Should I see a different doctor ?

So two weeks ago, after a guy went down on me, a couple days later I had a raw spot down there... my friends thought it could be from beard burn or staph...

I went and got a swab, blood and Pap test done. The first doctor said "this doesn't have the characteristics of herpes but I'm going to test this anyways.

I was so incredibly stressed out, I cried and cried and cried. Even thought of suicide.

Then I had a tiny blister pop up on my thigh, and a tiny sore pop up on my ankle and one on the crease of my nose (yellowy scab) I had white chunky discharge. I was so stressed out, I called my doctor every day waiting for my results. I freaked out and went back to the doctor 3 days later just so they could look at me. A second doctor said "I'm 90% sure this is not herpes. I WAS going to prescribe you herpes medication but now I'm only going to prescribe you mucriprin cream (which made my sores clear up)

They called me back A WEEK LATER and said all of my tests were negative EXCEPT my swab test came back as herpes 2.

I asked them what this meant and they said my body hasn't made any antibodies yet therefore this means I have a very recent exposure.

Is it possible to get a false positive on a swab test? Should I go see another doctor?

It's possible, but unusual for a swab to be falsely positive (falsely negative, yes). As mentioned before, they cannot infer antibody status from a swab, so that is just them making assumptions, unless you were tested for HSV2 IgG antibodies and it came back negative. Your ankle, thigh and nose spots are not related. You can (re)test for HSV2 IgG antibodies at 3 months or redo a swab test should you get another similar sore.

So I'm gonna do blood work 3 months from RR exposure and do 3 month blood work from AC And that can determine who gave it to me? I can't be positive that I have h2 until those results?

Your swab should be correct, as it is unusual for a positive swab to be false. The IgG is only to determine antibody status, which you can't determine from the swab. If you were negative for HSV2 IgG at the time of your sore (or soon after), but positive for it 3 months later, then it is a very new infection. I believe I already said AC seemed like an unlikely source based on the info you gave. More likely RR or you had it long before either.

I would go to another doctor. A doctor can't be 90% he has to be 100%. The reason why I say this, is because it could be possibly a gential wart with similarities of herpes 2.

A common test for genital herpes is the swab test, which consists of taking a tissue sample from the sores (of the liquid inside them) and creating a viral culture in a lab. It takes a couple of days for the culture to grow.