![]() Apparently Trustex Extra large is good if you’re bigger, and I’ve heard good things about Trojan Elexa but I’ve never tried them. If those aren’t good for you for whatever reason, you can try Beyond Seven, Kimono (regular or large), or Durex Extra Sensitive. Until then, however, you should use Crown Skin Less Skin condoms. ![]() My personal philosophy towards condoms is they are a necessary inconvenience until science develops the perfect contraception and we can start the second sexual revolution. I mean, if that’s your thing you can try them but I’ve never really looked into them myself. They’re worth a shot, but chances are you’ll say “that was pretty good, but next time I’d rather feel like I wasn’t fucking inside a garbage bag.” There are also apparently condoms that are designed to turn your dick into an insensitive pillar of man-flesh. So, then there comes the question what do you want out of a condom? There are some condoms out there designed to increase pleasure, with bumps, ridges and weird spiral parts at the top. But give the spermicidal lubricant a miss since it’s never been shown to reduce pregnancy, but has been shown to increase aids transmission (this goes for spermicidal condoms as well – see what the World Health Organization says.) There are 3 main brands: Natural Feel, Stimulating (my fav) and Ultra Sensitive. I guess their marketing is just off because so many people ask the same question They are like Trojans but contoured more dynamically from a womans perspective looking at how a females body relates to a condom. Using condoms in conjunction with the morning after pill probably results in far fewer embryonic deaths than the Pope-approved rhythm method – check it out.) Also, putting the condom on right and using water or silicon based lube will increase effectiveness. Elexa are Men condoms designed for womens bodies. (And don’t buy any pro-life bullshit about it. Some cool gynecologists will give you a prescription for the morning after pill beforehand so you can take it right when the condom breaks, maximizing its effectiveness. Given that, you may as well use whatever as long as you plan for potential failure. What you do know is that the safety statistics for all condoms do apply to any FDA approved condom. Unfortunately, there is no way in hell you’re ever going to get any sort of good answer on which condom is the safest because the FDA and condom marketing manage to disguise any sort of solid information on that matter. Always, though, the question still applies – what is the best condom to use?Ī reasonable first concern would be safety. But at some point in his or her sexual career, nearly everyone has to use them at least a few times. You sort of love them and sort of hate them.
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