You don't have a cherry and nothing breaks - you may have a hymen which is a layer of tissue around the inside of the vaginal opening. As long as you're gentle the hymen doesn't cover much and will stretch so tampon use shouldn't tear the hymen at all. The hymen has nothing to do with virginity - virginity refer to whether or not someone has had sex with someone else, the hymen can be torn long before you have sex or remain in tact long after you have sex.
Yes it can - you are technically not a virgin if you have used a tampon. Therefore a tampon can 'pop your cherry'.
There is no cherry, and nothing pops.Females can have a hymen, this is tissue that surrounds the opening to the vagina - it is not up in the vaginal canal, it is just at the entrance of the vagina. The hymen normally doesn't cover much of the vaginal opening so a tampon can easily pass through it, but even if the tampon were bigger as the hymen is flexible it ca easily stretch to allow the tampon through. The hymen can tear but only if penetration is forced or rough, a tampon is very unlikely to cause tearing of the hymen.
No, not every girl experiences their hymen breaking (sometimes referred to as "popping the cherry") during their first sexual experience. The hymen can be stretched or broken through various activities like exercise or tampon use, and its presence or absence should not be equated with virginity.
You do not have a cherry and nothing pops.You may have a hymen and this is tissue that surrounds the vaginal opening, it normally doesn't cover much of the vaginal opening so a tampon can typically fit through without problem - the hymen is also flexible so will stretch to accommodate things far larger than a tampon without tearing. The hymen typically only tears if there is forced or rough penetration, a tampon is unlikely to cause damage to the hymen, even if torn pain is minimal as there's little in the way of nerve endings in the hymen itself - although if penetration is rough or forced you are also likely to damage other areas of the vagina and/or vulva which could cause you pain. As for 'hurt more', it depends...more than what?
anything that pushes hard enough
Yes. The "cherry" is slang for the hymen. A thin layer of tissue around the top of the vagina that will slightly tear during a females first insertion. This can also be done by something as simple as inserting a tampon.
Next week
It cant do that because it doesn't have the parts that a man has to make a baby
You don't have a cherry and nothing pops - your hymen can be torn from tampon use but it's very uncommon as the hymen doesn't usually cover much of the vaginal opening and it is flexible so can stretch to allow items into the vagina without tearing. You wouldn't be able to tell the difference between menstrual blood and bleeding from the hymen tearing - however bleeding from the hymen tearing is actually fairly uncommon. You could feel discomfort or a release in pressure once the tampon clears the vaginal opening if the hymen was in the way, or you could potentially see the tear if you compare the hymen before and after tampon use.
A tampon lasts in the water about the same as when you're not in the water, although there is a risk of water getting into the tampon for the most part the vaginal walls close around the tampon to prevent this from happening. Tampons need to be changed every 4-6 hours, if water gets to the tampon they won't last as long but there's no way of knowing when they will leak as it depends on how much water gets to the tampon. If concerned try menstrual cups instead, they last up to 12 hours.
it is a tampon it is a tampon
Your "cherry" is actually your hymen, which is a thin piece of skin that covers the opening of your vagina. When your "cherry pops" your hymen breaks either from exercising,masturbation, inserting a tampon, or sexual intercourse. There may be a slight amount of bleeding. Remember to seek a professional doctor or gynecologyst for medical advice. Also, never have unprotected sex, as this can lead to unwanted pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases (STD'S), and sexually transmitted infections (STI'S).