Woman with two vaginas says she isn’t cheating on two boyfriends
A woman who has a condition which means she has two vaginas, two cervixes and two periods reveals she has two boyfriends but claims it isn’t cheating.
A woman born with two uteruses and cervixes has revealed she has two boyfriends – saying they each have their own vagina so it “isn’t cheating”.
Annie Charlotte, 25, from Surrey in the UK, previously made headlines after revealing she was diagnosed with uterus didelphys when she went to get a contraceptive coil fitted at 16.
The medical phenomenon means that, incredibly, the model could conceive two babies with two different men at the same time.
She also has two periods – something she manages with contraception – and says both organs are “completely functional”.
After her long-term relationship ended last year, Annie has gone on to meet two new men – and claims she “isn’t cheating” because they each have use of one designated vagina.
“I don’t cheat because I let my boyfriends use one vagina each.,” Annie, who works as a model for an adult content subscription service, told What’sTheJam.
“They don’t really know about each other. I never told either of them about each other – I didn’t think they needed to know.
“They both have their own vagina, so they only have sex with that one.”
Annie has been dating one of the men for four months, and the second for two months.
She said: “I started dating only recently. I got my first boyfriend last year, and then just kind of enjoyed that until it fizzled out and then started dating two new people.
“It was casual at first but then we started hanging out more and more.
“It is actually kind of nice because they are both totally comfortable with making adult content with me and their vagina.”
Annie says it can be “hard to juggle” both men, but she sees them each once a week and spends alternate weekends with them.
Annie was diagnosed with uterus didelphys when she went to get a contraceptive coil fitted as a teenager, at a time where she was starting to become interested in dating and exploring her body.
“As a teenager, you want to be ‘normal’, and being told you weren’t, was really quite scary,” she said.
Luckily, by the time she went to university to study philosophy and religion a few years ago, Annie had learnt to open up – even using the quip ‘I have two vaginas’ as an ice breaker.
She said: “I really started to accept it.
“I stopped looking at it as a medical issue, and all the problems that could arise from having children, and instead something that was just a supercool aspect of myself because of people’s reactions, they would be shocked but also so interested.
“Now, I’ve completely embraced it and accepted it as part of myself, and I’ve never been more confident.”