WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

934

Does it impact her health at all? I know that male snipping is bad for your health.

Does it impact her health at all? I know that male snipping is bad for your health.

(post is archived)

[–] 7 pts

Never a good idea to fuck with any organ highly controlled by hormones...

[–] 3 pts (edited )

Yea, unfortunately when my second son was born he had major issues with snoring, snorting and snuffling while he slept - hear him through two walls loud. I cant remember the name of the tissue atm (not tonsils), however the family Doctor recommended the 'usual procedure' that they do to toddlers/ infants with the same problem by surgical scrapping it off. Completely harmless and simple with zero long term effects - uhuh.

Few years later, When covid came round - i found out the tissue is actually part it's of the body's immune system and kinda first line of defense against foreign particulate/ bacteria etc entering orally/ nasally - like a little sponge that soaks up/ captures minute debris (not one single medical person informed me that it were - just that some kids are born with it too large and rather than wait until they grow into it as a teen or adult - it's totes ok to remove it now as it's not really needed for anything important) he suffers runny noses all the time with hay fever like allergies since they removed it - of course absolute cohencidence and completely unrelated - but if i knew then what i do now. Mthrfckers.

[–] 1 pt

Completely harmless and simple with zero long term effects - uhuh.

They meant zero long-term negative effects on their income.

[–] 7 pts

You should be asking God that question.

[–] 5 pts

Yeah it prevents her from having babies. Learn natural family planning. Treat your woman with respect and honor her femaleness. She in return will do like wise. Rediscover the marriage act and welcome children into your life if you are blessed with them.

[–] 5 pts

Is carving a jack-o-lantern bad for a pumpkins health?

[–] 1 pt

'But but but that one night of the year, i can look so coooool'

[–] 3 pts

It prevents eggs from dropping. Which means her body has to constantly absorb them. This creates a constant signal of cell death in the reproductive tract.

My personal observation is I've heard a lot of women with tied tubes report endometriosis. I have no idea if it's coincidence or simply a fact doctors love to ignore. Given I'm not running around asking women about their slit on up, I find it odd I've noticed a pattern. Does it mean anything? I dunno. Take it for what you will.

[–] 2 pts

Tubal ligation does not cause endo, HOWEVER endo occurs in something like 10-20% of women and can ONLY be confirmed via visual diagnosis. The reason tubal ligation so often leads to an endo diagnosis is that endo is common and it's otherwise rare to conduct exploratory surgery on a 20-40 year old woman's abdominal cavity.

Also, doctors are loath to conduct surgery to look for endo because half of them think it's just women exaggerating period symptoms (because, you know, crippling pain is normal amirite), and the other half are well aware "A hysterectomy or suffer" are the only real treatment options.

[–] 0 pt

An obgyn recently told me that severe cramps which cause dizziness and vomiting is normal, that i'll "get used to it eventually". It's been two decades for me now...still not used to it.

obgyn's don't care about female health unless it's cancer related, can be cured with birth control, or is affecting fertility. I'm starting to wonder if it's caused by women not sticking up for themselves and getting angry.

[–] 1 pt

It's a mix of low female assertiveness coupled with women being significantly higher in trait neuroticism. If a man goes to the doctor reporting dizziness and vomiting, its probably been going on for six months and he's dying. If a woman does the same, it's a toss-up between a severe medical issue and an anxiety driven nothing burger.

[–] 3 pts

If it ain't broke, don't fix it.

[–] 3 pts

If they're liberal, encourage it to prevent them from breeding.

[–] 2 pts

If they aren't White it would be preferable before they breed. I think it's ok for White women if they have some children already IMO.

[–] 1 pt

I am glad you brought this up. I refuse to get snipped and my wife is hesitant about this once we are done having kids. Glad to see some of the feedback here.

[–] 0 pt

A vasectomy is much less invasive than a tubal. A tubal is weeks of recovery. A vasectomy will have you back at the gym in under a week.

Once you're done having kids, vasectomies are the least risky/unpleasant option.

[–] 0 pt

Just no to vasectomies as well.

[–] 1 pt (edited )

I had mine tied at 35 and haven't had any issues. Every other birth control method caused major issues. Maybe I have been lucky. I would never ask a man to get a vasectomy. I've heard too many bad things about it.

When I ovulate, I still feel the egg release as I always have (I know some women don't notice but I do with one of my ovaries - so every other month). I have seen pictures of my tubal (long story) and it is low down on my fallopian tubes. I figure the egg travels down, gets stuck, and is absorbed there rather than where it usually would in my uterus.

It was painful but whatever. I've dealt with worse (I've had my uterus perferated). I was moving around normally within a few days and the pain was gone shortly after. I took one dose of the rx pain killers the same day as the surgery and alleve for a day or two after that. I felt rough mostly from the sedatives and the air they blow into you for the laproscopic procedure.

[–] 3 pts

That's called "mittlesmerz" (sp). The sensation of actual ovulation.

Load more (4 replies)