| Yes, exclusively. Try the Hanky Panky ones (make sure you get the original rise) if you think they are uncomfortable. I discovered them over a decade ago and have worn nothing else since. |
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I hate thongs. I can't relate to people who think it's more comfortable. I wear organic cotton bikini cut underwear, size XS.
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| No. Not one pair. I don't think I could get used to having a "weggie" all day let alone feel sexy with one all day long lol. |
Agree! They are SO unhygienic!!!! |
| I have them but rarely wear them. They trigger UTIs and yeast infections. The fabric is too close to my vagina when it’s only a small amount of fabric wedged in my butt crack. I prefer the fabric to lie looser on my vagina. |
| I have Hanky Panky ones and they’re not unbearable but it’s more the hygiene aspect. I only wear them on special occasions. |
| I wear Hanky Panky exclusively. |
| Nope. I find them extremely uncomfortable and unhygienic. |
| They are stimulating. |
| No. I hate all that material up my ass. |
| I wear them when an outfit necessitates a no panty look but I don’t find them particularly comfortable. Something about my anatomy doesn’t work. They ride up and strangle the top of my butt crack. I’ve tried bigger and smaller sizes. |
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Nope. When I want something that disappears under close fitting clothes, I generally go with seamless briefs with a laser cut edge or very thin lace in back. There might be a faint line but it's really not a big deal.
There was a lot of pressure to wear thongs when I was in college and in my 20s (early 00s, peak Thong Song/whale tail era). This was also when super low cut pants were in style, and one of the problems with those pants is that normal underwear will show under them, so there was this push for women to wear the skimpiest possible underwear -- not just thongs, but G-strings. If I could resist the pressure back then, which I did, then I can certainly do it now. I respect that some people find them comfortable or alluring or whatever. It's a personal choice. But it's a very hard no from me and always will be. |
| Why are people so freaked out by VPL? |
There was a national campaign to shame women for it back in the 00s. And it was mostly conducted by women against other women -- men mostly do not care about VPL. It was just a way to police other women for noncompliance with beauty norms, an activity that seemed to reach an all-time peak around 2005/2010. |
It's still happening. Just look at the thread in off topic about snobbery. Women policing what other women wear is very much alive and well. |