Bitten & Bruised Breasts

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Sep 24, 2011
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26
Hi, Sorry if this question has been asked before....

My Dom loves to bite and flog my breasts/nipples, afterwards they are thoroughly swollen and bruised. I enjoy this abuse and find the biting within my pain thresholds but I am concerned about any long-term health risks ....and in the short-term what is the best way to treat my delicate breast to sooth the pain and reduce the bruising/swelling?

NTL
 
Hi, Sorry if this question has been asked before....

My Dom loves to bite and flog my breasts/nipples, afterwards they are thoroughly swollen and bruised. I enjoy this abuse and find the biting within my pain thresholds but I am concerned about any long-term health risks ....and in the short-term what is the best way to treat my delicate breast to sooth the pain and reduce the bruising/swelling?

NTL

Generally speaking, a bruise to a breast is not dangerous and should not have any long term health implications. A bruise is merely bleeding under the skin. If there was no other trauma, your jumblies should be fine. That being said, it would probably be smart to ease up on boob torture after a particular heavy session, waiting until the tissue, particularly the nipples, have had time to heal and is no longer sensitive to touch.

For the pain and swelling, I found that cool compresses, (a wet face cloth, for example) and some arnica helps to speed up the healing. Plenty of fluids and make sure that your iron levels are normal. However, while I heal very quickly, with the pain and swelling subsiding in matter of days, I hold on to bruises for a very very long time (the breasts especially as I found out a few months ago!) so it really depends on your healing capabilities.

If you're worried, at your next physical, bring it up with your doctor. It's nothing that they haven't seen. When I went for a check up two weeks after visiting my all, I was still marked. My doc, after asking me what happened, didn't bat an eye. If you're concerned about your play being misinterpreted, just say that you enjoy some intense, rough sex and leave it at that.
 
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Generally speaking, a bruise to a breast is not dangerous and should not have any long term health implications. A bruise is merely bleeding under the skin. If there was no other trauma, your jumblies should be fine. That being said, it would probably be smart to ease up on boob torture after a particular heavy session, waiting until the tissue, particularly the nipples, have had time to heal and is no longer sensitive to touch.

For the pain and swelling, I found that cool compresses, (a wet face cloth, for example) and some arnica helps to speed up the healing. Plenty of fluids and make sure that your iron levels are normal. However, while I heal very quickly, with the pain and swelling subsiding in matter of days, I hold on to bruises for a very very long time (the breasts especially as I found out a few months ago!) so it really depends on your healing capabilities.

If you're worried, at your next physical, bring it up with your doctor. It's nothing that they haven't seen. When I went for a check up two weeks after visiting my all, I was still marked. My doc, after asking me what happened, didn't bat a single eye. If you're concerned about your play being misinterpreted, just say that you enjoy some intense, rough sex and leave it at that.


Thank you, at my last health check up all blood counts etc were normal and I am fit and healthy....but what are the implications of low iron in relation to this?

NTL
 
Thank you, at my last health check up all blood counts etc were normal and I am fit and healthy....but what are the implications of low iron in relation to this?

NTL

Low iron can slow the healing of bruises, that's all. If your iron levels are normal, then your healing is sped up.

If you're fit and healthy, then there should be no long term worries. If you realise that you are healing slower than normal, then I'd suggest to get it checked out (particularly iron, as that's usually the culprit), but otherwise, you're fine. You have to know your body. If something doesn't feel right, or is taking too long, then you may wish to pay your health care practitioner a visit. I mean, think of it this way - women play rough sports and get their breasts bruised all the time (soccer comes to mind) and they're fine.
 
I second the use of arnica in helping the bruises heal. It has worked wonders for me. I have iron levels that recently have been on the lowish end of normal and I find that bruises on sensitive tissues (for me, the insides of my thighs, but I think breast tissue would also fit in this category) tend to take a little longer to heal even when my iron levels are supplemented and more in the normal range.
 
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