153 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
153 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
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Sources say: A Girl's Guide To Condoms
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-- by Mimi Coucher
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WARNING: Boys cannot read this. If you are a boy and are reading this,
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stop immediately. The following article is chock-full of highly intimate girl
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secrets that will be 10 times more embarrassing than any TV commercial for
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feminine-hygiene products you've ever seen. So quit it. I mean it. You'll
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be sorry.
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We've Come A Long Way...
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We thought we were pretty darn smart, all right. In the '60s we
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became liberated and bravely marched into our neighborhood women's-health
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collective, had our blood tested and our bodies examined, and marched out
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armed with a pink carousel of little tablets and a new attitude. We related
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to our sex partners, we discovered the joys of uninhibited physical thrills,
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we took our pills regularly. In the '70s we were sorry for it and went en
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masse to our gynecologists to be fitted for diaphragms. We carried
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them everywhere, became geniuses of delicate timing. We tried IUDs, flirted
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with cervical caps worn at jaunty angles. We researched and discussed the
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issues with candor and aplomb; ask any high-spirited modern girl and she'll
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tell you all about the G-spot, male menopause, the Hite report, impotence,
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arousal, pregnancy, the Kama Sutra, birth control.
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Ready for the '80s? Hell, we thought we were ready for anything.
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Anything but this. No woman, not even the most avid reader of sex manuals
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or sophisticated connoisseur of amour, is prepared for the experience of
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walking to the corner drugstore and asking the freckle-faced adolescent
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behind the counter for a package of... condoms.
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OLD FACT: Condoms aren't sexy. Neither are rubbers, sheaths,
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prophylactics, Coney Island white fish, raincoats, skins, safes, rubber
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booties, socks. The package says, "Sold for the prevention of venereal
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disease." The boys say, Sold for the prevention of love. Oft compared to
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taking a bath with socks on, the condom ritual was the classic bane to the
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romantic advances of bumbling '50s teens.
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NEW FACT: Unless you can account for all the blood transfusions,
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intravenous activities, and sexual escapades of your partner and your
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partner's partners, you'd best get used to the idea, right now. "Say," you
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blink innocently, "shouldn't the boy be taking some responsibility for this
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dangerous transaction?" Yes, of course. But I wouldn't count on it. You
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know how they are. And here's a horrifying thought: not only are you
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protecting yourself against your partner, you're protecting your partner
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against *you*.
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Oh, cheer up. It beats abstinence.
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Buy Now, Lay Later
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Don't even pretend for one minute that you're never going to do "it"
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again. You will. So brace yourself for the new shopping experience of the
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'80s.
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First take: you enter a quiet, out-of-the-way drugstore that has a
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display of walkers and bedpans in the window. Confident that no one you
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know will ever spot you here, you stride over to the kindly old pharmacist
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at the back of the store. "Excuse me," you venture a little shakily.
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"Where are your rubbers?" You are gently guided to a Totes display in Aisle
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Three. To save face, you buy a pair of men's size 11s and ditch them in a
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corner trash can, determined to do better next time.
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Second take: the next store you choose is a little larger, and
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crowded. But you can't find the condoms anywhere. There is a line at the
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cash register. You stand in it, patiently, rehearsing your lines. You
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arrive. "Excuse me," you politely whisper to the surly loud-mouthed Iranian
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behind the counter, "where are your prophylactics?"
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"Right here," he shouts. "What kind ya want?"
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"Uh, Trojans, I guess."
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"Lubricated or nonlubricated?" he bellows. "Ya want ribs? We got
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the ribs kinds." By this time, the entire store is involved in the drama,
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the crowd behind you is silently hanging on your every word, and you're sure
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that that's your third-grade teacher who just walked in. "Oh, uh, skip it,
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thanks. I'll just tell my little brother that he'll have to buy his own."
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Don't be discouraged. Buying condoms is a tough job, but somebody's
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got to do it. And here's a heartening fact that I bet even *you* didn't
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know, Ms. Modern: marketing tests prove that women buy more condoms than men
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do, and have for years. That's why, ever since the late '70s, condom
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packages have featured air-brushed photos of couples holding hands at
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sunset. They thought we'd like that. We don't, but it will have to do till
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pictures of Mick Jagger, Mel Gibson, or beautiful shoes come along.
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Condoms Demystified
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There are basically three kinds of condoms: unlubricated latex,
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lubricated latex, and lambskin. The lambskins are no good because they
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haven't been proven to be a barrier to infection. Anyway, they're really
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made of lambies and that makes us sad, especially around Easter time. (The
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real reason we don't like them is that they actually smell like lamb. One
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is tempted to lubricate them with mint jelly.)
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There are variations on the basic latex condoms. Some condoms are
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prelubricated, with spermicidal jelly, even. Others are not. Strictly
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B.Y.O.K.Y.
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The strangest variation by far is the ribbed latex condom. Why are
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these condoms ribbed? This is supposed to be stimulating? Should one
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attempt to play washboard tunes on it? This is just part of a big problem
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with condoms. Condoms were, and are, designed by men.
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If Girls Designed Condoms...
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What a wonderful world it would be. Skip the ribbing, skip the
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lube. If women designed condoms there is no question that they would be
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padded. "But size doesn't matter!" comes a chorus of voices. (The loudest
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voices come from boys who are peeking. Stop that right now. Turn to the
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sports page immediately.) Sure *length* doesn't matter. But give any girl
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a small dose of truth serum and ask her about width. Admit it. If padded
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condoms were placed on the market, hordes of screaming women would storm
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their local druggists and dash out with tote bags full. Unfortunately, it
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wouldn't work. After all, there is that ticklish issue of boy sensitivity,
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which we can't overlook, even if we occasionally want to. Padded condoms
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would rob boys of the skin-to-skin sensation they already claim condoms
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rob them of. And we can't have that.
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No, we modern women, being kind and sensitive lovers, would design
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whisper-soft condoms, completely transparent and microscopically thin. The
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paisley, rainbow, and floral-print condoms we designed would be strictly
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novelty items, kept for special occasions only. Ditto the condoms with
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cute sayings: "Hang in there, baby, Friday's coming"; "My girlfriend went
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to Florida and all I got was this lousy condom"; and the classic "I'm with
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stupid" (arrow pointing back toward the boy). Other specialty items would
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include the male-ego condom, which, like black olives, come in three sizes:
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jumbo, colossal, and humongous. Naughty subversives would enjoy the Karen
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Finley assortment, colorful, decorative condoms that turn ordinary penises
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into bananas, hotdogs, yams, and more.
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But I digress. The best place to buy condoms is your local massive
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drugstore that has them on display, self-serve, just like corn pads or
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athlete's foot spray.
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So go shopping. Dress cool, hold your head high, read labels, make
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your selection. Be assured that most popular brands come with little
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instruction booklets much like the ones found in boxes of Tampax (uh oh --
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don't mix them up!). While at the drugstore, be sure to purchase at least
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one of the following items: Tickle anti-perspirant, Ban Roll-on, or any of
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the Calvin Klein line of men's grooming aids. You'll need these for
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important condom experiments at home.
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At home, be alone. Light candles. Play inspiring music; any
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record by Rick James will do. Remove one of the condoms from its packet.
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Examine it carefully. Then put it to work. Experiment with your slippery
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new friends; whip those sons-of-gummi-worms into shape. Recruit those
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deodorant bottles and practice, practice, practice.
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And how about some new nicknames for the old standbys? Love skins.
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Slicks. Wet suits. Silk stockings. Eight-by-two glossies.
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Soon enough, you'll be happy and relaxed, perfectly in control of
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those silly little slips o' sin. But wait. Something's missing. Oh yes,
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the hard part. I mean the good part. I mean, both.
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The Condomed Man
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It is far, far easier to start them on condoms when the
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relationship is young. In fact, the condom is a terrific tool of seduction
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when you're ready to make the leap between the sheets. Call that someone
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on the phone and say to him, casual-like, "I just bought a new kind of condom
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and I'm dying to try it out... want to come over?" Or when out on the town
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with your paramour, and the clock on the clubhouse wall says thump thump
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thump, push that hunk against the wall and growl, "Listen, buddy. I've got
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a condom in my pocket and I'm not afraid to use it. We're going home."
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Welcome To The Safety Patrol
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Before you know it, you'll be a veritable connoisseur of condoms.
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You'll allow them to drop casually out of your purse in front of attractive
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men at cocktail parties. You'll dispense them to friends, give lessons,
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perhaps even roll your own. "Oh, handsome boyfriend," you'll soon sigh,
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"I've always wanted to see you in rubber."
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And he won't mind one bit.
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