louise1302
mum to FIVE boys :)
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all my 5 boys are uncirc'ed and will stay that way unless theres a bloody good medical reason why they need to be done x
well once you see a child...or many children go through horrible dr's visits and procedures to stretch the skin around the opening, and get infections over and over you wouldnt be so against it
well once you see a child...or many children go through horrible dr's visits and procedures to stretch the skin around the opening, and get infections over and over you wouldnt be so against it
Ive personally never met a single person who has had a problem with their uncirc'd penis. I grew up in the UK were it is very rare for a boy to be circ'd i never met a guy who was circ'd till i met my husband.
so just because you dont have ti done, doesnt mean there WILL be problems. the chances of infections and problems with an uncirc'd penis are very very low. otherwise countries like the UK would of started to circ their boys long long ago!
Un-circ'd. Nothing against anyone who does it, just my own belief xx
well once you see a child...or many children go through horrible dr's visits and procedures to stretch the skin around the opening, and get infections over and over you wouldnt be so against it
Ive personally never met a single person who has had a problem with their uncirc'd penis. I grew up in the UK were it is very rare for a boy to be circ'd i never met a guy who was circ'd till i met my husband.
so just because you dont have ti done, doesnt mean there WILL be problems. the chances of infections and problems with an uncirc'd penis are very very low. otherwise countries like the UK would of started to circ their boys long long ago!
What she said.
There are many problems people face with their bodies, it's a part of life.
I equate the removal of the foreskin at birth to removing all of ones teeth in case they 'may' go rotten. Sure, if you have teeth issues you get them fixed as they come along, and it's painful and horrible. Just like circumcising or foreskin issues. If it's broken, fix it, if not, leave it alone.
I must admit I still find myself being surprised when I read about how socially 'normal' it is in other parts of the world. It's just not something that is routinely done in the UK (unless there are parts of the country where ethnic / cultural makeup means it is done more, idk for sure). you learn new things everyday ....
anyway, i'd never consider it, to me its a totally unecessary operation and as my son can't yet decide for himself, I dont feel it would be in his best interests. so unless he develops problems (very unlikely as far as I know) no way. Most dr's (in this country anyway) would go with that viewpoint, as someone else said if it aint broke why fix it ...
I dont know current medical research on it but I would bet that the figures for problems caused purely by keeping a foreskin intact are pretty rare.
Just out of interest (genuinely) someone said their dr told them there were 'health benefit's for circumcision, what are they?