Infected... Lumps? In labia
Posted: Sun Aug 15, 2021 6:44 am
Hey! This is an issue I've had for many years and it's rather bewildering to me and I've never been able to find answers to it. It's hard to explain for something as simple as a Google search (or at least I've found it so) and I don't trust my family doctor, so... It's just kind of been something that I've let be.
I regularly get painful lumps full of pus and blood on my outer labia. They are rarely on the mons where there is hair, and most commonly are at the very edge, just inside that, although sometimes they are farther in getting towards the inner labia. I have them more often than not, sometimes multiple at once. When they get really bad, and/or are inconveniently placed, I have a hard time going about my life because walking is painful and wearing pants even more so. I have had to miss school because of them. Often I have to pop and drain them before they will go away, which is also painful and then I have an open sore on my labia until it heals up.
There's no way for them to be an STI. I started getting them when I had been not at all sexually active. No kissing yet, let alone anything involving genitals.
I have tried doing research on my own and the closest thing I can seem to find is infected sebaceous glands, but why on Earth would I get them so often? Is it just an unfortunate reality that I am so susceptible to them?
Thank you for your time! I love what you do here. It's the first time I've found sex-ed that makes me feel included as a transmasculine individual.
I regularly get painful lumps full of pus and blood on my outer labia. They are rarely on the mons where there is hair, and most commonly are at the very edge, just inside that, although sometimes they are farther in getting towards the inner labia. I have them more often than not, sometimes multiple at once. When they get really bad, and/or are inconveniently placed, I have a hard time going about my life because walking is painful and wearing pants even more so. I have had to miss school because of them. Often I have to pop and drain them before they will go away, which is also painful and then I have an open sore on my labia until it heals up.
There's no way for them to be an STI. I started getting them when I had been not at all sexually active. No kissing yet, let alone anything involving genitals.
I have tried doing research on my own and the closest thing I can seem to find is infected sebaceous glands, but why on Earth would I get them so often? Is it just an unfortunate reality that I am so susceptible to them?
Thank you for your time! I love what you do here. It's the first time I've found sex-ed that makes me feel included as a transmasculine individual.