It's absolutely alright!
Just because your boyfriend is convinced of something... well, it doesn't make it so. He's incorrect about lubricated condoms. There's only a little lubricant on the condom, and it's not enough to replace what you'd use from a tube (or bottle!). As a sex ed organisation, we'd always suggest having some lube in a tube or bottle around whenever you're having any kind of sex: most people
do need a little to make sex comfortable and to make sure that a condom doesn't break, and too, nearly always, extra lube only makes sex feel better. So, added lube: win all round.
When used correctly (so, including adding a small dab of lube
), condoms are a reliable method of contraception, and breakages are rare. It depends on how confident you feel about using them as a method, and how much protection from pregnancy you want. Over one year of use, condoms are 86% effective in typical use, 98% in perfect use. For people who strongly don't want to become pregnant, we suggest using two methods, because that makes the chance of pregnancy very tiny indeed. We have more info in
The Buddy System: Effectiveness Rates for Backing Up Your Birth Control With a Second Method
While we're talking about that, though, I have to say that I'd advise holding off on further sex with someone who's being, well, resistant at best, to the things you're saying you want and need. His actions aren't giving him a glowing endorsement! His behaviour is suggesting that he's, at best, not good at taking on board and acting on what you want and need, and that's always a negative in a sexual partner. Things like intimate sexual entry, pregnancy risk, STI risk - they're not trifling things, and it's better to only head into them with someone who already has a proven track record of immediately supporting and respecting us. For your physical and mental well-being, I'd suggest holding off unless and until there's a long-term change in his behaviour. (More related to this in your newer thread.)
Saliva is pretty rubbish as a lubricant: it dries up and evaporates within a few seconds, so it doesn't work very well. We'd not class it as a lubriant
It's certainly no substitute for actual lube in a tube! The usual information about STI transmission, and other bacteria and virus transmission, applies to saliva contact with genitals. We wouldn't describe it as unsanitary, we'd simply suggest that people should know what kinds of transmission risk may be involved with the activities they've chosen, and do what they can to reduce those risks. What matters here, though, is how
you feel about it with your own body and life, and you're being clear that you don't like the idea of saliva on genitals. That's really the end of the matter: if you don't want something, if you're not comfortable with something, it's off the table. Simple as that.
There should never be a need to "convince" a partner of
anything when we're talking about sex. Your saying it should be enough.
Because you (don't) want it is reason enough. Too, the kind of sex you're talking about is about entry into
your body. That's a very personal thing, and for anyone else - someone whose body
isn't going to be entered in that way - to be suggesting what you will and won't need is, in my opinion, a bit clueless and beyond. We'd be happy to talk with you further about your boyfriend in this, but this issue seems clearly part of the issue you've raised in your newer thread; so, for now, it seems to make more sense to get to the heart of the overall matter in that thread, and then we and you will have a much better idea of how to handle this particular part. Is that okay?