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All About Genital Piercing

As genital piercing becomes more common, doctors may need to learn more about it.

By R. Morgan Griffin
WedMD Feature Reviewed By Brunilda Nazario, MD


Genital piercing: the very idea of it is enough to send many of us, whimpering, into the fetal position. But it's a practice, whether it intrigues or disgusts you, that's becoming more and more popular for men and women alike.


"It isn't something done only by the fringes of society," says Elayne Angel, a professional piercer in New Orleans and Medical Coordinator for the Association of Professional Piercers. "Most people probably already know at least several adults who have genital piercings. They just haven't had the occasion to find out."


And true enough, while a glance can establish whether someone has a nose ring or pierced eyebrow, you'd need to know a person intimately -- or possess an unobtrusive metal detector -- to discover a genital piercing. Who knows what lurks beneath the boxers or panties of that person you've been flirting with at work, or for that matter, your landlord or mail carrier?


In a recent article in the medical journal The Lancet, Aglaja Stirn, MD, assistant director of the Frankfurt University Teaching Hospital for Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy in Germany, surveys the history of the practice and argues that because of its increasing popularity, medical professionals need to learn more about the phenomenon -- and to avoid the impulse to pathologize those who have gotten pierced.


A Short History of Piercing Down There


Genital piercing has probably been around for a while, although just how long is difficult to say; histories of piercing tend to be woven with myths. According to Stirn, genital piercing of men has only been confirmed among a few tribes in Borneo, who implant bones in the glans, or head of the penis. There's also some evidence from the Kamasutra -- the ancient Sanskrit text that establishes the rules of love and sensuality in Hindu society -- of men who had penis implants adorned with jewelry. However, claims that Arabs, Africans, or Greek cultures engaged in routine genital piercing -- or that nipple rings were developed by the Romans to hold up sagging togas -- are fabrications or legend, Stirn says.


In fact, while piercing as a general practice is common to many cultures, genital piercing is largely a recent and Western phenomenon. This may be disconcerting to a few ill-informed proponents of the practice, who might prefer to imagine that they are rediscovering a venerable and ancient rite of passage, rather than practicing a newfangled invention. But as Angel and Stirn assert, most of the exotic sounding names for different types of genital piercings were actually made up in the 1970s in the U.S. and Europe.


The Western origins of genital piercing are also disconcerting to those uncomfortable with the practice, who would prefer to imagine it is a barbaric custom imported from far, far away and not something domestic. A public information officer at the American Medical Association in Chicago was disbelieving and then aghast when informed about the practice and asked, hopefully, whether it was a custom only "practiced in tribes somewhere." Little did the she know, it was probably done every day at piercing parlors within a few miles of her office.


By the 19th century, some men and women in European society were having their genitals pierced. One common type of penis piercing -- the Prince Albert -- is actually named after Queen Victoria's husband, the prince consort. The story goes that Albert had his penis pierced with a ring -- called a "dressing ring" -- so that he could manipulate his privates to prevent an unseemly bulge when he wore tight trousers. Whether there's any truth to the tale is unknown, although the accounts of 19th century genital piercing do demonstrate that the Victorians weren't quite the prudes that we imagine them to be.


Genital piercing became more common in Europe in America after World War II, but it only became popular -- in a relative sense --since the 1970s. Piercing became fashionable with the punk movement and among some gay and S&M subcultures during this time, and practiced at landmark piercing studios like Gauntlet in Los Angeles, where Angel was manager. From there, the phenomenon moved out into mainstream society.


Types of Piercing


Piercers are an ingenious lot when it comes to devising new methods of and locations for piercing, and there are many, many ways of sprucing up your genitals with holes and jewelry. For the brave of heart, read on.


"For women, the VCH [vertical clitoral hood] is by far the most popular," says Angel, who is widely considered a seminal figure in the piercing phenomenon. "It is easy to get, quick to heal, and fun to have there." The VCH is a piercing through the tissue above the clitoris that can stimulate the clitoris during sex. According to Angel, variations on this type of piercing are also popular, such as the triangle -- also a piercing through the clitoral hood, but deeper and behind the clitoris.


However, women are often restricted in their choice of piercings by their anatomy. For instance, while piercing the clitoris is possible, it is rare that a person actually has a clitoris large enough to accommodate it. Piercings of the inner and outer labia are also dependant on a person having enough loose skin in the area.


Men have a wide selection of piercings to choose from. One of the most popular is the aforementioned Prince Albert, in which a ring is inserted vertically through the urethra and out the bottom of the glans. While it's fairly common type of piercing for men, it can cause some problems; the piercing of the urethra can sometimes make urinating standing up a messy business. Angel says that other places of piercing popular among men are between the base of the scrotum and the anus and the frenum (through the lose skin on the underside of the penis).
 
I was going to get a frenum peircing...my buddy was a peircer and was going to give me a free barbell.....when i saw how big a freakin' 8 gauge was, I chickened out
 
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