FreddyCalhoun
All Star
Ear wax brehs....Ear wax
Do you know how many people have HPV & Herpes? It's like 1 in 3 people.....
Some people got herpes and dont ever have breakouts in their life.... This is gonna be some fukked up shyt, cause nikkas are gonna treat a girl like shyt if she got herpes and act like she a hoe... but she coulda got that shyt by accident as a child or something.
Simp ass nikka
What color for HIV?
What in the actual fukk?Id pass on that
I was drunk and coked up with a chick a few weeks ago. She told me she had aids, I still went in raw
For the folks saying is it cool to take the condom off if it doesn't glow, you might want to find out more info about how it actually detects STDs.
So after a few strokes if there's no glow is it cool to take it off
the thought of the sex game officially changing from this
nikkas startin off doin an assessment stroke nohomo
examinin the condom after
"
she clean , good to go"
I she insists on fukking with the lights on you know she burnt...
nikkas about use them shyts for impromptu STD tests.. only use to glow to know if you can hit raw
Fukks your problem fakket? Ill have you busted you stupid motherfukkerWhat in the actual fukk?
Fukks your problem fakket? Ill have you busted you stupid motherfukker
A condom that changes colour when it comes into contact with STIs has been invented by a group of school pupils
A condom that changes colour when it comes into contact with sexually transmitted infections has been invented by a group of school children.
The 'S.T.EYE' has a built-in indicator to detect infections such as chlamydia and syphilis, turning a different colour depending on the strain of bacteria present.
It is the brainchild Daanyaal Ali, 14, Muaz Nawaz, 13 and Chirag Shah, 14, pupils at Isaac Newton Academy in Ilford, Essex, who wanted to "make detecting harmful STIs safer than ever before" without the need for invasive tests.
You may think awkward post-coital silences are common enough as it is - but the group's ingenuity has been recognised with an award, the TeenTech gong for best health innovation.
Daanyall said: "We created the S.T.EYE as a new way for STI detection to help the future of the next generation.
"We wanted to make something that make detecting harmful STIs safer than ever before, so that people can take immediate action in the privacy of their own homes without the invasive procedures at the doctors.
We've made sure we're able to give peace of mind to users and make sure people can be even more responsible than ever before."
The group get £1,000 and a trip to Buckingham Palace from the TeenTech awards, aimed at up-and-coming inventors.
Former Tomorrow's World presenter Maggie Philbin, founder and chief executive of TeenTech, said: "We encourage students to take their ideas out of the classroom by putting them face-to-face with industry professionals, helping to open their eyes to the real potential of their ideas."
Other winning inventions included shoes that allow the user to charge up electrical items while walking, and and an electronic tap to help manage water supplies in developing countries.