OnlyFans star Annie Charlotte is embracing her rare uterus didelphys diagnosis — meaning she has two vaginas, two uteruses, two cervixes and an ovary on each side — with open arms.
“I’m bloody glad I didn’t [have surgery], because Jesus Christ, what would I be doing for my life right now? I literally don’t even know,” Charlotte, 26, exclusively told Us Weekly with a laugh. “It’s my whole personality trait on the internet.”
Charlotte was diagnosed with uterus didelphys at age 16 after attempting to get an IUD. While she initially asked doctors if she could “get rid” of the condition, Charlotte was advised that surgery might do “more harm than good.” Charlotte claimed that doctors didn’t tell her “much” about the condition, leading her to begin teaching herself about the diagnosis from the internet.
“The lack of knowledge, I think, in the medical field is also another stressful thing. I’ve had doctor’s appointments where I’ve turned up — I’m seeing a registrar who’s underneath my gynecologist — and she’s gone to me, ‘Have you tried the Mirena Coil?’” she said of the IUD. “I genuinely was like, ‘Well, the whole reason I’m here is because I have two vaginas. You can’t put a Mirena Coil in, which obviously needs to go in the middle and I have a wall in the way.’ And she was like, ‘You have two vaginas?’ I was like, ‘You’re joking, right?’”
For Charlotte, using her platform on OnlyFans has been empowering following her diagnosis.
“It’s allowed everyone, like women, to take back power in a space that was completely male dominated,” Charlotte told Us. “You look at how mainstream pornography was very male dominated and women have been in very compromising situations in order to make money. I think what OnlyFans has done is allowed women to be in this space and have full control. That’s another reason why some people don’t like it, because some men just do not like to see women succeed.”
Charlotte noted that she feels like “everything is in the power of a woman” on OnlyFans.
“If a woman does not want to do something because a man has asked her to do it online, like on OnlyFans, she can just say no. Whereas if she was at a porn shoot, she’d have to say yes,” Charlotte alleged. “I just feel like it’s allowed these women to take their power back and have complete control, which is really cool.”
Charlotte shared that she’s “very fortunate” for being able to differentiate herself in the space with her diagnosis.
“I’m very fortunate for that. I’d never take them for granted because it’s such an oversaturated market these days that I’m so lucky I have a USP [unique selling point]. I think that it is a really cool thing,” she said, adding that she hopes to attempt other methods of raising awareness for her condition. “I’d like to be able to take it further than just, obviously, having OnlyFans. I’d love to be able to change the space for women in gynecology and allow for there to be more care in the healthcare system for women and all of that kind of stuff.”
To learn more about the serious potential risks and harms of “competitive sex” and other explicit OnlyFans content — read what doctors, mental health professionals and other experts told Us Weekly here.