Is it normal to have a frenulum if you are circumcised??
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Frenulum
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Not exatly but there may be a remnant of it.
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Normal? Yes. Common? No.Sometimes the frenulum is not completely removed during circumcision, and a piece of it is left behind on the underside. I'm circumcised, and I'm this way - I have piece of frenulum left, that looks like a little bump of extra skin on the underside of my penis near my circumcision scar. That one little piece of frenulum I have left is by far the most sensitive and pleasurable part of my penis. Although I hate being circumcised (wish I were uncut), I feel fortunate to have that little piece of frenulum left as it gives me so much pleasure. I feel sorry for those cut guys who have no frenulum left. Because of my frenulum, and how its given me a small sample of what it might be like to be uncut, I know for sure that if I ever have any sons, they will remain intact. Just the pleasure from the frenulum is reason enough to keep the foreskin. The fact the foreskin offers even more than just the frenulum is icing on the cake. Guys who are cut without a frenulum, and continue to circumcise their sons, really don't know what they are doing. If they had a frenulum and knew how much pleasure they were removing, they wouldn't do it, IMO.
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It depends on the type of circumcision. And unless you're doctor was trying to remove it at the time, it's fine the way it is now. Keep it if you can, it's one of the sensitive spots.
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When ur cirucmcised as an infant, the frenulum isn't removed. I just doesn't develop as much since its job is to pull the foreskin back over the head. Sometimes when you're circumcised when ur older it is removed like when I got circumcised he remove the frenulum too.
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I am uncut and so I have mine, but it has VERY slowly torn over the years. With all I've read about circumcision and different methods, I can't imagine how they manage to cut the frenulum off without cutting into what stays!
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In reply to:When ur cirucmcised as an infant, the frenulum isn't removed. Not quite true - it depends on the circumcision. Some circumcisions the entire frenulum is removed, and in others some of it is left behind and not cut off. It's pretty much luck of the draw for most. Being an infant doesn't matter - the frenulum is already there when we're born.