Answer: by Konstance McCaffree: (05/29/2004)
Thank you for asking even more questions. It is important that we learn as much as we can about what might create a pregnancy. It sounds as if you have been doing lots of research already, so I will give you the best answer I can.
Obviously, the only way to know for sure, is to take a pregnancy test two weeks from now, but I really don't think you need to. If you have read my answers to others you will know that sperm is not nearly as powerful as some would make us believe.
I do not think you are paranoid because I was once as nervous as you are about having a boy touch me and possibly cause a pregnancy. What you need to know is that sperm is very fragile and cannot swim through clothing, especially the many layers that you describe.
Even if your boyfriend was wet, that would have been from pre-cum and the research we have, which is very reliable is that there is no sperm in pre-cum unless the male has just ejaculated a few minutes before and not urinated since then.
See, pre-cum is designed to clean out the urethra (the tube in the penis) before the main ejaculation comes out. Sperm is so fragile that even in semen, if it gets into the acids from urine in the urethra it can be damaged, thus the male's body helps facilitate the sperm, in semen, through that area.
Since you didn't mention that your boyfriend actually ejaculated, the wetness on his shorts is just pre-cum, which is just early fluids from the Cowper's gland.
Enjoying pleasuring as you described just isn't dangerous for pregnancy unless the penis ejaculates semen (with sperm in it) at the opening of the vagina or inside the vagina. It is not at all risky just to rub together with clothes on. The erect penis can touch your body as long as you both are covered and it just isn't going to create a pregnancy.
If you want information on the research about sperm in pre-cum, it is in the book Contraceptive Technology, 1998 by Hatcher, et al.
As for the morning after pill, which is commonly called Emergency Contraception, now days, it a heavy dose of birth control pills within 72 hours of the unprotected or unplanned intercourse. Not all the variations of birth control pills work for this though, so I recommend that if you are worried next time, just go to a local family planning clinic, or in some states the pharmacy (since I don't know what state you live in it is hard to know what the state law is on where EC is distributed) or even the emergency room of a hospital. EC is provided by all of the above.
I hope this helps ease your worries, and if you have other questions, please feel free to write again.Reviewed by Sexual Health Editorial Team
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