Ok, so me and my boyfriend had sex the other night and (this might be disgusting but it might help my situation if i describe what happened) i was on top, it was the first time we had ever had sex, and also the first time I'd had sex in 8 months. Well we were switching spots when he must have noticed the condom was gone. But i got off when i switched, and i also didn't notice any differance in texture i still felt rubber lets put it that way And now im freaking out b/c i tried getting the plan b pill but you have to have a prescription for it if your 17 or younger which is bs b/c im 17 and the pharmacy wouldnt sell it to me. and its been about 48 hrs and i kno it takes 72. So now i feel alil bit of cramping and i have to pee alot. What does that mean? Can I get pregnant? I'm not sure what to do.
In other words, at 17 you're legal and the store is just effing stupid. Get an 18 year old friend to buy it for you, you won't be breaking any laws. An equatable legal situation is you're 21 years old and the liquor store thinks you have to be 22. If you get another 21 year old friend to buy you the alcohol, neither you nor the friend is committing a crime. [ WittyUsernameHere's advice column | Ask WittyUsernameHere A Question ]
Razhie answered Sunday February 28 2010, 5:15 pm: If you are pregnant, it's damn near impossible that you'd be experiencing any pregnancy symptoms yet. You are probably just nervous and hyper aware.
You didn't explain enough here for me to say much else... (Did you notice the slipped condom immediately? Did he ejactulate inside you after the condom fell off? Before? Not at all? If he never ejactualted pregnancy is still possible, but rather unlikely)... If you are not able to go to a doctor or planned parenthood to get a prescription, then all you can do it wait until your next period, and take a pregnancy test if you are late. Pregnancy tests are not accurate until 3 to 7 days afer a missed period. [ Razhie's advice column | Ask Razhie A Question ]
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.