One way to make sure you stay happy and healthy XXXbut.
A doctor in the United Kingdom is raising eyebrows on social media by warning people about the dangers of masturbating with ornaments in the run up to Christmas – which is apparently a real trend.
“It’s not okay to masturbate with Christmas ornaments,” gynecologist Dr. Sarah Welsh told NeedToKnow.online. she was listing HeartHere are the dos and don’ts of the scandalous yuletide tradition in which people are hospitalized after being refreshed by everything from glass trinkets to candy boxes.
In fact, trying to bring Christmas early with ornaments is apparently dangerous to one’s health.
“Christmas ornaments can have sharp facets or pieces that can break off during masturbation, which can cause pain, pose a risk of trauma and are generally unsuitable for your vagina,” warns Welsh, who Co-founded the condom brand Hanks. In other words, leave your elf on the shelf come Christmastime.
Gino cautioned holiday pleasure hunters that Christmas confections also pose a danger “because of hygiene issues, concerns about pieces breaking off, or the sugar content of items such as candy canes.” “Anything with sugar in it, such as Christmas confectionery, should also stay well away from the vagina as it disrupts the delicate ecosystem of the vaginal microbiome and can predispose you to a vaginal thrush infection.”
to abstain from these so-called self pleasures gender-Mass toys may seem like a no-brainer; However, this unfortunate phenomenon is more common than one might think, with a 2013 case study mentioning people inserting glass baubles and even “turkey basters” into themselves. Meanwhile, a social media post in a paramedic Facebook group described examples of working holiday hornballs with a candy cane and a tree decoration, along with photos showing graphic X-rays from each.
“These X-rays show a candy cane and a Christmas tree ball ornament lodged in the rectum,” read the caption. “Ya know, for the holidays.”


Jam Press reported that according to data from the UK’s National Electronic Injury Surveillance System, there were 13,213 cases in 2021 alone in which people aged 25 to 64 inserted “objects of jewelry” into their bodies.
Check out the stats: Experts attribute the use of these festive exotic items to “autoeroticism,” which Merriam-Webster defines as “sexual satisfaction derived only through stimulation of one’s own body.”
It’s not just yuletide baubles that have been found in the strangest of holes. Last fall, a randy Michigander found six kidney beans in his urethra during a bizarre attempt at sexual gratification—known in the medical community as “the sounds.” Meanwhile, in September, a 27-year-old man in India was hospitalized after allegedly inserting a deodorant canister up his butt, where it remained for three weeks before doctors removed it.

Welsh summed up his thoughts on the practice this way: “There are a number of suitable, and proven, sex toys available on the market that will work much better.”