply, and if you must use it, do so clitorally rather than penetrativly.

Source: Read Full Article