Young woman hospitalized after having…See more

Then tears slipped down my face as my best friend and a nurse held my legs apart, while another nurse inserted gauze into my vagina to try and stop the bleeding.

Everyone always says you’ll remember the first time you have sex, but I’d thought it would be because of how awkward it would be. My first time featured a blood-stained bed, carpet, bathtub and three different hospital rooms.

So after my disastrous first time, I want to make sure others don’t have to go through the same thing – and that starts with this cautionary tale and a call for better sex education for all.

I was in my late teens when I first had sex with a boy I was dating at the time.

On that fateful day, he’d booked a hotel room but it never even crossed my mind that I’d lose my virginity. Needless to say, I was completely unprepared for it.

Even before we got to the room, I was nervous to the point of feeling nauseous. He made me feel too anxious and jittery. I didn’t know how to behave or what to even say around him – I felt awkward.

As we got down to it, there was no foreplay for me and he didn’t touch me anywhere other than my chest. Looking back, I should’ve seen this could cause issues.

It felt like a piercing pain when he put it in and I remember thinking that something was wrong, but I didn’t know what. He asked if I was on my period and I said no.

At the sight of the blood, panic flooded my system – I felt scared and anxious. It looked completely different to period blood, in the sense that it was more fresh and looked like it was never-ending.

He asked: ‘Why are you bleeding so much?’

There was pain and there was blood, but the blood made the room look like a crime scene. It spilled everywhere in a gushing waterfall, staining through the bedspread and into the mattress, down the sides of the bed frame and onto the carpet.

After the bleeding started and we stopped having sex, I started using sanitary pads to try to stop the bleeding. When I got through six of them, I decided to call 111 and they asked if the sex was consensual and to describe the events that led up to it.

They told me to go to the nearest walk-in centre. At this point, I’d nearly fainted once and felt dizzy, like my entire body was experiencing pins and needles. My mouth was so dry. All I could think was that my family would kill me.

We went to the local walk-in centre – where they told me I had to go to A&E, I almost passed out, breaking my phone screen when it slipped out of my hand, as they didn’t have the equipment to find out what was wrong.

I ended up telling a nurse that I didn’t want my parents knowing I’d had sex because I wasn’t supposed to be having it

On the way there, alone, I nearly fainted again in the Uber – the driver had to pull over and get me a packet of cereal bars and a bottle of water, which helped. While in the waiting room, I’d managed to contact my best friend and by the time I’d been taken into one of the wards for serious injuries, she’d arrived.

When I arrived at A&E – about an hour and a half after the bleeding first started – I saw two gynaecologists and a revolving door of nurses – all women. One of the medical staff told me that if the bleeding didn’t stop by the next day, I would have to go into surgery.

‘You have a tear on both your vaginal walls,’ someone said to me after using a cystoscope to try to figure out what was wrong. They said it could’ve happened because the penetration was too rough or even because I wasn’t ready or turned on. After that, they all settled on using gauze to stop the bleeding.

By this point, I’d been bleeding for more than three hours and soaked through more than 10 sanitary pads even when two were used together. I find it oddly hilarious that I hadn’t got a drop of blood on my jeans.

One of the nurses helped me put on a pair of disposable maternity-style briefs and on the end of the bed, I spotted the red and black silk and lace thong I’d bought specially from Ann Summers. Fat lot of good it’s done me, I thought.

I felt everything from panic and shock to amusement at everything that was unfolding. I ended up telling a nurse that I didn’t want my parents knowing I’d had sex because I wasn’t supposed to be having it.

I had my mother’s words ringing in my ears that I shouldn’t be having sex because it’s a taboo in our South Asian culture. We’re taught never to do it with anyone because it’s all boys – or men – want and once they get it, they leave.

‘They’ll make you all these promises,’ my mum told me in Bangla when I was 15. ‘They will tell you they love you or will marry you, so you have sex with them. But once you do, they will break every promise and leave.’

I went to sleep that night in the hospital feeling sick and frustrated. I also hadn’t been able to keep any food down and I couldn’t sleep either.

Every two to three hours, a nurse would check my blood pressure, do a blood test and take my temperature. I also had a catheter attached, which was extremely uncomfortable.

The next day in hospital, I spoke to a gynaecologist and told her I never want to have sex again. She laughed and said this isn’t how sex was supposed to be. ‘When you’re ready, it’ll be so much better,’ she assured me. I felt wary but nodded anyway.

It is important for young women to understand that first time sex is definitely not meant to be inherently painful and not everyone bleeds

I ended up staying in the hospital for two nights, and the bleeding finally stopped the day after I was admitted—sometime after lunch, after my body had already been through more than it knew how to handle. I remember feeling weak, disoriented, and honestly, a little disconnected from everything around me. It didn’t feel real. One moment I had been trying to convince myself that what I was experiencing was “normal,” and the next I was lying in a hospital bed, surrounded by quiet urgency, nurses moving in and out, and the kind of silence that makes you realize something wasn’t right from the beginning.

That night, they removed the gauze. It’s hard to explain just how painful that moment was—it felt almost as intense as when it had been put in. There was a sharp, lingering discomfort that stayed with me even after it was over, like my body hadn’t yet caught up with everything it had gone through. I felt exposed, physically and emotionally, but I didn’t really know how to process it. I just wanted to go home.

But going home wasn’t as simple as it should have been.

Because I had told my parents I was staying at a friend’s house, I couldn’t explain where I had actually been or what had happened. I walked into my house carrying something heavy—something I wasn’t ready to talk about. I couldn’t tell them. I couldn’t tell anyone in my family. And so, I stayed quiet.

That silence followed me for a long time.

It wasn’t just about what had happened physically—it was about everything I didn’t understand, everything I hadn’t been prepared for, and everything I felt like I should have known but didn’t. I kept replaying it in my head, trying to make sense of it, trying to figure out where things had gone wrong.

Later, when I started talking to friends, I realized something important.

One of my friends told me that the first time she had sex, all she felt was wetness everywhere and pain. Another told me that her first time hurt so much that she ended up crying. These weren’t isolated experiences—they were common, shared, and yet rarely talked about openly before they happened.

That realization was both comforting and frustrating.

Comforting, because I understood I wasn’t the only one who had gone through something difficult.

Frustrating, because it made me question why no one had talked about it honestly beforehand.

In a lot of ways, that experience became a turning point for me. It forced me to learn things I hadn’t fully understood before—about the importance of foreplay, about arousal, about emotional comfort, and about how essential it is to feel safe and relaxed during intimacy.

Because without those things, everything changes.

And when all of that comes together, the experience can quickly shift from something that should feel natural and enjoyable into something painful and overwhelming.

It made me realize that sex is not just a physical act—it’s deeply connected to how you feel emotionally and mentally. If you’re anxious, nervous, or unsure, your body responds to that. And if you’re not ready, no amount of pretending will change that reality.

A survey of over 3,000 women revealed that one-third were not ready for their first time having sex. Even more telling, 22% said they wished they had waited. These numbers reflect something important—many young women feel pressure, whether it’s from partners, social expectations, or internal beliefs about what they “should” be doing.

And the consequences of that pressure can be significant.

Over 51% of those surveyed said their first time hurt. Half admitted they felt nervous or scared beforehand. That fear, that uncertainty—it matters. It shapes the experience in ways that often go unspoken.

And yet, despite how common these feelings are, conversations around them are still limited.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *