Page 1 of 1

Pregnancy risk? Help.

Posted: Sat May 28, 2016 11:00 pm
by spicey
I am 17 days late from my period. My last period was April 13 but according to my record, I started to have egg white discharge aroung May 9-14. I believe I was still fertile on May 14, that was the time we had sex. It was only one time and we were using condom plus pull out method. However, he ejaculated on my stomach and somewhere to my mons pubis. He was lying on top of my while gliding his penis on my stomach (i am sorry if this is too much detailed). Is there a possibility that I would get pregnant on this? He never put it inside his penis inside my vagina without a condom. My fear was what if his ejaculation dripped down and met with my wet discharges during the intercouse. Right after the intercourse, I went to the bathroom and have a shower. Was there a possibility?

I took pregnancy test on my 10th day 13th 14th day delayed and all are negative. My boyfriend keeps on telling me that nothing will happen because he ejaculated on top of me. Is my delayed period due to my anxiety? my summer environment? because I am from the other city. My change of daily routine?

Usually I am 12-13 days delayed and this is so far my longest delayed of my life. I am 23 years old btw.

Re: Pregnancy risk? Help.

Posted: Sun May 29, 2016 9:02 am
by Heather
We will not answer ANY questions about pregnancy fear or anxiety in our direct services from users who are not pregnant or who are not or have not otherwise been directly involved with an actual pregnancy.

If you are seeing this text, and your thread is locked, it is because you have posted this kind of question.

We CAN and WILL talk about things like:
• choosing and using a method or methods of contraception for any future sexual activity
• creating your own sexual limits and boundaries based on your needs and/or presenting them to any partners
• making sexual choices that suit your own needs, abilities and limitations, including your own readiness for certain possible risks
• help locating or using emergency contraception if and when you have had a pregnancy risk
• discussing options with a real, existing pregnancy, and help finding and accessing those options, such as abortion services and pre-natal care, or discussing feelings or concerns about a past pregnancy
• help with anxiety like locating mental health services, sound self-help or asking for support from friends or family

For help dealing with a scare (including what poses a risk and your next steps based on your unique situation), you may use our tool on site built for this purpose: The Pregnancy Panic Companion.
For help with anxiety, click here.
For related help and information at Scarleteen, click here.
If you would like more information about this policy, click here.