Woman born with ‘two vaginas’ reveals how hundreds of her lovers have never noticed

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A woman from Surrey who was born with two vaginas has explained how hundreds of the men she has been with have never noticed.

Annie Charlotte was just 16 when she found out she had two uteruses, two cervixes, and two vaginal canals due to a rare condition called uterus didelphys.

She claims her reproductive system is duplicated and her body parts 'just share one set of ovaries together'.

Annie Charlotte was born with two vaginas (Instagram/@annieecharlotte)

Annie Charlotte was born with two vaginas (Instagram/@annieecharlotte)

Charlotte was initially devastated by the diagnosis with there being a 'complete uncertainty' whether she can have children or not.

But the now 26-year-old is embracing her body and has monetised herself via OnlyFans.

"I have two vaginas. It's a really cool thing. It doesn't matter that I'm different. It's actually really awesome and people love it," she told Fabulous Magazine.

"It was very common that when I would start seeing someone, they would like to claim a vagina.

"I don't know if, because I have two vaginas, it makes me extra horny, but they would say I'm very sexually active.

(Instagram/@annieecharlotte)

(Instagram/@annieecharlotte)

"I get weird requests all the time. I one time sold a bottle of my bath water, because this guy was like, 'I want to have like two vagina bath water.'"

As reported by the Mirror, Charlotte said men pretty much never notice: "I've slept with hundreds of men and 99.9 percent don't realise I have two vaginas.

"None of them ever know. I've had experiences where I've told them 'By the way I have two vaginas' and they're like, 'What?'

"There have been times where I've been laid on my bed with my legs in the air as they inspected me."

(Instagram/@annieecharlotte)

(Instagram/@annieecharlotte)

Charlotte also shared that she doesn't get heavy periods, but thought she did, after constantly putting her tampon in the wrong vagina.

"I'm bleeding through like, a super tampon. Like, it's just that I was putting it up the wrong side. So now I've learned, when I have a period, I have to double up one side, pull it out, and then if it's not, like, kind of soaked, I'm like, 'Oh, that's not the side that's beating,' and I have to then put it in the other side to double check which one is kind of having a period," she explained.

"I don't tend to have two periods a month. Sometimes I do, but that's more rare.

"I think it's because obviously they have, like, their own separate ovaries, and your ovary, like, releases one each month.

"They do work like separately, in that respect."

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