A woman born with two vaginas claims none of her “hundreds” of lovers notice anything is amiss.
Annie Charlotte was diagnosed with uterus didelphys – a rare condition that means she has two uteruses, two cervixes, and two vaginal canals – at 16.
The 25-year-old previously made headlines after revealing she had two boyfriends at the same time, claiming it “wasn’t cheating” as she had “a vagina for each partner”.
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Now back on the market, the Surrey-based model and content creator has been active in the bedroom but says that the majority of her lovers don’t realise anything is different – until she reveals all.

“I’ve slept with hundreds of men and 99.9% don’t realise I have 2 vaginas,” Annie said.
“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.”

After making the discovery in her teens, Annie has become familiar with the differences between her two reproductive organs.
She said: “My right one is bigger and more dominant than the left, so when I have sex, most of the time it goes in the right.
“Guys get really possessive and weird about it when they hear the left ones tighter and smaller, and they get desperate to try [it], even when I tell them the right feels better.”

Of her “juggling” of two men earlier this year, spending alternate weekends with her then-partners, Annie previously told Need To Know: “I still don’t think it is cheating because I let my boyfriends use one vagina each.”
Annie, who has 42,000 followers on Instagram, was diagnosed with uterus didelphys when she went to get a contraceptive coil fitted as a teenager.
She said: “I was a young woman, I was just starting to become interested in dating and exploring different parts of my body and I was suddenly told it was different to everyone else’s.

“As a teenager, you want to be ‘normal’, and being told you weren’t, was really quite scary.”
She also felt let down by the medical system, saying doctors have taught her “nothing” about her condition.
Annie said: “After I had found out about my condition I went to a gynaecologist to see what birth control would work for me.
“She had my notes in front of her and asked me if I had tried the Mirena coil – she hadn’t even bothered to read them.

“My mum and I just looked at each other, and my mum said, ‘The whole reason we’re here is because she’s got two vaginas so she can’t have the coil’.
“We walked out of there pretty upset.
“I also had a doctor tell me that because there is a high chance that I won’t be able to get pregnant due to my uterus being half the size of a normal one, I should just have multiple miscarriages since that will open up my vaginas… that just doesn’t make any sense.

“I feel rejected and unaccepted by the medical industry, and I know a lot of my female friends feel the same.”
Luckily, these days Annie has learnt to accept her differences.
She said: “I’ve gone from hating it, to accepting it, to thinking it’s really cool.

“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 super-cool 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.”
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