pain with penetration

I mentioned that I would write a post about pain with penetration. Here it is.

There are a number of reasons people with vaginas – let’s call them “women” for now – might experience pain with vaginal penetration:

1. Most commonly, you’ll experience pain because of lack of lubrication, resulting in friction. Not enough foreplay or a lack of correlation between mental arousal and physiological arousal or hormonal changes can all result in not enough lube, and if you’re engaged in penetration for a long time, your body just can’t produce enough lube to prevent friction and therefore tearing and irritation. Solution: at least 20 minutes of highly arousing foreplay, plus water- or silicone-based lube. Possibly oil-based, and possibly-glycerin based, depending on various health issues. As I say, this is the most common reason for pain with penetration, so if you’re experiencing pain, start here. If this doesn’t help, consider the other reasons.

2. Infection is an underrated cause of pain with penetration. Either a urinary tract or reproductive tract infection can cause pain, and may have no other symptoms. If your arousal is good and you’re using lube and still have pain, check with a doc re: infection.

3. Contraction of the pubococcygeal muscle (PC muscle, pelvic floor muscle, or Kegel muscle) can result in pain with penetration. It’s the sphincter of muscle around the mouth of the vagina. If you’re tense, nervous, anxious, stressed, fearful, unsure, or even just inexperienced, the PC muscle may be tensed up, causing pain when you attempt intercourse; it may be so tensed up that you can’t even accomplish penetration (vaginismus). Or it may simply be tense and you have to take some deep breaths and allow it to relax with penetration.

4. The hymen stretching or tearing can cause pain. These days people who’ve never had intercourse might not have a hymen, due to, gosh, anything! Tampons, masturbation, sports, lots of things. A small number of people have problematic hymens – septate, microperforate, or simply a bit thicker and more resistant than average. If you think this might be you, see your ob-gyn.

5. Pain-related sexual dysfunction like dyspareunia or vulvodynia, are fairly rare, affecting (depending who you ask and which diagnosis you’re assessing) somewhere between .0005% to 12%. If you have pain with the lightest of contact (not just with penetration) on your vulva, introitus, vestibule, or clitoris, see a doc.

As you can see, the answer to pain with intercourse is either “lube and foreplay; really want penetration more before you try it” or “see your doctor.” Only when a medical professional actually looks at (and usually also touches) your genitals can you find out for sure what’s up.

A more difficult question is: why would someone have vulvovaginal pain and NOT see their doctor? If you have pain your elbow every time you threw a softball, so intense that you had to stop playing the game, you’d see a doc, right? If your stomach hurt so badly after every meal that you had stopped eating, you would seek medical attention, yes?

So why, if your genitals hurt with penetration, often so much that you were disinclined to have sex, would you not mention this to a ladyparts medical provider? Because you shouldn’t be wanting sex anyway, and the pain is god’s way of telling you that? Because a gynecologist is going to judge your genitals…?

I wish the medical community could get their shit together; it would make my life as an educator MUCH easier, because then I could tell people, “Ah, for that problem, what with your medical provider,” without adding the caveats. I know – I mean, I KNOW – that the medical community is not reliably sex positive. So you have to advocate for yourself, ask questions, even educate the provider about talking in a sex positive way to patients. But you also have to GO.

13 Responses to pain with penetration

  1. One of my favorite GYNs (she’s actually an NP) said to me (after we ruled out a whole lot of infection possibilities for penetration pain), “well, sometimes they’re just REALLY BIG, so you just keep adding lube and don’t let him in until you’re good and ready.” This in small college town Texas where more often than not you get a lecture before they’ll provide you birth control (but what would your parents say? don’t you think you should tell them? Um, no, I don’t).

  2. I wish to throw another idea in the pot which is probably most helpful for ladies in category 3. Nobody, when learning to lift weights, would immediately go from doing reps with 2lb to 20lb, but most of us try to do it with sex. One finger to penis-sized is a big jump. The solution, when someone finally suggested it to me, was simple: visit your helpful sex shop and buy some toys that are in between a finger and his penis. Practice with them yourself, to help stretch the muscles. Teach him how to use them on you before he uses his penis. Hopefully he’ll soon notice that the extra warmup time is rewarded with more penetration time and more ability to enjoy different angles and positions.

    I especially wish that someone had suggested this brilliant little tactic to me about 10 years before I first heard it. I wasted a lot of years where I could have been having lovely sex on a bunch of painful almost-firsts, getting scareder each time I had to back down because it hurt too much.

  3. In my case, as with many of my friends, it is a matter of not having health insurance. Office visits in this area run in the neighborhood of $150, and even higher for an initial visit. Add that to the cost of any tests and then a prescription or two, and for those of us who have to pay out of pocket it is well beyond our means. Thanks to the current political climate, I doubt that is going to change.

    I truly appreciate your blog with all the wonderful and helpful information you offer. Thank you.

  4. Another possible cause is endometriosis. I even had to give up using tampons in my early twenties because it was just too painful to leave them in for more than a few minutes. I finally got diagnosed and had surgery in my late twenties. After the surgery, the ob-gyn told me I shouldn’t expect to have any more rectal pain, either. I gave him a “how did you KNOW?” look, because that was one symptom I had been too embarrassed to mention to him. He told me he saw (and removed) the growths, so he knew I had to have been having pain there, too.

  5. Yes, lube! That is the one thing that helped me out the most, coupled with a “don’t even touch my vagina without an invitation” rule. There are so many other body parts that can be played with first.

    Also, thanks for including us non-women. :)

  6. Hey Emily,

    I was wondering if you have any recommendations on books, literature, websites or anything on this subject? I’ve been struggling with this problem for years which has led to all kinds of sexual hang-ups (surprisingly, if you expect pain and anxiety in relation to sex, you become less inclined to partake. Very shocking, I know. I’m surprised my own self.)

    The thing is, I know where to go to start seeking medical attention, but I just can’t seem to work up the courage, and there are so few people and spaces that seem to talk about this, I guess I’d just like to know more before I go in. I’ve been shot down by ob-gyns before who has been dismissive or unhelpful, and it just really gets you down. I really appreciate you posting about these kind of troubles.

    • I know your comment was about a year ago, but there’s a good chance you’ve avoided sex for that long if the problem is vaginismus. There are lots of books listed on the yahoo groups website in the group called “vaginismus.” Just search in the messages thing. Most of the have the word “dysparenua” or something in the title if you’d rather just google them.

  7. …this makes me wonder if there’s something wrong with me or the way I have sex.

    For me penetration usually hurts at first… I think the reason is a combination of his size and positioning, (I’m angled strangely), but I might have a chronic injury because there’s also usually a little bit of blood.

    I enjoy a little pain during as long as I don’t hurt much after.

    • Medical stuff has been ruled out unless my doctors have been incompetent.

    • The blood could be from a polyp that happens to be in a spot where it gets rubbed or hit during sex. Next time you see a gynecologist, ask them to take a look. One of mine asked me whether I ever bled during sex, after finding one.

      Why not start in a position you know works in the beginning, let your muscles loosen up, and then start experimenting? You might also want to consider a stage or two of stretching, as mentioned in my previous comment. The warmup might help you be comfortable with more angles, tugging, and so on.

  8. I always hurt. Even during foreplay, any stimulation will make me sore. Sometimes it goes from just sore to pain but the doctors seen me for everything and said nothing’s wrong. Once I stopped freaking out since there’s nothing really wrong with me, if i don’t ‘ache for someone’ in my mind, they suck :) Usually I’m right haha if they can’t make me ache without laying a finger on (or in!) me, then they usually turn out to be “sex, by definition”. Oh well.

  9. ordinaryovershare, possibly – very possibly – could be connective tissue disorder? Causes tearing of the skin among other things, including joint and muscle pain. Or just the effects of the Pill, which over time can cause vaginal skin to thin.

  10. Pingback: break your hymen: re-redux | Emily Nagoski :: sex nerd ::

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