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cervix and cherry

Im confused on where things are located. Is your cherry placed before your cervix? If you try to put your hand in your vagina to figure it out can you go past your cherry or like behind it? I just want to know more about my body so i cam protect my reproductive system so things do not get damaged.
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Avatar universal
Well your cherry is a very thin layer of tissue. It can move but you can also go around it. You can stick your finger in your cervix which goes to your uteris sorry I am very tired so I am trying to spell correctly. On average a female it is 7 to 8 inches to your cervix. So not even a guy can hit it and damage it. But you will get that chance that a man is longer than the length to your cervix than it will hurt that means he has gone to far in. This is what I found to explain it more.
The hymen is a piece of tissue that, during development, blocks some or all of the entrance to the vagina. It exists in many species, and scientists have no real understanding of its purpose in humans.

Not every woman has the same type of hymen. In some women, the entrance to the vagina is mostly, or completely, unobstructed; in others, a condition called imperforate hymen can block the entire entrance so that not even menstrual blood can escape. There are, of course, variations in between.
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Avatar universal
Well your cherry is a very thin layer of tissue. It can move but you can also go around it. You can stick your finger in your cervix which goes to your uteris sorry I am very tired so I am trying to spell correctly. On average a female it is 7 to 8 inches to your cervix. So not even a guy can hit it and damage it. But you will get that chance that a man is longer than the length to your cervix than it will hurt that means he has gone to far in. This is what I found to explain it more.
The hymen is a piece of tissue that, during development, blocks some or all of the entrance to the vagina. It exists in many species, and scientists have no real understanding of its purpose in humans.

Not every woman has the same type of hymen. In some women, the entrance to the vagina is mostly, or completely, unobstructed; in others, a condition called imperforate hymen can block the entire entrance so that not even menstrual blood can escape. There are, of course, variations in between.
Helpful - 0
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