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Your comments,
below. Read older ones dating to 2000 at
the link at the bottom of this page. Add yours! (I
count 1069 on these pages dating to 2000.)
The New York
Times quoted from your e-mail below for an article on menstrual
suppression in the 14 October 2003 edition, Science
Times section (online
here).
YES.
I have endometriosis, and have been crippled by my
periods since day one. I am now on birth control pills
for the rest of my bleeding career to be able to live
a normal life and not allow the diseased tissue to
spread even more.
The vast majority of mammals do NOT bleed as part of
their cycle, so why should I? Absolutely pointless and
not necessary to be a fertile animal. How did it
evolve that an upright naked mammal was to bleed all
down the insides of her long legs for years on
end....?
January 2012
...................................................................................................................................
Read a long contribution
from a man (on another page to save space).
January
2012
...................................................................................................................................
Now I know it happens for a very good reason.
I probably wouldn't want it to end. I want to have
kids when I'm older. It doesn't ruin my life in any
way.
[Later she wrote] I don't have any pains from it. It
doesn't affect my life in any way. I wouldn't be able
to have kids if it stopped. I started in when I was 12
and thought it was pointless. Now I know it happens
for a very good reason.
December 2011
...................................................................................................................................
Yes.
I’m only 13 but i sure would as long as I'd still be
able to have kids when i was older?
i get dizzy and faint and before and after my periods
i get a brown discharge, which warns me when I’m going
to get my period.
It is sooooooo annoying and all the blood goes to back
where my bum is when im sleeping ANNOYING much??
December 2011
...................................................................................................................................
Read 2 long contributions
from the same person (on another page to save space).
December
2011
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Why not have a time, monthly, that is devoted to
slowing down and turning
inward and comfort and warmth and just being?
For most of my life I hardly menstruated at all.
Three-four times a year,
mainly brownish spotting. I always felt that this
indicated that hormonally
I was not quite normal sexually speaking. Throughout my
20s I never
conceived (with first husband, who later easily got
another woman pregnant,
so obviously it wasn't him) and then with my second
husband I suddenly
became fertile and had four children in a decade (my
30s). After my last
child was born I had an IUD put in. With that my periods
absolutely
vanished. Nothing. Which I always felt uneasy about --
what was it doing to
my body?? It gave me some trouble the last year and was
near the end of its
life expectancy anyway, so I had it taken out and since
then have had
frequent periods (<28 days) and actually *bleed* now,
bright red blood.
This is something really new and different for me -- and
wonderful. Every
time it happens, I keep finding myself with this sort of
smug pleased
feeling that my body is finally working the way it's
supposed to. At 45 and
not yet mentally ready to be a crone, it makes me feel
like, "Oh. Yes, I AM
still young." Not ready to give that up.
There's also a romantic aspect to it, an animal
primality that I find
compelling, and associated with that is my interest in
cultivating a more
simple, natural lifestyle that acknowledges human life
as optimally alive
when in harmony with the earth and its cycles. Why *not*
have a red tent? [Women
still use menstrual huts around the world.]
Why not have a time, monthly, that is devoted to slowing
down and turning
inward and comfort and warmth and just being? Having
spent my life
bombarded by the relentlessly scheduled structure of our
society, it sounds
lovely. Makes me wonder, how might women experience
their periods
differently if they did that, if they were supported in
doing that, if we
as a society treated it as a special, life-affirming
thing?
November 2011
...................................................................................................................................
In response to your
question about whether I would want to stop
menstruation, I
wholeheartedly answer YES. [The writer is 57
and British]
It's disgusting, humiliating and DEGRADING. And it
causes severe physical
and mental pain and discomfort. I reckon that's more
than sufficient reason.
At age 17 I went on the pill which did help a bit, but
not much. Eventually
my gynaecologist put me on a pill called Cerazette about
6 years ago. This
pill is truly amazing as it STOPS all menstruation
completely! It does take
a couple of months before it actually works, but I can
recommend it to all
my fellow sufferers.
However, the fact that I had to wait almost 35 years
before a gynaecologist
came up with a real solution just goes to show that
researchers, doctors and
gynaecologists don't take the menstruation problem
seriously. My
gynaecologist could have put me on Cerazette immediately
after it was put on
the market (I believe it came on the market in 2000)
instead of waiting 5
years, even though I had been begging her to help me for
decades.
Cerazette is one of those pills that you take
continuously without a week's
break. It also seems to eliminate perimenopausal
symptoms as I have none of
these whatever. Either that or I haven't entered the
perimenopause yet :-).
And yes, I'm still taking it. My gynaecologist suggested
I stop as she
thought I might have arrived at menopause, but I'm not
taking ANY risks as
far as that sort of thing is concerned.
I just wish this wonderful pill had been available when
I started
menstruating, so I could have avoided all those years of
hideous suffering.
November 2011
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"I now take low dose birth control pills
continuously
and must only have a period about every 4
months. It surprises me how few
people know about this method and how apparently
underused it is.
Hi! Great site - I'm on it to research for a paper and I
ran across this
forum, which perplexed me. You can easily stop your
period by a far less
drastic and nonsurgical method than the ones suggested
by the commenters.
I and several people I now take low dose birth control
pills continuously
and must only have a period about every 4 months. It
surprises me how few
people know about this method and how apparently
underused it is. My
period was pretty mild, but I just didn't like bothering
with it. Hope
other people find this useful!
Best, ******
November 2011
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"Of course I would!"
If I had the option of removing my period all together,
I would.
I'm 19 at the moment and I am had it with my period. I
started when I was 12
I'm sick of the monthly pains, the staining of the
sheets and clothing, the
hassle of finding a toilet to change pads when I am out,
disposing of them
in the most secrete way I can and still being found out
what I'm disposing
of. Then there's the running out of pads and the
humilation of buying them
at the store, my mum telling my dad when I'm 'on it',
the mood swings and
then there's the awful heavy flow I get on the first 3
days which drives me
crazy.
I'm seriously fed up!
October 2011
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"I am delighted to be a woman. And menstruation is
part of that. . . . I live in the Midwest, USA, where
menstruation is never discussed."
I love my period. It's a periodic check that my body is
functioning
properly (or not). My first cycle came when I was 10
years old. It was
regular as clockwork for over a decade -except during
pregnancy. I had
my period while breastfeeding, although not as often.
After my third
live birth, my husband gifted me with a vasectomy. It's
the only birth
control that actually worked for me. The time between
periods shortened
as I hit my 30's. Soon, I was beginning my cycle every
17-19 days. At
39, I had an endometrial ablation to stop excessive
bleeding. I also
received 2 units of whole blood. Thank you, anonymous
donors.
I'm one of the few who still have full periods after
ablation, although
they usually only last 4 days. It's like being a
teenager again!
I'm sure to many this sounds like a horror story, but
it's not. I am
delighted to be a woman. And menstruation is part of
that. Menopause
will catch me eventually, and I guess that's part of
being a woman too,
but now for a while yet. Women in my family hit
menopause around 60. I
am 42. And I live in the Midwest, USA, where
menstruation is never
discussed. [People
who visited MUM in my
house sometimes told me it was the first time
they had discussed menstruation with anyone, like
their fellow visitors.]
October 2011
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I've been using a menstrual cup . . . .
I'm 46 now, I began when I was 11, I don't have children
and I never wanted
to, but I can't see a reason for me to stop, since
periods never gave me any
problem. Actually I find it a sort of reassuring
periodic check. I'm quite
on the take it easy side, and a spot on my underwear
won't ruin my day.
Last summer I had a nasty rush on my inner upper thighs
(heat - sweat -
trekking and pads!), since then I've been using a menstrual cup,
(too lazy
to change my routine before..) and now I can't even talk
about mild
nuisance.
September 2011
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Oh YES I would
I would DEFINITELY stop my menstruation if I could.
Right now, in fact. I'm
only 18 but I'm already looking into methods to do so
when I save enough
money. I can't WAIT. Originally I wanted to get a
ovariohysterectomy, but
after reading through all the risks and dangers and
significantly decreased
life expectancy, I've had to search for other options.
Currently tubal
litigation seems to be the most viable option.
I have absolutely no desire to have kids - for one
thing, I value my
personal freedom too much. For another, it's exceedingly
improbable that
I'll ever have a partner, and I definitely don't think I
should be allowed
to bring up a child all by myself. Should all the
aforementioned factors
change, I could still adopt. Menstruation brings nothing
but pain and
frustration for me - first mood swings, then
debilitating pain, and then the
sheer discomfort of bleeding all over the place without
being able to
control it. Not to mention the psychological discomfort
- I'd rather not
have a monthly reminder of my female body. I'm
definitely not male either,
though, so I can't speed up the process by having myself
be certified as
transgender.
So yes, if my fairy godmother appeared right now to
grant me three wishes,
getting rid of this thrice-damned menstruation cycle
would definitely be one
of them.
September 2011
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Oh, yeah!
When I was about 40, my periods got really heavy, and I
became anemic. My doctor put me on birth control pills
(I had one child, at 21) and my periods stopped; if any
doctor had suggested that I stop the pill I would have
laughed in his/her face. At age 49 or 50, I
stopped the pills to see what would happen and found
that I had hit menopause. Yay!!
Evolution hasn't kept up with civilization. In the 21st
century,we certainly don't need to be fertile every
month.
Sent from my iPad
September 2011
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OMG YES I WOULD.
I know I’m only 18, but ever since I first got mine
around 15 or so, I’ve hated it with a passion. I don’t
have kids, I don’t really want kids (maybe that’s just
because I’m 18..) But there’s got to be a permanent way
for getting rid of the monthly horror! I have
cramps,irritability, the works...nothing seems to help,
no amount of ibuprofen works for even an hour for me.
And I can’t get my tubes tied..no doctor will even think
of doing it. I think periods should be optional. I don’t
want to have to wait until I’m like 50 or until I have a
kid for my body to say “Ok! I’m done!” Periods are just
a huge irritation.
September 2011
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"Damn Right I would"
I have just finished my 438th period. Any sane
individual at this point in her life would plead, beg,
whimper, and fall to her knees in prayer if it would
mean finally putting a stop to having to endure another
monthly horror show. I have been flirting with the idea
of taking bcp's continuously as a means of stopping my
period, but at the last moment would ditch the plan for
fear of all the potential side effects. At this
point I can almost say I don't even care about getting
cancer or a life threatening blood clot if I could just
stop having a period. That's how bad it's
gotten. It sounds so dramatic but all the moments,
days, weeks, years of going through the endless
debilitating side effects of menstruation has pushed my
drama levels to exceeding heights! Also, it's such
a huge part of women's lives but it hardly is talked
about or reflected back in art, television, newspapers,
magazines, etc. It's like the purple elephant in
the room. No one talks about it so nothing really
bad is going on........
I have tried the 'natural' approach; acupuncture,
supplements, diet, meditation, positive thinking, you
name it. But the bottom line is having my period
is debilitating and wreaks havoc on my life. What
bothers me most is how desempowering it is for me -
producing & creating anything long lasting seems
impossible as just when I get focused, energized, and
creative, the next horror shower is there and pulls me
under yet again.
48
Devon, England
August 2011
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"[M]enopause was THE BEST thing that ever happened
to me!"
When I was younger and still menstruating, although I
HATED the pain,
bloating, diarrhea, and, most of all, the MESS of
getting periods, I feared
and dreaded the prospect of someday going through
menopause because I
thought it would make me instantly "old." Still,
if someone had offered me
a safe way to stop menstruating without "getting old,"
as I saw it, my
answer would have been Sign me up right now! I began
menstruating at 10, and although it wasn't the biggest
deal in the world, I always hated the
mess and discomfort. Never found anything to enjoy about
it.
I went through menopause in my early 50's, and to my
surprise, I DIDN'T at all feel like I had suddenly
gotten "old" - in fact, in some ways, it turned
out that menopause was THE BEST thing that ever happened
to me! At the beginning, when my periods were
getting irregular and more infrequent, I remember that
there were a handful of times when I was sure I'd
finished for good ñ and I was EXTREMELY resentful
and angry when that turned out not to be the case.
When I finally knew the whole thing was over and done
with (i.e., I hadn't gotten a period in well over a
year, maybe even closer to two years), I was elated.
I'm 59 now, a life-long New Yorker, and I don't miss it
at all!
August 2011
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Reply to earlier
comments down the page
"The other thing I find curious or even amusing, is
that so many women have 'no idea when they will begin
their period'. Speaking generally, most women can
chart their period from month to month..say for a
year. I did this when I was trying to get pregnant and
became so tuned into my body that I can get within a
day or so of beginning and ending my period."
Well, bully for you. I have been menstruating for 35+
years, and I would say that the first 20 years were
predictable and uneventful. The last 15 years have
been hell. Every 24 days? 35 days? Sure, whatever! Two
periods in one month is the ultimate cruelty.
Just when you think it's normal, its not. Yes, I have
kept a calendar, for years...a calendar of TORTURE.
August 2011
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"The many problems mentioned on your website are a
direct result of a woman taught to hate that aspect of
her self, including poor nutrition and decreased
exercise."
Good afternoon,
Menstruation is a gift given to women that patriarchal
societies have turned women against. As a little
girl growing up, I was taught that having my period
was dirty. I dreaded having periods once upon a
time. What's more, I wished I was a man because
I was taught that women were a disgrace to God.
My perception of Self was shaped by family,
community, research on female anatomy conducted by
prejudiced males, research conducted by male
psychologists, religion and even other women whose
perceptions of Self had been altered. This
perception of course caused me to resent that aspect
of Self that is empowering, spiritually powerful and
natural. Furthermore, my periods at the time
were painful and uncomfortable. They also lasted
four or more days. My menstrual flow was heavy
and it smelled. It's amazing what the Mind
creates, not just in our thinking, but how it affects
our body physically. Mind, body and spirit, it's
all connected.
Women, in patriarchal societies, were taught to
disconnect body from mind and spirit. The many
problems mentioned on your website are a direct result
of a woman taught to hate that aspect of her self,
including poor nutrition and decreased exercise.
It's true that nutrition and exercise impacts quality
and duration of a womanís menstrual flow.
I know this from personal experience. With good
nutrition, exercise and a healthy state of Mind toward
life and Self, my periods are only 2 to 3 days
long. My periods do not smell. I only have
a heavy flow the first day I start. The cramps have
significantly decreased.
I have learned over the years that menstruating is a
time of receiving
spiritual medicine. This is when a woman is in
her greatest power. Perhaps this is the reason
why women were taught periods are dirty and unwomanly,
because a woman in her power is a time when she is
closest to God. It's a time when she is most
spiritual. Why? Her womb is expelling the
old to prepare for the new. It is always keeping
the uterus healthy for a new life. This is on a
physical level. On a mental level she is being
challenged to throw out thinking that does not serve
her well so that she can embrace the state of Mind
that will serve her well In return, a healthy
Mind produces a healthy fetus. She is also
challenged to exist on a physical plane or to become
connected to her spiritual Self. Menstruation is
a time to realign body with Mind and Spirit; bringing
the three in harmony so that she can produce a strong
and healthy child. What is wrong with
that? Nothing.
The blood tells the woman the state of health she is
in, not just
physically, but mentally, emotionally and
spiritually. If she is having a bad experience
it's a time for her to re-examine her overall
health. It's a time when she is able to decide
what course of action to take. For example,
blood that smells could be a sign that she is
consuming too much sugar, refined carbohydrates,
refined fats or that her body is too acidic. A
heavy flow could indicate lack of exercise, poor
nutrition, stress, obesity, diabetes or perhaps it
could be a medical condition needing professional
care. Pain and cramps can indicate stress,
caffeine, smoking, excess sugar consumption.
It is time woman know their truth, one that has
not been altered by illusion. It is time she knows her
truth so that she can help other woman come to know
their truths. Menstruation is not what it seems
for many. That is illusion.
There is a resurgence of truth that is resurfacing
about women and their cycles; one that will help women
to love them Self, womanhood and menstruation.
Woman will once again feel empowered instead of
disempowered, like so many feel now. She will
once again love her divine Self, being a woman.
And her experiences with periods will once again
become positive.
Aho.
Respectfully,
I love being a woman and I love the fact that I bleed
once a month
P.S. A healthy vagina does not
smell.
August 2011
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"When I had a
traumatic brain injury the cycle became shorter. .
. . When menopause hit I was never so happy."
The day my older sister's explained to me that I
would soon be getting my period I vividly recall
telling them I would get rid of as quick as possible.
Just 6 months from that talk I started my cycle. At
10.5. I hated it then, I hated it till the very last
day. It was always reliable. I could count on it
coming very 21 days.Ý When I had a traumatic
brain injury the cycle became shorter.Ý Because
I didn't have children I had my cycle most of adult
life. When menopause hit I was never so happy. Other
then the hot flashes. I am greatful to get rid of the
bother.
Looking back now since I didn't have children, I had
my cycle longer then any of my sisters.
July 2011
"The other thing I find curious or even amusing,
is that so many women have 'no
idea when they will begin their period.'"
I am quite entertained by some of your respondent's
regarding their monthly cycle. It is what it is! Do I
LIKE it...not really. Do I LOVE it...no.
Do I HATE it...again, not really. I mean...it is part
of being who I am.There are so many different options
out there for handling "problem" periods...the problem
is women don't find it "important" enough to actually
pay for it or make lifestyle changes. As far as
surgery, if it is an elective...you will have to pay
for it. Seems to me to be a small price for getting
rid of something that seems to be so absolutely
horrible to some of these women.
I am 47 and have never had my own biological
children. Would I have liked to be rid of my period
when I realized I would never have my own children?
Yes! Did I want it bad enough to pull the money out of
my pocket for it...no!
The other thing I find curious or even amusing, is
that so many women have "no idea when they will begin
their period". Speaking generally, most women can
chart their period from month to month..say for a
year. I did this when I was trying to get pregnant and
became so tuned into my body that I can get within a
day or so of beginning and ending my period.
Oh...and a great way to stop the staining (because
you don't know when you start...) would be to wear a
panty liner a day or so before you should begin. My
bet would be that most women don't pay attention to
their body unless it is screaming at them. Self
awareness, not to be confused with selfishness, is a
key!
Thanks for your time and ear...
April 2011
"To all of the women and girls who said that
menstruation was unnecessary/obsolete: you may have
been right!!"
Hi Harry! This is a contribution to the "would you
stop menstruating if you could?" And also, thank you
very much for making the awesome site, too!!
To all of the women and girls who said that
menstruation was unnecessary/obsolete: you may have
been right!!
But I'm not talking about using birth control or
getting surgery; I mean NATURALLY women may not have
to bleed at all!
You see, I was reading about vegetarianism and how
that type of diet affected the menstrual cycle,
because I just became a vegetarian a few weeks ago. So
I found this site where a lady, her name is Debbie
Took, went into a lot of theories on how menstruation
may be normal, but NOT healthy. Because when people
switch over to eating a vegan (which is a bit
different from vegetarianism btw) diet their
menstruation may either get really light... or totally
stop, and never come back! Now, a lot of people may
think that absent menstruation is really unhealthy,
and that the person must not be getting enough
nutrients in their diet. But the lady's article
explains why the opposite may be true! Here's the link
to the article, and I'll post some quotes from the
article below:
http://debbietookrawforlife.blogspot.com/2009/04/periods-they-may-be-normal-but-are-they.html.
Before I read her article, I would have said NO, no
way did I want to stop menstruating! Because I like to
bleed and use my awesome menstrual cups and cloth
pads!! But after reading the article, I've decided
that I like my body being healthy more than I like
bleeding, so...my answer now is yes, if it meant that
my body was in good health, then YES I wouldn't mind
if I stopped menstruating.
Ok, Here's some quotes!
In the 21st century 'developed' world, the women most
likely to report light or 'absent' periods are so
often the healthiest. They're often athletes - women
at the peak of physical fitness. And/or they're women
who have at least eschewed the disease-causing
substances listed above and following diets high in
raw plant foods. They may eat voraciously, but they
eat healthily.
In general, the less healthy women are, the better
the diet (in terms of eating refined foods; she
explains that in the article too), the more they are
likely to be plagued by heavy periods. Studies have
shown that overweight women tend to have heavier
periods.
'Little bleeding', 'no observed flow', 'tablespoon of
blood', 'half a day mucous flow' - doesn't seem to
make sense, does it, when we've been led to understand
that the 'womb lining' has to be shed each month. But,
many women in developed countries following healthy
diets/lifestyles, some indigenous women, and gorillas,
don't seem to be shedding any womb lining, but are
still having babies! Why is that many, if not most,
women in developed countries do appear to shed a lot
of gunge along with the blood, but the most
natural-living women don't appear to?
One theory, (and this is backed to some extent by
scientific observations of monkeys), is that the womb
lining can, instead of being shed, be reabsorbed by
the body when not needed as a bed for the fertilised
egg.
'If the endometrial tissues are not needed - in a
truly healthy woman, as in animals in their wild
state, those tissues are mostly reabsorbed. What
remains is expelled over a short period of time as a
slight mucus discharge.' (Dr H G Beiler)
So - could it be that the womb lining that the
average woman has built up contains toxic substances
due to things ingested (like refined foods) and the
body is saying 'No way - don't want that reabsorbed
thank you!' and chooses instead to dump it?
Viktoras Kulvinskas in 'Survival in the 21st Century'
reports the case of a woman treated by Dr G S White,
who changed her diet to vegan. '[She] flowed bright
blood five or six days of each month [and] had such
severe cramps that she could not hold her position as
stenographer. [He treated her for six months, after
which her]periods changed to half a day mucous flow
with no blood at all. She was able to resume her work
and did so for two or three years. She married and has
had three daughters. Each of them had a mucous flow
for about half a day each month and are in perfect
health. One is married and had a healthy baby girl.'
'Menstruation (bleeding) is NOT a necessity following
ovulation...We have been conditioned to believe that
menstruation goes hand in hand with ovulation...Most
women, including myself, experience menstruation
because they are not truly clean on the
inside...Menstruation is the body's desperate attempt
to free itself from toxins, and many females
experience PMS in addition to the needless bleeding.
Abdominal pain (cramping), headaches, fatigue and
irritability do NOT signify an optimal state of
health, yet most of us brush these symptoms off as the
norm. If you feel such symptoms, this is how your body
is communicating that it wants you to change what you
are doing; we must listen to Nature's
messages...Presently, on a mainly raw diet, I do not
even realize that I am menstruating until I feel moist
and decide to take a peek'.
From a 16yr old living in Georgia, U.S.A. (I'm
orginally from New Jersey though!)
April 2011
"[M]enstruation meant saying good bye to freedom"
- and what's this about whistling?
If I had been asked the question before I hit
menopause, the answer would have been a resounding
Yes! After nearly 4 decades of menstrual problems, I
didn't have any problems with menopause, which I felt
was a case of "Justice at last" I SO do not miss
menstruation.
I began menstruating at 12, which I felt was way too
young. (I know some women begin even earlier and they
have my deepest sympathies.) There were two reasons
for this: the memory of potty training was still
reasonably fresh, I had achieved a control over
bladder and bowels and menstruation felt like that
control had been ripped away. The second reason was
that menstruation meant saying good bye to freedom,
women definitely had a lot more restrictions placed on
them back then than men did.
I was most interested to read that many of the other
women who have had problems with menstruation
mentioned diarrhoea. I always got what I thought of as
"period diarrhoea" but no one ever mentions it.
The cycles of the moon story never cut it for me, as
I tended, if left to my own devices, to have a 3 week
cycle, of which about 10 days were spent bleeding. In
reality, you have a lot more chance of getting in
touch of your feminine side during ovulation. I don't
see anything "feminine" or "girly" about the bleeding.
I think of "feminine" as clean and sweet-smelling.
Oozing blood isn't clean, it's messy, I don't think we
are going to see menstrual blood scented products on
the market any time soon and period diarrhoea has its
own particular stench.
As a teenager, my belly would swell a dress size with
menstruation, when the period started it was not
unusual for me to lose consciousness (did that one
time on a school trip, going down marble stairs). On
occasions, the pain was such that I would chew my
blankets to stop crying out. No one needs to be
tortured. The worst part was knowing that the same
torture was coming next month. Once the first couple
of days were over, it still felt as if I had been
kicked in the guts.
If someone found that urinating was agony, or lifting
their arms, or chewing or whatever, then the medical
profession would admit that they had a problem. When
it comes to menstrual pain, especially in teenagers,
it's not seen as a problem. The doctors warble on
about possible risks to future fertility if they try
to treat the problem with something effective (I
already knew I didnít want to have children)
and even trot out the "Once youíve had a baby,
the menstrual problems will go away" line. Again, as
other women who've described their experiences here
demonstrate, this is egregious bullshit. When I was a
teenager, there was a story doing the rounds that
Catholic and Jewish women were more prone to
dysmenorrhoea than Protestant women because they were
trained by their religions to feel more guilt. My
Protestant friends assured me this was bullshit.
I would see the female reproductive system as
possible evidence of "intelligent design", or rather,
"dumb as dogshit design", as it is hard to imagine how
a system that works so badly for so many women could
survive evolutionary selection. The fact that people
look after each other when they are unwell - and
menstruation can make you feel exceedingly unwell, may
explain how the system got past the selection test.
[An interesting side note here: youíve
probably heard that "breastfeeding stops you getting
pregnant" and also met women who fell pregnant whilst
breastfeeding. That breastfeeding stopped pregnancy
used to be true, about 15,000 years ago, before humans
took to basing their diet on grains. I have wondered
if a diet without grains would reduce menstrual
problems.]
If I could redesign humans, I would make menstruation
optional, unless you were specifically trying to fall
pregnant, in which case it does have a point. I would
also get rid of underarm hair, pubic hair, facial hair
and underarm sweat, I'd build in immunity to colds and
'flu and I'd make whistling
impossible [yer MUM hates that nervous, barely
audible whistling]!
52 year old
North Queensland, Australia
March 2011
"I just have to wear a pad and pray it doesn't
leak."
Yes, perhaps. If I was able to control it, like
urination, I wouldn't mind it at all - the pain sucks,
of course, but I can handle it. But I hate the feeling
I get that I'm not at all in control of what happens
down there. I just have to wear a pad and pray it
doesn't leak...I'm not young or ancient enough to have
incontinence problems! I am not sexually active, nor
do I plan on having children, so I don't use my period
as a pregnancy test. I'm glad when my medications get
switched around a lot and causes my period to skip or
be very light.
I think I would miss it if it went away for a long
while though.
Memories, you know?
- A girl from California.
March 2011
End periods forever
I started my cycle when I was 11. I will turn 42 in
March. I have had enough. I do not have kid and do not
plan on having any. I had my tube tied almost two
years ago so there would be no accidents. If there
were a way that I could get rid of my periods without
surgery, I would take it without hesitation. I have
been trying to find a way to permanently end them
without having to take the pill for a couple of years.
All they are is a bother to me. I can never plan
spontaneous sex with my significant other because I am
never sure when old mother nature is going to show up.
Now he works out of town and I cannot plan on when to
go visit him because I never know when it is going to
occur. I hate my periods. If they were going to serve
me a purpose I could see them continuing but I am not
going to reproduce so why continue in the monthly
disgusting body function that God gave us. We should
be able to say when we want it to stop. It is our
body. We should have the right to chose if we want to
end our menstruation just like we have choice of right
to life. Doctors and insurance should not have a say
so.
**** *****
February 2011
YES! Sign me up NOW!
Yes!! Please!!! I was on Depo for about 11 years and
after so much nagging from every doctor that Depo is
not healthy to use for so long and I'd have
osteoporosis, etc I finally stopped using Depo 3 years
ago, got my tubes tied and MEA. I have no interest in
having children and even the thought of being pregnant
is my worst nightmare and absolutely disgusting to me.
I'd rather have tapeworm! So OK, I got the whole
contraceptive thing out of the way, but I still get a
period and I hate it! This is so primitive! Birds have
the right idea; lay an egg and wait till it hatches to
a baby bird. Better yet, bury the eggs like a turtle.
If this were a man's issue, there would have been a
better solution ages ago! But no, there are too many
feminist women that feel empowered and more 'womanly'
or something because they have a period. Right now, I
know I should start my period today or tomorrow.
Tomorrow I have a race to run. Would my period
interfere with my run? You bet it would, just like it
will interfere with everything else in life. If you
look at the math, you get your period once a month for
5-7 days. So you spend nearly a quarter of your life
from your teen age years until you're in your 50s with
this misery. Somebody fix this please! It's just not
right!!
~*****
CO, USA
February 2011
Yes. "I think for me the reason I don't like
having a period is...the mess."
I am working on my Masters in Women's Health, but I
still hate having a period every month. I find it very
interesting to read people's responses. I have to
write a response to a discussion question that asks us
to contrast and compare modern day views on coming of
age and a girl's transition into womanhood...including
menstruation to those in Biblical times. I found a
site that spoke of how the transition into womanhood
(in the Bible) was a time of celebration and the women
did not have to do there regular duties of cooking,
serving, etc. The rested and relaxed for the days they
were on their period. I think that I wouldn't mind my
period so much if it were like that nowadays! hahaha.
However, I think for me the reason I don't like having
a period is...the mess. I don't have a long period,
but it is heavy for the 1st two days. I feel so dirty,
yucky and stinky. I think that I would still feel that
way no matter how many showers I took during that time
of the month. I don't feel girly or anything pleasant
when I feel that gross. Others may think that I am not
proud to be a woman or some other granola crap, but it
is not true. I am proud to be a woman! I don't think a
period or female organs define ones femininity. It is
all about attitude! Everyone is entitled to their own
opinion because that is what it is...an opinion...not
fact. I did say "I", which means that is how "I" feel
and I don't expect everyone to agree with me and I'm
not pushing my opinion on anyone.
Texas, USA
January 2011
Yes. "I don't need to be unhappy, unhealthy and in
pain to prove my womanhood."
I'm 45 and have had my period since I was 11 years
old. I have had cramps, diarrhea, moodiness (to the
point of annoying even myself), headaches, backaches,
iron shortages, tiredness and a laundry list of
symptoms the entire time. I have had doctors prescribe
heavy drugs that knock me out and make it impossible
to function. I have had other doctors tell me there
was no such thing as PMS. I have had a few doctors who
have helped, so it was not all bad on the doctor
front, but unfortunately too many doctors all together
for a problem only some of them think is real. I past
any age of wanting more children and am more than
ready for the periods to end. However my mother and
grandmother both had the cycles well into their 60's,
so no hope for an early end!
People have included how proud they are to have
periods to prove they are women. I believe I would
still be a woman if the menstruation stopped. I don't
need to be unhappy, unhealthy and in pain to prove my
womanhood. Every woman is different and I am happy
(and jealous) of the women who do not have any the of
extreme problems that afflict others. But those of us
who have had problems should be able (if ever
possible, please!!!) to put an end to a very unhappy
situation.
January 2011
Yes! "Enough already"
Hell yes. We need a once a year pill that allows you
one cycle a year--you take it, you predictably get one
cycle, lasting no more than 3 days, and you're done
for another year, with no weight gain/loss, loss of
sexual desire, effect on future fertility or increased
risk of malignancy.
It would be a blockbuster drug. Someone's gotta come
up with it.
Enough already in Los Angeles
January 2011
"No, absolutely not."
Oh dear. No, absolutely not. (Unless my current
circumstances changed and I started having such heavy
periods that were a threat to my life.)
It makes me really sad to read some of the comments
from women who say they hate their uterus, that must
be really heart-breaking to feel that way about one's
own body. There are lots of diseases (cultural and
physical based) that can provoke people to start
hating parts or all of their bodies, and it always
makes me sad to hear about people suffering that way.
I know some people think that the whole "connection to
the earth and moon" is much too new-agey fru-fru for
them as a rationale for keeping the menstrual cycle,
and I certainly don't think that women that don't
menstruate (for whatever reason) are less than fully
WOMEN, but I definitely like to connection to myself
that my cycle gives me. A lot of the time I lose track
of time, the passage of days and weeks, in the chaos
of everything I'm trying to remember to do, but I like
that my body keeps right on progressing with it's
functions without my conscious thought needed-- my
lungs breathe, my heart beats, my uterus sheds it's
lining monthly. All is in working order! And, as a
sexually active adult female, it's always nice to have
a check in to let me know I'm not unexpectedly
pregnant...!
I have found my own ways of managing and handling the
blood and occasional cramps (raw kombucha, moon cups
and fabric pads, here I come baby!) that work for me,
so I would never want to give up my menstrual flow
artificially. Maybe if they didn't work, I would feel
differently. I'm sure the onset of menopause will
produce it's own issues! But hopefully once it's over,
I won't be fertile anymore and won't have to worry
that a lack of blood is an indication that I might be
pregnant.
It's worth mentioning however, that for the girls and
women who have already commented while in their teens
that they absolutely HATE their cycles, that the first
several years of menstruation can be the most
chaotic-- onset of menarche doesn't actually mean that
all of the bodily organs are FULLY mature, it'd be
more accurate to say that the body is gearing up and
kicking into high speed. It still needs time to adjust
which can actually take several years, into the
mid-twenties, before one's cycle becomes more regular,
and some women find they get lighter cycles as they
mature also. So it's worth considering that their
experiences may change as they get older.
Also, I sincerely hope that no one considering how
much they dislike their monthly cycle, thinks that a
hysterectomy to actually remove the 'offending' organ
is a simple matter -- it isn't, and, there can be
life-long consequences that have nothing to do with
bearing children. (Believe me, this isn't coming from
a woman that thinks that childbearing is god's gift to
women to make them feel whole-- I don't really like
kids very much, never intend to have any of my own, my
own body being impregnated creeps me the hell out.)
Some women have reported a loss of sexual pleasure
after their uterus was removed, in part probably
because the sexual and reproductive systems are quite
complicated and interconnected. Personally, I KNOW
that losing my uterus would be devistating to me,
because I quite enjoy deep penetration at times during
intercourse as well as the heightened intensity of
orgasm that I often achieve while on my monthly flow.
I would be very sad to lose those.
Lastly, just to the commentor that talked about the
sewage problem related to the disposal of so-called
"sanitary products," specifically, "...the tampon
applicators, not to mention pads and wrappers that get
flushed. These products break our equipment, clog
pumps and dull the teeth of the grinders." That's a
totally legitimate-- and also inexcusable, problem,
that isn't caused so much by menstruation as it is by
women flushing things that were never intended to be
flushed! Most applicators shouldn't be flushed, unless
they're cardboard (in which case the lady or gentleman
commentor would know more than I as to whether even
the cardboard ones cause problems), and certainly not
pads or wrappers. That's just... ridiculous. Read the
directions people.
Oh and, for the record, I'm 26 years old and from the
US. (And I'm a Gender & Sexuality Studies major at
University, if that lends any credence to my claims on
scientific facts, since I don't have the names of the
studies on hand to quote from directly.)
January 2011
Yes. "I'd be over the moon!"
Absolutely I would!! I have two children and only
ever wanted two. All my period does is make a huge
mess and prevent me from making love or going
swimming. It lasts for at least 8 days and has
precisely no good function.
What a waste of good iron! If I could stop having
them from now until I die I'd be over the moon!
****, Surrey, England
December 2010
From the Czech Republic: Yes. "I'm 18 and really
have had enough."
Hello!
Yes, I would absolutely like to stop menstruating
forever. I started my period when I was just 10 years
old, at the moment I'm 18 and really have had enough.
I can imagine a life without: fear that I get my
period unexpectedly, ladies sanitary aids and not
forgetting to change them, loads of painkillers,
general physical discomfort resulting from it (like
bloating or digestive problems) etc. And infertility
wouldn't be an issue to me - I also never want to have
kids; if I wanted, I would adopt, because all the
pregnancy and giving birth frightens me too much.
That is just my point of view.
A girl from the Czech Republic.
October 2010
"No, I am proud of my period."
Hi Harry - I love the MUM website, it's got so much
information about the history of menstruation - thank
you for keeping it going!
I want to add my voice to the long ongoing debate of
"would you stop menstruating if you could?":
No, I am proud of my period. It's been a part of my
life for 13 years, and I wouldn't want to part with it
now. It's helped to shape my self-esteem, my identity,
and who I am. Menstruation is a mixed blessing for me,
I can't change it so I like to focus on the good
things about it. I don't like the pain but it is
manageable now at the age of 23 (I used to get very
bad pain sometimes as a teenager). The pain has made
me a stronger person. Menstruation makes me feel more
connected to other women & prouder of being a
woman. Menstruation has brought me closer to my
mother, and makes me feel more connected to her &
my sister. I also like the blood, I find it
fascinating (to me, blood and the colour red symbolize
women). The blood tells me about my body, and
menstruation makes me feel more connected to my body.
I see my period is a welcome excuse for me to take
time out, watch television during the day and nurture
myself.
Thank you ;)
****** (Auckland, New Zealand).
No
Hello!
No, I don¥t want to miss my period. It makes me
feel healthy and powerfull.
**********, 38, Berlin, Germany
October 2010
"Hell Yes!"
So you ask, "Would you stop menstruating indefinitely
- for years, maybe?"
My answer would be a resounding "Hell Yes!" I have
never in all of my 31 years been able to justify why I
personally should be subjected to such a monthly
ordeal. I have known since I was 13 that I would NEVER
breed or bring another life into this world and have
taken such measures to accomplishing that. I've been
looking into the option of getting a hysterectomy
since I was about 27 and naturally I was told that
surely I wouldn't want such a procedure because what
if I wanted kids in the future.
I think this is the most ridiculous argument. Do they
discourage people who need amputations with similar
arguments? Surely those people would like to continue
walking in the future. Frankly, I think by denying
young women the option to stop menstruation by
surgical means is nothing short of typical
misogynistic medical oppression. It is a complete
disregard of what a woman wants for her own body.
And as for those delusional women who think that
bleeding every month defines them as a woman, take
note: you are so much more than your genitals.
--
*"Killing for peace is like fucking for virginity."*
October 2010
No!
HI
thanks for a very informative guide. I always enjoy
my periods, and always look forward to it coming. As
you said, I feel so girlish and feminin.my boyfriend
loves me more during these times. [Actually I didn't
say that but many contributers to this page have said
similar things.]
October 2010
No. "It makes me feel so feminine and girly."
No, I would not. Yes I've always had a heavy flow in
which I would bleed through SUPER tampon in about 15
mins. Even my first period was very heavy...etc but no
I would not stop menstruating if I could. I say this
because for whatever reason, my period is kind of like
my own sweet little secret. It makes me feel so
feminine and girly. It's special and intimate and
nobody knows except for me.
August 2010
"Right now I'd say HELL YEAH NO MORE PERIODS,
because I'm menstruating at the moment and it sucks.
. . . I still wish I was a guy sometimes."
I like reading all the different answers to this
question. I suppose I'm in the middle as to how much
this monthly business affects me physically and
emotionally. Right now I'd say HELL YEAH NO MORE
PERIODS, because I'm menstruating at the moment and it
sucks. I began when I was 11, and had some pretty
painful periods right from the start. Throughout high
school they weren't so bad, because I was very
physically active: I had to walk everywhere and was
forced to go to gym class five days a week. Now that
is more of a challenge for me because I work at home
and I could sit in a chair all day if I wanted to.
Over the last four or five years I was moving to
different houses and changing jobs like dirty laundry,
and my periods became more and more painful, to the
point where I'd be writhing around on the bathroom
floor at 3 am, screaming for my mom. When I met my
boyfriend, who I'm living with now, my cycle became
perfectly regular for the first time in my
life. It's still painful, but for much less time than
before. I guess if I've learned anything from all of
this it's how complicated your body is, and how much
it's affected by your environment, your daily routine,
the people around you, illness, even the weather
(humidity=big bloating)
Two months ago I stopped drinking coffee and alcohol
and decided to make a lot of changes in my diet, so
hopefully that will help even more. These experiments
are kind of interesting, to see how quickly or
gradually I respond to a change, but I never wanted to
think about my period so much. I still wish I was a
guy sometimes.
---Age 27, USA
"I managed to find a Dr. who finally rid me of my
uterus & one ovary at my age of 32.....he said I
had blood clots 'from nipples to knees'! I praise
God every day for that man!"
I started my period a few months shy of my 13th
birthday. Every single month, I would be felled by
cramps, nausea, hot & cold flashes, and constant
diarrhea. At 15, my Dr. wanted to put me on birth
control pills- this was the early 1960s!
I married in 1965 & was on the pill for 4 yrs.
until we started our family.....stopped nursing at 6
weeks so I could get back on The Pill...($2.50/month
at the time!) Anyway....we had another child 30 months
later; my husband had a vasectomy, so I was back to my
'normal cycle'. Same old symptoms.....only worse!
I had to Dr.-shop to find someone who would perform a
hysterectomy....I would bleed thru two tampons, two
pads, and a beach towel between my legs on the first
two days of my period, post-childbirth. I managed to
find a Dr. who finally rid me of my uterus & one
ovary at my age of 32.....he said I had blood clots
'from nipples to knees'! I praise God every day for
that man!
Anyway.....about 50, with one active ovary, I went on
Premarin for hot flashes & insomnia....did that
for about 10 yrs., then gave it up. I am now
symptom-free, travel light (no pads, tampons, or
anything else!), and am very happy grandmother of 4
lovely grandbabies! My sympathies with those who've
experienced what I have....and I have total respect
for those who are not going thru what I have.
All the best-
August 2010
Yes. "I have the best of both worlds - I still get
the energy and sexiness that comes with a woman's
natural hormonal cycle, but with none of the
swelling and pain and shedding that is due to the
build up and release of the lining."
Heck yes I would stop and I finally found a way that
wasn't unnatural!
Since getting a Mirena IUD for birth control, I have
stopped menstruating at the age of 38, and I am
thrilled. I used to have awful cramps, vomiting,
diarrhea, and mood swings. Now I feel good all the
time - no pain, no depression, no weird distractions
of cramps and clots. It is wonderful, and with none of
the emotional side effects of the Pill which were very
extreme.
The Mirena doesn't interfere with my natural cycle,
or pump hormones all through my body, it just releases
a tiny amount of hormone right into the uturus, and
this thins the lining so it is almost gone. So I have
the best of both worlds - I still get the energy and
sexiness that comes with a woman's natural hormonal
cycle, but with none of the swelling and pain and
shedding that is due to the build up and release of
the lining. I feel so powerful and LUCKY that I
discovered this early enough to enjoy it! I recommend
it to anyone. On the commercials they say that only
women who have had a child should consider it, but I
have never been pregnant at all and it fit just fine.
August 2010
Yes. "I will not be using my uterus again and see
no reason to keep it."
Yes, at this point most definitely. I am 37 and a
mother of 4. I started at 11.
Through out most of my life, it hasn't really been an
issue. Just a normal biological function that happened
on a monthly basis. After an emergency c-section with
child # 4, my periods have become painful &
heavier. Also, in the past couple of years I've begun
experiencing severe depression lasting around 10 days
that coincides with it. So - if given the option I
would love to have a hysterectomy and simply get it
over with. I will not be using my uterus again and see
no reason to keep it. Not that uterus removal would be
likely to take care of the hormone issues that are
causing the depression, but hell, at least life would
be less messy. Just to be clear though, it's not about
shame. I don't despise being female or having a
vagina. I'm not angry about it. It's served it
purpose, acquired some damage the last time around and
should be properly put to rest.
****, Maine
July 2010
"Never Ever Ever!"
In answer to that question: Never Ever Ever!
I get one or two days during my period that
completely disable me, but I still love it. People
think I'm crazy, but women in industrialized countries
are taught to hate our periods, to hide them, to feel
ashamed, which is why people respond so negatively to
anyone who respects menstruation. Sexism is part of
the motivation for the negative views, as in, "men
don't have this 'nasty' 'horrible' 'smelly problem'
every month".think about it! What's so shameful about
a body indicating fertility? There are so many
products that are aimed at hiding menstruation-but
this is unnecessary-a tool for feminine hygiene
companies to make more money. Try reusable cloth pads
or cups or sponges-these aren't bad for you or the
environment. I get it-it's really really hard to see
where I'm coming from if you answered "no" to the
question, and for you sisters who have periods that
are so painful they merit medical attention, I
understand your situation is different. For everybody
else, all you have to do is try, try thinking positive
after all the pain about what it all means-it will
change your entire outlook!
I'm ****, I'm 20 and I'm from Wisconsin, and I love
this site!
July 2010
"NO"
I haven't had menstrual problems like very, very
strong pains or fainting, but it hasn't been easy for
me too. But, although I don't love the fact that I
have the bleeding, it doesn't only remind me of the
fact that I'm a female (and that's a fact that I DO
like), but it's also very natural. If God has created
us like this, why should we try to stop it? I know how
it is to feel sick or how it is when you've been
caught having menstruations at SCHOOL. But I still
wouldn't give this up. I must sound crazy, but I've
learned to live in peace with my body (and I
understand that that's not actually a very easy goal
when you're in great pain). The fact that you have
menstruations can mean (most of the cases, anyway)
that you're only healthy and everythings alright with
you.
So, my answer, in one word - NO.
And thank you for this website.
July 2010
"I already have. . . . I think I would rather die
a thousand agonizing deaths than to have to have
those periods again."
Your site is so interesting! Here's a story for your
"Would you stop menstruation if you could?" page. :)
Sorry if it's too long. Feel free to summarize or take
out excerpts if you still want it.
I already have.
I started my period when I was 12 and, from the
beginning, I had very heavy periods. They were so bad
that I refused to go to school on my heaviest days; I
would stay home in bed and cry. After I got a little
older, my mom got me an appointment with a
gynecologist to see if I could get some help. The
first visit he just prescribed me some Naproxen for
cramps. I went back later and tried to more fully
explain what the deal was: it was the cramps, it was
the bleeding. So this time, he put me on Seasonique
birth control.
The idea of only having a period every three months
made so happy I almost cried. I was delighted.
Unfortunately, after being on Seasonique for a while,
I started having very heavy breakthrough. I was afraid
it would be something I would have to deal with
forever. It interfered with my life so much that I
became depressed for a while and was prescribed
Prozac. I remember coming home from school one day,
having dealt with the heavy bleeding all day, and
sitting in the bathroom and just screaming my head
off. At that point I was beyond crying.
It had gotten to the point where it was like I was
having a period, every day. After a few weeks of that
I went back to the doctor and he put me on a different
birth control, and told me to skip the placebos and
take the active pills continually to supress my
period. I liked that idea, but after a while it
stopped working, and so the doctor schedule a
laparoscopy to see what was wrong with me.
I was terrified at first, but the experience wasn't
too unpleasant. The doctor did the laparoscopy as well
as a DNC, and he burned off the excess endometrial
tissue he found. He also removed a few small polyps.
My appendix had endometriosis on it, so he just
removed the whole thing.
I woke up from the surgery feeling pretty good. I had
almost no pain post-surgery. The worst part was, when
I went to the bathroom at the hospital, finding out
the doctor had put a tampon in me. Having never worn
tampons I didn't realize what the cord hanging out of
me was until the nurse looked at it. I nearly had a
panic attack; I think I thought my intestines were
falling out or something. I've always hated tampons.
Anyway, after the surgery I did very well for a
while. My doctor never fully explained that I had a
condition called endometriosis. He just told me that
he burned off the tissue; I didn't know it was a
disease. My mom explained to me what it was.
Eventually the heavy breakthrough came back, and I got
put on a different birth control, and another. I had
to try a few before I found one that worked for me.
Now I'm on Ovcon 50. It's a very high dosage, very
few pharmacies carry it, and there's no generic for
the 50mg dosage, so it's very expensive. However, it
works, and that makes me extremely happy. I skip the
placebos, so I no longer have a period. My friends
tell me how I lucky I am that I don't have to have a
period. I don't think they fully understand what I
went through, but I know that I am lucky for
endometriosis to be the only health problem I have. It
could have been a lot worse.
At the time I wished I could have just had a
hysterectomy, but I was too young and it was too
extreme a solution for my problem. Right now I'm glad
to just have birth control and no more period. I think
I would rather die a thousand agonizing deaths than to
have to have those periods again.
July 2010
"I believe the close affinity with the moon it is
not a mere coincidence."
No, I would not stop menstruation artificially. To
me, menstruation means an opportunity to remember
periodically that I am a fertile woman and that my
body is available and gives me the opportunity to
receive a new life.
The inconveniences of menstruation (discomfort,
unpleasant feelings, uterus pain) are an invitation to
slow my pace of activity and work, to pay attention to
the changes in my body, to take some extra time for
myself. Bleeding periodically can be a natural gentle
regeneration at biological and energetic level. I
think menstruation is also surrounded by magic. I
believe the close affinity with the moon it is not a
mere coincidence. I usually have my period in crescent
moon and I found out that I was born and that my
children were born or conceived with a crescent moon.
The physiology of ovulation is part of the mystery.
Girls are born with hundreds of thousands of ovules.
Many of them will disappear, about four hundred will
wake up 15, 30, even 50 years later to produce
ovulation and just a few of them will generate a new
life. It is also amazing that the signal to ovulate
comes from the hypothalamus, which is also the central
unit of emotions. When a woman has anomalous periods,
she may have emotional or psychological aspects which
require attention.
In addition, for some cultures, like the indigenous
people from Australia, menstrual blood is used in
medecine.
My name is ***, I am 40, and I am from Spain.
She later added:
There is a recent documentary dealing with
menstruation that probably you already know: "The moon inside you," from
Diana Favianova. It can be viewed on line here.
www.cultureunplugged.com/play/2369
June 2010
"The blood loss is so great that I have to have
blood transfusions continuously. So, HELL YEAH. I
would stop it without a doubt."
I am 16 years old and begun my periods on my 12th
birthday. The most painful day in my life without a
doubt. I have the worst period pains known to mankind
(well maybe not the MAN-kind) as well as the fact that
I have anaemia and faint at least 4 times in the 5
days that I have my period. The blood loss is so great
that I have to have blood transfusions continuously.
So, HELL YEAH. I would stop it without a doubt. No
second thoughts, nothing. I don't care about the fact
that I can't have children, although I am young to be
saying this, I already have knows for years that I
would rather adopt in the future.
June 2010
"No" from Chile
Would you stop menstruating if you could?
(¿Dejarías de menstruar si pudieras? No,
aunque muchas mujeres piensen lo contrario. Me agrada
el misterio que hay en la menstruación, porque
es la esencia de la femeneidad, representa totalmente
el hecho de ser mujer, porque no le ocurre de ninguna
manera al hombre.
Además es una indicadora del funcionamiento de
mi cuerpo. Tengo resistencia a la insulina, una
enfermedad crónica similar a la diabetes tipo 2
aunque menos grave, y uno de sus síntomas es
precisamente tener ciclos irregulares.
Mis ciclos nunca han sido regulares. Esperé
los dos años después de mi primera
menstruación (que fue a los 12 años y 7
meses), sin embargo seguía tan irregular como
en los primeros ciclos. A los 17 años fui por
primera vez a un ginecólogo debido a mi
irregularidad. Mis ovarios no poseen quistes,
según reveló la ecografía. Lo que
me hace irregular es el alto nivel de azúcar en
la sangre que tenía antes de comenzar mi
tratamiento.
Felizmente ahora me he vuelto más regular. Es
un proceso lento. Antes mis ciclos variaban en su
duración de 25 a 48 días; ahora duran
entre 31 y 38, lo cual es un gran avance, en los tres
años que llevo como insulinoresistente
diagnosticada.
Sí, tengo algunas molestias cuando
menstrúo, pero se solucionan con paracetamol
para mujeres. Nada grave. Sólo es desagradable
la sensación de estar manchada, aunque nunca he
visto la temida mancha roja en mi ropa. Por cierto,
gracias al sitio Mum.org que me atreví a probar
los tampones.
Son cómodos y bastante seguros, aunque al
principio es difícil acostumbrarse, ya que al
ser virgen como yo el tamaño de la vagina es
diferente.
Una vez mi mamá los probó y
según ella fue un desastre, se manchó
entera y nunca más quiso usarlos. Incluso
guardó un tampón (era Tampax), sin
embargo, lamentablemente lo botó a la basura
hace algunos años. Si hubiera sabido de la
existencia de este sitio lo habría conservado y
enviado.
Aquí en Chile no todas las mujeres usan
tampones. Le expliqué de esto a una amiga, y me
dijo que ella jamás los usaría. Creo que
es por la gran cantidad de católicos que hay
aquí (yo no soy católica), y son
bastantes conservadores en este aspecto. La
menstruación generalmente es un tema
tabú, al igual que el sexo.
Muchas gracias por el espacio de expresión,
*****, 20 años, Chile
June 2010
"I'd surprisingly have to say no!"
I'd surprisingly have to say no! I've only had my
period for about two and a half years, I'm currently
15 and I got it at 12. I used to HATE it SO much, but
now I feel better once I get it if you know what I
mean. Like, before my period I feel all bloaty and
gross when I'm pmsing, but it feels great to finally
be done with that. I think the main reason's because I
used to get very heavy periods when I was 12 and 13,
and some of the time when I was 14, but now their not
so bad, if anything on the lighter side.
Plus, my cramps have also gotten much better since my
first. Womanhood's not so horrible after all!
P.S. I love your website Harry, keep it up! I
actually found it when I was looking for first period
stories, since I love reading them.
June 2010
"I know is a contradiction, but I am a
contradiction, and that's why I can not make up my
mind regarding this."
By one hand it would be a relief as my period is not
allowing me to keep going with the normal course of my
life. By the other hand I think there is a kind of
sacred thing in our blood. It is also well-known that
we, women, get a really good cleanse while we have our
periods and that I feel well when the period is over.
So, if I don't have my period anymore how I am going
to enjoy that moment of being free of pain? I know is
a contradiction, but I am a contradiction, and that's
why I can not make up my mind regarding this.
****, 35, Belgium
April 1020
"Maybe, if I took the right attitude about it, my
periods would put me in touch more with my feminine
side, but I'm one of those girls who really should
have been born a guy."
I'm 17 and have very irregular periods, sometimes
bleeding for a month straight, but sometimes going for
three or four months without a drop of blood showing.
The unpredictability makes my life, uh, interesting,
but at least the flow is light and I don't have severe
cramps or noticeable mood swings. So, while periods
are an inconvenience, they're nothing I can't put up
with.
Maybe, if I took the right attitude about it, my
periods would put me in touch more with my feminine
side, but I'm one of those girls who really should
have been born a guy. Not to say I'm lesbian or
anything, just missed out on the Y chromosome.
April 2010
"I have a few family members and friends that have
had hysterectomies and oh how I envy them so."
Do we even need to ask this question????Ý I
would stop it in a minute, given that there are no ill
effects as has been stated by others.Ý I have
fibroid tumors and the extreme pain and excessive
bleeding wreak havoc for me.Ý I usually plan my
life around that "week".Ý
I started menstruatingÝ at age 13 and it was
the worst experience ever.Ý I remember thinking
after the first two times it occurred, "Whew, I
survived and I'm glad it's over", then my mother
reminded me that this event will happen every 28 days
for the next 30-40 years of my life.Ý I was
devastated!Ý It took me over a year to get used
to the changes, but it's still not my friend!Ý
I have a few family members and friends that have had
hysterectomies and oh how I envy them so.
Chicago
37 years old
April 2010
"hmm... not sure I'd stop it all together"
I know periods are definitely a pain, but I'm not
sure I'd stop them all together. I'd have to question
what effect it would have on my overall biological
functioning. If there were no negative side effects
associated with it, I think I might consider it, but
still, not sure I'd do it.
I'm almost 23 years old, and have been having periods
since age 12. On the one hand, periods are painful.
When I was on birth control (which I started using at
19 years old), it wasn't so bad, but now that I'm not
on birth control anymore they're so much more painful.
My whole lower back hurts pretty bad, and I'll
randomly get dizzy or hot. I don't want kids
(literally, ever), so do I really have a need for a
monthly period? On the other hand though, I do like
the monthly assurance that I'm not pregnant. I know I
could easily get a pregnancy test, but having a period
is free. I'm a student, money is tight sometimes.
I don't think having a period is beautiful and it
definitely doesn't make me feel more connected to
other women or nature, but I don't hate my uterus
either (or my periods, for me they're just not that
serious). I wouldn't say having a period is symbolic
of womanhood as post-menopausal women are still women.
I'm on the fence about what I'd do in this situation.
My biggest concern is what effect removing a process
from my body all together. I'd wonder what effect it
would have on my immune system (which works in sync
with the menstrual cycle) and other processes in my
body. If it was safe to do, I just don't know if I'd
actually do it.
~ Undecided student
April 2010
"YES i want to stop my period!!!
"I'm 18 years old and i started my period at the age
of 10. i was diagnosed with endometriosis at 17 and
was told that i need a hysterectomy. after years of
suffering and STILL suffering im ready for it to stop.
i hate being on hormones it only does my body more
harm than good. i have horrible cramps,heavy
bleeding,lower back pain and swelling, painful
urination and diarrhea. my endo is and will only get
worse with every period and bleeding i have. im in
college and i want to have fun. i cant have fun when
im literally being frozen(cant move one inch without
being in pain) while on my period. absoubly no pain
killers,birth control pills,iud,shots,etc work. im fed
up with periods. why cant men have them? lol
April 2010
"Messy and inconvenient, but not so much as to
take measures such as medications or devices that
may topple my decent hormonal balance."
Yes-----hesitantly.
My last child almost killed me (through the birth
process), and I had a necessary tubal ligation in my
mid 30s to prevent further pregnancies. At 43 years
old, my periods have always been irregular, so it is
always a surprise when Aunt Fannie comes to visit
again, usually after 25-45 days.
Messy and inconvenient, but not so much as to take
measures such as medications or devices that may
topple my decent hormonal balance.
And I suppose when the big M begins, it will be the
stigma of becoming an old lady. So, I will put up with
a bit of mess, and be thankful I have modern hygiene
products and facilities at hand.
"You can not do all the good the world needs, but the
world needs all the good you can do." -Anon.
-- registered nurse from Oregon, U.S.A.
April 2010
"I guess if there were no side effects and it
wasn't from something hormonal, cause that can
fuck your body up if you're unlucky, I would
choose *not* to bleed every month."
Hi Harry
Very interesting comments here!
Not too sure where to start. I guess every woman's
interaction and reflection of her period and all that
goes with it is a very personal account based on her
individual situation, heaviness, methods of handling
the blood that drips/flows/pours out of her vagina as
often as it does.
So for me, I don't have painful periods, not too
long, usually fairly regular and I have always plugged
them up (with non-applicator tampons), I really hate
pads for the dripping/leaking and plastic-y/nappy
wearing feeling - and have just used a diva cup that
my sister gave me a while back, but I put off using.
It was ok as I was able to forget about it for longer
(it holds more than a tampon), and I didn't need to
remember to carry more tampons (as I often get my
period first thing in the morning, while still half
asleep and I forget about it until later when it's
time to change it...) but - it isn't as easy to use -
I'm really worried I'll drop it in the toilet or drop
blood all over the floor getting it out!
Interesting to see how much blood comes out, I've
thought about next time collecting it into a cup
hahThe consistency of the fluid is interesting.
I don't really care about the mess any more. I have
had a lot of really healthy relationships - mostly
with women, but also with men that don't mind the
bleeding blood.
Specially when dating lesbians, if you want to have
sex and you're cycles aren't synced you're going to
end up painting the town red more than once. Can be
quite fun if you're arty! (and comfortable!)
Anyway....
I guess if there were no side effects and it wasn't
from something hormonal, cause that can fuck your body
up if you're unlucky, I would choose *not* to bleed
every month.
Like the other contributor who made the comment about
if we didn't get periods, and then someone asked you
if you wanted to bleed every month, have some cramps,
have hormonal changes, perhaps headaches, food
cravings and feel generally shitty - we'd probably
turn down the offer, right?!
BUT I do *not* hate my period - it can be a good time
to bond with other vaginas, and all get a bit more TLC
than normally.
I'm more worried about the "hot flushes" that my mum
and grandma have been talking about more recently.
Eikk!
http://www.mum.org/pastgerm.htm#anchor1442058
The retired teacher that wrote about her family
herstory is amazing! Such an asset, I hope that she
has been put in touch with other historians to pick
her collective memories for these stories of 150 plus
years ago! Wow.
Cheers,
***** - from Australia, living in China (late 20s)
April 2010
"I don't need to bleed once a month (or in my
case, at this point in my life, every two weeks)
to prove or feel like a true woman."
I'm a 44 year old Canadian who has been
peri-menopausal now for nine years. My body has
recently "kicked it up a notch" and, gathering from
what my mother and grandmother have told me, I'm now
going through the last stages and likely will stop
altogether and reach menopause before I hit 50.
All I can say is, thank God for that!
If I could have ended my period long ago I would
have. I don't need to bleed once a month (or in my
case, at this point in my life, every two weeks) to
prove or feel like a true woman. I already know I am.
I have the womanly bits to prove it and there's no
question about it genetically either! (Let's just say
that I have more than my share of womanly gifts in
other areas, because genetics is awesome that way, and
leave it at that.)
I started getting my period when I was exactly twelve
and a half years old. When I got it, and I did before
most of my friends, they were all jealous and I got a
lot of congratulations, which was fine. I was never
"taught" to hate my period or hate this aspect of my
femininity, but I have lived in a private hell when it
came to my monthly cycle right from the get-go. My
mother didn't understand. Her periods were regular,
PMS-free, pain free and did its thing and ended. No
problem. For me about a week or so before my period
would start, I would feel cranky and short tempered,
would get severe lower back aches, headaches and,
while extremely regular (I could tell you what day and
what time of day I would start), it came with 10 days
of cramps so bad I saw stars, migraines, vomiting,
excessive flow and sometimes fainting. I'd miss at
least three days of school each month because of the
pain and sickness, and eventually I would be on
painkillers so strong, I was too stoned to make any
sense of anything. After three days life became more
tolerable, but I still had bad cramps, still was pale
as the walking undead and tired from the whole ordeal.
I have had tests upon tests done on my reproductive
system since my doctors, male and female, were
concerned I had some sort of problem that caused such
a nasty experience and execessive flow, but even
today, all my tests have come up normal. I eventually
had to accept the fact that I'm one of those lucky
women (and I mean that with every ounce of sarcasm I
can muster - and that's a considerable amount, trust
me) who have what I lovingly call "the periods from
hell".
And to make it just that much more a stab in the
heart (which I would have much preferred), I found out
in my mid-20's I was unable to carry a child to full
term and often would miscarry just before or around
the first trimester (one manged to make it to nearly
four months - the first one I lost). As I said it
once, "The little guys take, but when they get to the
size of a pea, the little sailors jump ship and that's
an experience I would never wish on anyone!"
I long accepted that I was unable to have children
and didn't feel it necessary or desireable after a
certain point to have any of my own. So, I didn't
consider fertility treatments. Anyway, my problem
wasn't that I couldn't concieve...that I could do
easily enough. My problem was, I was unable to carry a
child to full term...and no one knew why or even how
they could effectively fix the problem without driving
me insane. Or causing me further trauma or pain.
Once I accepted that, I firmly wanted my periods to
stop. Nothing at the time was available to me that I
could use to make them stop (that didn't involve
surgery or removing bits of my anatomy - which no
doctor will do even now when I emphatically tell them
I want it done because the whole aparatus is not ever
going to be used for the purpose it was developed).
Because of other health problems unrelated to
reproduction, most of those methods are still
unavailable to me (or don't work to stop my periods,
just make them a teensy bit lighter - but eventually
these would even stop working).
Then I started peri-menopause. That just made
everything worse. Now I never know when my period is
going to start, how long it will be, or even how heavy
and bad it will be. It's gotten so disgusting to clean
up the nasty messes. I have to wear double or triple
the amount of pads (three pads at the same time have
me now referring to the whole get up as my "lady
diaper") and right now have a cupboard stuffed with
them to get me through the next few months (hopefully)
and always go nuts picking up boxes of pads when they
go on sale (tampons turned out to be unuseable for me
- they actually make my cramps worse and I'd still
have to wear a pad anyway).
So yeah, I'd love to make it stop, right now. No more
expense, no more mess, no more pain, no more mood
swings, no more any of it. The good news is, by the
time I finally stop, most of my friends my age will
just be getting started.
For those women who love getting their period and
think it makes them more feminine, connects them to
other women, reminds them of their fertility (which
was totally ironic for me), etc. well, I'm glad they
can feel that way and pat them on the back for it, but
those of us who hate having our periods and would stop
it in its tracks if we could shouldn't be considered
less of a woman, or be judged has hating our bodies
and hating ourselves or women in general. As other's
have said, this is my body and I should have the right
to deal with this particular function of it as I wish.
Since the chamber is decidedly empty, will never have
anyone move into it, why should I keep it open for
tenancy? Or have reminders that while it may have a
temporary resident, it won't make it to the end of the
lease. For a long time that was more heartbreaking
than the hellish period itself.
Now, my period is just a nasty annoyance. I can't
wait for menopause to hit...and according to just
about every woman I know who has gone through it,
that's worth celebrating more than starting getting a
period it in the first place.
It can't come soon erough!
April 2010
No. "I see my period as a reminder
of my fertility, which I haven't yet tested by
trying to get pregnant, but I hope it will possible
for me and my husband."
I wanted to contribute because I seem to be one of
the few who would probably not stop my periods if I
could. I want to have children someday and therefore
need to have periods for that purpose, and currently
it is helpful to know every month whether I'm pregnant
or not. However, that's unlikely because I've been on
the pill for about 8-9 years. From what I hear from
friends, not everyone is as lucky with the pill as I
have been - I did not gain weight and my cramps and
bleeding didn't get worse, but reduced significantly.
I am now 27 and interestingly, for the last few years
my period became VERY light and only lasted about a
day and a half. Recently, my period stopped entirely
for about four months. I was a little concerned and
saw a doctor about it, I chose to switch to a very
low-dose pill to see if it would return. I'm hoping it
does. I may have this attitude because my sister went
through a rare premature menopause during her late
teens and I am happy to be reminded that I did not
have to go through such difficulties. I see my period
as a reminder of my fertility, which I haven't yet
tested by trying to get pregnant, but I hope it will
possible for me and my husband. [Women in an English
cotton mill menstruated without any absorbing material
to show eligible men they were fertile - scroll about
halfway down the page to "When studying the
Suffragist movement . . . ." for the interesting
story.]
I can understand why some wouldn't want to have
periods, and before I started the pill, I may have
agreed as I had terrible cramps that would keep me out
of school every month. The silver lining of this is
that I found out I could be comfortable talking to my
dad about periods (he often picked me up from school
when I had cramps) and this added to my respect for
him.
Thanks for letting me contribute my opinions and
experiences. Please do not use my name - though I
personally wouldn't mind, I'd like to respect my
family's anonymity since I mentioned them. You were
interested in nationality and region, I am in the
U.S.A. and grew up in central Illinois.
March 2010
"OMG YES"
I started my period when between the ages of 11 and
13. My perioiods are sometimes so bad that i cant even
go to school. I get very dizzy and even faint. i fell
asleep in the shower once because of it. Almost every
single period i get i throw up and my cramps are
sometimes so bad that i would compare it to having
contractions during childbirth. I am 18 years old now
and i still get horrible cramps. My thighs hurt, my
lower back hurts, itfeels like my insides are be wrung
out. It feels like i have to go poo reeaallly bad but
i cant and i know its not that because i can pass gas
normalyy and the pain is still presisitant. More than
once while at school i have passes out in class due to
my period. Ive thrown up at school many a times thinks
to Aunt Flow. The past year or so my periods are only
about 4 days long. they used to be about 7. the thing
about histerectamys and birth conrtol is that i hear
they are bad for your body and your hormones.
February 2010
"Good Lord, Yes!"
At the age of 50, after 41 years of menstruating -
492 periods, to be exact, I had the bright idea to ask
my doctor, "Do I really have to do this?"
He said no, put me on YAZ, and I lived happily ever
after.
The bloating, the IBS symptoms, the weird food
cravings, the weight gain, the inability to fir into
my clothes, the muscle ache, the migraine headaches
(complete with hallucinations and vomiting), the
sudden flashbacks to every unpleasant experience I
ever had with anyone over anything - gone. All gone.
Best of all, the filth is gone. As Tennessee Williams
said, "Nothing human is foreign to me," and it is
especially true for those of us who have taken care of
infants, and the elderly. But one day the whole
business seemed so repulsive to me. Why was it
necessary? Why did I have to put up with this every
month? What was the point? I'd hated every period I'd
ever had, and enough was enough.
The best thing was this: Traveling without a
menstrual period. When I menstruated, no matter what
the reason, business or pleasure, I always ended up on
an airplane or an isolated stretch of Southwest
highway, damn near bleeding to death.
Everyone I suggest YAZ to says, "Oh, no, I can't use
a contraceptive because..." It reminds me of when I
was younger, and women said that they couldn't use a
contraceptive "because." They were always
"discovering" they were pregnant - as though it were
completely out of their control.
I say, have or have not the babies you want, and have
or have not your periods. Take control.
February 2010
No. "It's the only way I can be excused for
being cranky."
Why would I want to stop my menstruation? It's the
only way I can be excused for being cranky. I feel
close to the nature, the idea of the cycle and the
whole concept behind it makes me feel special. I am
proud to be a woman and menstruation is part of my
life...
February 2010
"Yes."
Yes. I'm 17 and would do anything to stop periods.
It's the one thing that has ever made me want to
die.
February 2010
"I cant think of anything more putrid than having
to wash the huge amount of menstrual blood I produce
away by hand."
Im nearly 38 and I say.. yes..
I had 11 yrs of infertility. Month after Month of
humiliation, disappointment and mess. I had months of
pain, months of having to throw my knickers out every
day.. Finally after having a 20cm tumor, ovary and
tube removed and 9 months of fertility treatment I
fell pregnant and those 9 months were awesome period
free months.
I then Bled none stop for 14wks just to teach me a
lesson Im sure.. 14mths later got pregnant again and
had a second child and ever since my periods have been
so heavy and horrendous that even Maxi absorbing
incontinence pads leak! Not to mention mid cycle
debilitating pain (Mittelschmerz doesnt describe
enough the pain)
I have had my kids.. why keep the factory open if
its not going to produce anything. If I could have an
hysterectomy I would.. I only have one functioning
ovary and it would be kept to help my hormones
regulated.. but why bleed?
As for moon cups and washables.. NO THANKS.. I cant
think of anything more putrid than having to wash the
huge amount of menstrual blood I produce away by
hand.. YUCK.. some days I wish I could just stand in
the shower all day to save the embarrassment of leaks
and failed protection..
Its no one else's place to comment on my personal
choices for MY Body.. if you love it.. good on ya but
i don't need periods to define my femininity nor to
have babies any more...
February 2010
"And to those spouting hateful comments about
women who choose suppression - Sorry, but living in
horrific pain is not a requirement for being a
woman. My body is mine, and I'll do what I need to
to live comfortably in it."
Came across this page and thought I'd add a comment.
I don't know that I'd feel 100% comfortable with
completely ending my period, though the idea is very
tempting. But I am currently regulating it, and have
been since I was 16. I'm now 23. It was one of the
best things I've ever done for myself. I use regular
birth control pills to suppress it for four months,
then at the end of that fourth month I let myself have
a withdrawal bleeding. It's uncomfortable, but fairly
light and tolerable. A far cry from how it used to be.
For years my period caused me nothing but pain. It
did not make me feel connected to other women or my
womanhood. It didn't make me feel sexy or feminine. I
didn't hate it because of societal brainwashing. I
hated it because the pain was excrutiating. I hated it
because I was bedridden for a week, because I was in
too much pain to stand and take a shower for days,
because I had to schedule my life around it. I hated
nights trapped in the bathroom, crying and vomiting
from the pain. Every diet and exercise change I made
to my life had little to no impact on it. And my PMS
was insane, causing me enough physical pain that I'd
just wish my period would show up already and get this
over with. Not to mention the emotional turmoil. Even
after taking birth control pills in the traditional
fashion, it made only a small dent in the problem. I
felt trapped and tortured by my own body. I couldn't
understand how this kind of pain was normal. I
couldn't even go to school, so how could I ever hold a
job? How could this supposedly normal female bodily
function be so destructive to my life?
My mother just happened to catch a special on TV
about period suppression, and my life was changed from
that moment. I talked to my doctor, started a routine
and never looked back. My quality of life has
skyrocketed. When I do have the withdrawal bleeding,
it's light enough for me to still function like a
normal human being. And my body seems to have adjusted
itself to the schedule. When that fourth month comes
up, I start feeling kind of sore and a little PMSy,
just a bit, like it's saying "Okay, it's almost time."
My body and I work together now. I feel more connected
to it than I ever did on my "natural" cycle.
And to those spouting hateful comments about women
who choose suppression - Sorry, but living in horrific
pain is not a requirement for being a woman. My body
is mine, and I'll do what I need to to live
comfortably in it.
February 2010
Yes. "Dr. *** was there in the surgical suite
when I came in with his Jimmy Buffet playing. He
held my hand while they put me under, all the while
telling me what a great person I am, how well I was
going to do and that surgery would be fine. It was
truly amazing!"
I'm a 46 year old female who had an endometrial
ablation a few years ago. As soon as the discharge
from the procedure stopped, I have been without a
cycle. PRAISE THE LORD! I couldn't be happier! No more
pain, no more bleeding all over the sheets at night
now matter what type of sanitary product I used...
none of it!
My gynecologist was wonderful about performing the
ablation. A friend of mine at work had it done and
raved about it. She mentioned it to me when she saw
how I was suffering greatly from cramps, nausea,
exhaustion and anemia. (When my period came, it was no
secret. All anyone had to do was look at me. My skin
tone changed from a nice medium-to-light tone to stark
white. Even the guys could tell just by looking at
me!) Since I was definitely done having children, when
I approached Dr. *** about it he listened carefully,
gave me an extensive list of pros and cons and said
"Think about it." I went home, told my husband about
it he said "What are you waiting for? Call him back!"
I guess he really had noticed all the suffering I
endured!
The surgery was done at the outpatient clinic at our
local medical center. Prep involved not having any
food or liquids after midnight. That was it. Dr. ***
was there in the surgical suite when I came in with
his Jimmy Buffet playing. He held my hand while they
put me under, all the while telling me what a great
person I am, how well I was going to do and that
surgery would be fine. It was truly amazing! I woke up
feeling very groggy, but after I drank some liquids
and the staff was confident I wasn't going to vomit,
they sent me home with my husband to recover. For the
next few days I had some pretty significant cramping
and some bloody discharge, but all I needed to handle
the pain was some mild pain meds Dr. *** prescribed. I
had the procedure on a Friday and had planned to go to
work on Monday, but gave myself an extra day to
recover. Ever since then I've been happy as a clam!
Almost one year to the day my neighbor across the
street had her ablation done by Dr. *** and raves
about him and how she feels now also! (I was the
guinea pig, I guess.) Now, ironically, my
sister-in-law in another state had it done and had a
terrible outcome. Her periods got worse as did her
cramping. She ultimately wound up with a hysterectomy.
If I had known she'd have that outcome, I would have
insisted she come here to have Dr. *** do it!
I do NOT miss my period and feel for my poor 17 year
old daughter. Since the age of 13 she's been suffering
from severe cramping and bleeding AND Dr. *** thinks
she already may have endometriosis. She's on the
Depo-Provera shot for now which has stopped her cycle
all together, but we worry about the future and her
ability to have children.
February 2010
"[Menstruation] doesn't put me in touch with
the earth or my femininity any more than my snot
or shit does."
I am 38 year old New Zealander with two children.
During pregnancy and breastfeeding I had a marvelous
four years off (apart from one light period between
weaning and falling pregnant again). I can't see the
point of menstruating any longer. It doesn't put me
in touch with the earth or my femininity any more
than my snot or shit does.
I use a cup and washable pads because its cheaper
and doesn't generate rubbish, not because I enjoy
handling bodily fluids - I used cloth nappies for my
sons but I don't have a particular affinity with
baby shit either.
If worshipping the moon makes women accept their
periods more, then more power to them; but I think
menstruation, like painful and life-threatening
childbirth, is an artifact of evolution that we can
moderate, but are unfortunately stuck with.
January 2010
"I love menstruating."
I am 24 years old. I love menstruating. My cycle
is a beautiful reminder to remember what it means to
be Woman. I feel more empowered than ever now that I
am learning more about my cycle and fertility. I
used to get angry about being in a female body and
thought periods were a pain. Even if it still hurts
a little, now I am giving my cycles attention and
I'm feeling even more in tune with my body, the
Earth, the Moon, and really the essence of being
Human. As a Woman I am grateful for this gift, it is
so healing to give my body Love, and accepting this
into my life is one of the most wonderful things
I've ever done for myself.
December 2009
"Please try to accept that some people really
do have lighter, shorter, painless menstruation
and some people really do have terrible pain and
heavy bleeding."
I'm kind of surprised by the number of people who
are viciously vocal on this page in either
direction. Personally, I think there are better
options for dealing with menstruation that make it
far less annoying or painful. When I was using an
internal silicon cup I hardly even knew I was having
my period and I only had to clean it in the comfort
of my home twice a day. Lately I've been using
reusable cloth pads, which I find way more
comfortable than commercial ones. I used to have
terrible yeast infections and really bad cramps and
sensitivity. I still have nasty mid-cycle pains from
PCOS that blow menstrual cramps out of the water.
I know that some people have a worse (or better)
time than I do, but our voices are equally valid.
You don't need to hate yourself or others because
your experiences differ. Please try to accept that
some people really do have lighter, shorter,
painless menstruation and some people really do have
terrible pain and heavy bleeding. For goodness sake,
don't ridicule people because they're different.
Everyone has different genes, different reactions to
different products, and different lifestyles.
I do think that people who are suffering might
want to try making changes to their lives to improve
the conditions they're facing, but I don't see any
need to be self-righteous. Nothing works the same
for everyone. I hope people will research and try
other options before chemically or surgically
stopping their menstruation, but it's their right to
chose what they want to do with their bodies.
They're "real" women regardless of their choice and
regardless of their fertility. It's silly to suggest
that someone isn't a woman just because her view of
womanhood differs from yours.
I am saddened by how much people's body image and
their image of their femininity appears to be tied
to negative views of menstruation and their
genitalia. No, you may not have been meant to
menstruate as often as modern women do, but it is
still a natural process and not something you need
to be ashamed of. It doesn't make you filthy or
unclean or disgusting any more than sweating does.
I'm not saying it's loads of joyous fun, I don't
love sweating either, but needing to clean yourself
doesn't mean that there is something wrong with
_you_.
December 2009
"Hell yes!"
I was diagnosed with a rare bleeding disorder in
2007, and ever since then I have been burdened with
horrendous periods. Not only is the flow profuse,
but the clots that come out are sickening, and the
abdominal pain that follows is disabling. I would
not wish this monthly curse on my worst enemy.
It's bad enough, I frequently miss work because of
it.
I have recently met with my doctor, and am in the
process of scheduling endometrial ablation to help
with this problem.
So, when you ask me if I would stop menstruation
if I could, my answer is
Hell Yes!
xxxx
November 2009
"I teach anthropology, and we talk a lot about
the difference between sex (which is biological)
and gender (which is cultural). I think it's
perfectly possible to be female in both the sexual
and gender senses WITHOUT the pain and mess of
having a period."
Yes. At present, its sole function is reassuring
me that I am not pregnant. I would happily trade the
cost of buying pads and tampons (and, unfortunately,
I need both) every month for the cost of buying a
pregnancy test once a month. I would love to have
the money back I've spent on diagnostic work for the
sometimes paralyzing pain I have every month (not to
mention the fainting!) only to be told "Well, this
just happens to some women."
I teach anthropology, and we talk a lot about the
difference between sex (which is biological) and
gender (which is cultural). I think it's perfectly
possible to be female in both the sexual and gender
senses WITHOUT the pain and mess of having a period.
On another note, my mother reached menopause at
51. She rates it up there with getting her first job
and marrying my dad as "the best thing that ever
happened to her."
cheers,
xxxx
November 2009
"To sum it all up I'm never stopping my period
again."
I stopped my period for 2 years and let me tell
you, it was the worst thing i could have ever done
to my body. I I was so depressed, crying all the
time, irritable. The effects on my body were awful
as well. I had headaches, My libido was gone, I had
vaginal dryness, heart palpitations, acne and weight
gain all month long. As least when I had my period
all of my discomfort was temporary.
So I finally got fed up and had the Mirena removed
a few months ago and I'm almost back to normal. Sure
my periods are bad but I'm grateful to have it back
after what I went through when it was gone. To sum
it all up I'm never stopping my period again. It
just did not agree with me. I messed with nature and
my body pushed back. I'm never stopping my period
again.
November 2009
"As a sewage treatment plant operator I know
first hand the consequence of all the female
products that get flushed into the receiving
streams."
I have no time for those of you who write in with
your "I hardly notice it" and "eat organic"
comments. If fertility could remain intact there is
no way any sane person would choose to go through
this ordeal once a month. It is a poor set up. End
of story.
Let us assume for a moment there was no such thing
as menstruation and the body somehow dissolved the
uterine lining or it would be absorbed by the body.
Then let us say that we were told that once a month
for 3 (give me a break you don't fool me) to 10 days
you will bleed uncontrollably out of your vagina. We
would be mortified. It would seem RIDICULOUS to us!
Having a period is horrible. It is limiting,
expensive, painful, inconvenient and hard on the
environment. As a sewage treatment plant operator I
know first hand the consequence of all the female
products that get flushed into the receiving
streams. Our bar screens are littered with "shoots"
as the boys call the tampon applicators, not to
mention pads and wrappers that get flushed. These
products break our equipment, clog pumps and dull
the teeth of the grinders. Maintenance costs would
be reduced by 36% (yes I figured it out) if these
things were out of environment. As everyone knows,
the products also make their way into the oceans and
waterways, harming aquatic wildlife. I am 37 and
have a uterus full of fibroids and have opted for a
hysterectomy. People say I am crazy that I forfeit
my right to have children. Well, I never thought I
would grow up and be the person who didn't have
kids, but I am certainly not going to define my life
or my womanhood based on wether or not I brought a
kid into this world. There are many ways to express
motherhood and I am not going to go through my life
regretting that I didn't push a child out of my
vagina. It is so ridiculous some of the ideas
society throws at us.
So, I am firing my uterus and never having a
period again. I am an athlete and love to hike and
camp-I can not wait. No more period for the rest of
my life. Oh yeah-diva cups, luna cups and instead
all leak too. Some people have better luck than
others but to say they are fool proof is wrong. And
NO I DO NOT put it in wrong. If after 2 years you
still get leaks then there is something wrong with
the product, not me.
October 2009
"I know I'm female and I don't need a monthly
messy, painful inconvenience to remind me of the
fact"
I've already commented but I feel I had to again
after reading the entry from the woman who claimed
women who wanted to stop their period "sickened" her
and advised them to go get a sex change because they
weren't "real women". If she likes getting her
period then good for her, but she shouldn't be so
harsh on those who don't. I know I'm female and I
don't need a monthly messy, painful inconvenience to
remind me of the fact, I can see that for myself
when ever I get changed or go the bathroom!
September 2009
"I truly despise my uterus and would be more
than happy to have it removed sooner rather than
later, so that I waste less of my life having to
deal with this inconvenience."
I would happily give up my period at the drop of a
hat if I could find a way to do it that didn't have
other risks for my body. I think it's ludicrious for
me to deal with this mess when I'm not ever going to
have children. I am 23 years old, and I got my
period a few months before I turned 13. I have
fairly easy periods (first day pain only, fairly
light bleeding after the first two days) but all in
all I consider it a waste of time and money,
considering I have no use for it. I truly despise my
uterus and would be more than happy to have it
removed sooner rather than later, so that I waste
less of my life having to deal with this
inconvenience.
September 2009
"yes . . . but only naturally!"
yes i would like stop or lessen my period but only
naturally!
I usually have 7 days. I am 31 and have been slowly
changing my bad lifestyle habits that have been making
me sick. (food, sleep, stress). I feel better when i
am taking care of myself. I have learned to check
things out before taking advice and not let anyone
tell meÝhow wrong i am, that someone else knows
me better.
I like the natural pad thing and would like to give
that a try.
peace, love, starts from within.Ý
Texas
September 2009
"I would definitely stop my periods if I
could."
And, look at this, turns out I actually can!
I'm 21 years old now and live in Belgium, I started
menstruating when I was around 13. To be honest I've
never had really bad periods, but I did suffer quite a
bit from PMS. The week before my period started
(usually very regularly by the way, 28 days exactly
unless I was stressed) I had a lot of trouble with my
lower back and especially my breasts! God, my breasts.
Constantly felt like they were going to explode, not
very useful in a country where virtually everything is
done by bike... Sex was actually really difficult
because every time my breasts 'got in the way' I
almost had to cry because they were so tender.
Ok, these things weren't that much fun, but nothing
really serious.
I've used the pill for years but was always rubbish
at taking it at the right times, besides that I forgot
it every now and then. After that I switched to a
vaginal ring, which worked quite well but got a bit
troublesome after a while. Neither really affected my
periods, with or without it, they always came at the
same time.
Last year however, I started using Implanon as a
contraceptive. One of the side affects is a change in
your menstrual cycle, but in around 20% of women their
periods stop completely. I'm so happy I'm included in
that 20%. I cannot believe how much EASIER my life is
now! To be honest the first few months were really
strange, I still had PMS symptoms but never started
menstruating. I really felt like 'less of a woman',
like I was handicapped in some way. But after a while
I got used to it, and I dread the day that I'll have
to deal with them monthly again... No more waking up
in blood-soaked sheets, no more having to wear mostly
black skirts in case you 'leak' when you're away, no
more running to the bathroom every hour to check if
everything is still ok down there, no more spending
money on tampons and pads each month. And then I
haven't even talked about the occasional smell, the
constant paranoia that you're leaking or that everyone
can somehow see it on you, having to cancel fun plans
like an impromptu trip, camping, swimming etc. because
'it's that time of the month again'. What is there to
miss? Of course, it's there for a reason, and giving
birth is no doubt a wonderful thing, but why keep it
if it's not necessary? If we can control it? Of
course, I got lucky, but if the possibility existed
for everyone, I really can't fathom why somebody would
look forward to that grueling experience every month.
After my three-year Implanon cycle is over I'm
definitely getting a new one, besides the fact that
it's super safe as you can't make any mistakes using
it, the side effect of ending my periods has honestly
been heavenly.
Take care,
****
September 2009
"Would you stop menstruating if you could? Yes,
immediately."
I absolutely ABHOR this feeling of 'incontinence.'
Not to mention the monthly pain and the costs.
YUCK
from Germany, 49 years old
September 2009
Yes. "I started at the age of 8."
I'm 36 years old and want to stop my menstruation. I
don't know why I need it. Women younger then me can by
taking shots or pills and they haven't had it as long
as I have. I started at the age of 8. I've had my two
children and they are about to move out. I had my
tubes cut and burned over 16 years ago. I'm tired of
bleeding for 14-21 days every month and passing blood
clots going threw a pad and tampon every 20 to 30
minutes. So if I can find away to quit having my
period I would.
****
September 2009
Yes. "Men don't have to have some horrible,
painful routine in order to feel like men."
Hello,
I'd like to add my comments to your survey. I
would definitely stop menstruation if I could. In
fact, I found your website when I was doing a search
on what options there are to do that.
I began the horrible thing when I was barely 11
years old, after starting to mature when I was
barely 9. I feel as though I've missed out on my
childhood because of having had a woman's body at
such an absurdly young age. When I was a child, I
used to pray to God every night to make it go away.
When I was around the other kids at school, I always
felt very awkward and out of place because of my
over-developed body. One of the major reasons why I
decided not to have any children was because I was
afraid that a female child would inherit it. With
the age of puberty getting younger, the child might
have started puberty at an even younger age. I'm 38
now.
In response to some of the other comments, I
noticed that one respondent eats only organic foods.
That's really good, and I also eat organic as much
as I can afford to, as organic food is normally more
expensive. I've also noticed that a healthier diet
reduces the severity of the thing.
Some of the respondents say they wouldn't get rid
of it because it gives them the sense of being
connected to the other women around the world. Why
should suffering be part of being either sex? Men
don't have to have some horrible, painful routine in
order to feel like men. If menstruation is what
makes one a woman, is being a woman really a gift,
as some people say that it is?
Although there are ways of stopping menstruation,
they're often very hard to access. Many doctors
won't perform a hysterectomy on a woman who doesn't
have children under the presumption that the woman
will later change her mind and have a nervous
breakdown because she can no longer get pregnant.
This reasoning strikes me as absurd. On the one
hand, the doctors find the woman too feeble-minded
to make the long-term decision as to whether or not
to have children. At the same time, the doctors
think that this same feeble-minded woman would have
the sanity to raise a child. It's interesting that
doctors don't question a woman's ability to decide
whether to have an abortion, and even teenage girls
are trusted with the ability to decide this,
although there are women who've regretted that
decision.
There are also a number of medications which can
delay early puberty by suppressing the hormones
until the child becomes older. Despite the rising
rate of early puberty, few people know about the
existence of this treatment, and it's rarely used.
Even when it is, it's generally only used if the
child starts puberty before the age of seven. Is
seven a reasonable age to start becoming an adult?
If it is, should a seven-year-old get pregnant?
Some people use birth control pills to stop
menstruation, but at the same time, there are risks
with it, such as an increased risk of cancer. Also
it's a prescription medication, and getting the
prescription can be expensive for the many people
who don't have health insurance. Also, health
insurance doesn't cover hysterectomies that are
performed solely to stop menstruation. It would be
good if there was some way of stopping this which
didn't involve a doctor's appointment, such as
herbs, or if the existing medications against it
were available over-the-counter.
You can print my name if you publish this on the
website. [The general policy is I never print names
in this section for many reasons.] I live in
Germany, am originally from England, and lived in
the US for some years. Thanks for letting me have my
say.
Sincerely,
****
September 2009
"[T]he whole thing's nothing but a nuisance and
an expense, with no redeeming features
whatsoever."
I would happily have gone my entire life without
any periods. I started when I was 16 and am now 48,
and if my mother's history is anything to go by I
still have another five or more years to go before
menopause.
I've never had any kind of problems, pain,
pre-menstrual tension, or anything like that. I
don't have any kind of blood or period phobia. But
the whole thing's nothing but a nuisance and an
expense, with no redeeming features whatsoever. I
have to buy pads (and they don't come cheap), carry
a supply if travelling, dispose of them (not always
easy away from home), and go without a bath for a
week. How much money I've been obliged to spend on
pads over the years I hate to think, and it's
basically cash poured down the drain.
I can't understand anyone enjoying or welcoming
anything about periods. My long-standing fantasy was
always to have a hysterectomy and be rid of them
once and for all.
You can show my name if you like.
****
(Grew up in USA, now living in UK)
September 2009
"I thank God that he gave women so many gifts"
I would never stop my menstrual. It sets us apart
from men in a big empowering way. I thank God that
he gave women so many gifts like being able to birth
and hold children and then being able to feed them
with milk when they arrive in the world and
menstrualing helps this all transpire.
(15-year-old from Montclair, New Jersey, who
also contributed Nosebleed
pillow and The
comma to Words and
expressions about
menstruation and who "wanted [her brothers] to die
thinking I never had a period, which was
ridiculous.")
August 2009
"Absolutely NOT."
Absolutely NOT. I am 23 years old and with a 4
year old son. Every since I had him my periods have
been irregular. At first it was because of the depo
shot after I had him, but I stopped after the second
dose. I switched to the patch, then finally back to
the pill. However, after I left my exhusband I
stopped taking the pill when I was 21. Condoms
became my main choice of birth control, oh and I
barely even have had sex in the last 2 years. My
period comes whenever it pleases. Sometimes I only
get 4 to 6 a year. I get pains in my back that are
so unbarable, I get angry, and I get bloated.
However, I do not mind what comes with it. All
because it might mean I can bare children again one
day. Endometriosis is very common in the women in my
family and one day when I decide to get remarried
and have a stable relationship with the right
person, then maybe I can have one more child.
People who say they would get rid of their periods
sicken me. If you want so bad to get rid of them, go
have a sex change, because you're NOT a real woman
at all!
Regards,
****
Virginia [U.S.A.]
August 2009
"I HATED it!!!"
Oh yes.... I would have LOVED to have stopped it!
It came when it felt like it... from 27 to 56
days...... I bled heavily for 9 days each time....
flooded through clothing, hot flushes... cramps so
bad I wanted to die.... faintness in the street and
anywhere else. There were times when I could hardly
think straight due to pain and faintness. I HATED
it!!! Then... I had firbroids... and it got worse! I
eventually had a total hysterctomy .. which plunged
me into a slightly early menopause so have to use
hrt patches.. successfully ... but I feel so much
better! Without the 9 day periods, and the two weeks
prior to that swollen to the point of AGONY breasts
that went with it!
****, UK
July 2009
"My answer is YES!"
I'm 24 years old from United Kingdom. I got my
first period when I was 11 (I was at school at the
time as well... urgh!). They've never been
particularly heavy but I've always had painful
periods. When I was younger every month on the first
day I'd be so sore that I could barely move and I
would feel feverish so would have to stay off
school, luckily I grew out of that when I was 16,
although I still get bad cramps. I've never had any
desire to have children, so it annoys me when I get
it every month as I'm going through all that
discomfort for nothing. I can't take the pill due to
high blood pressure (I inquired about it a few years
ago for contraceptive purposes) so I can't even stop
it that way. I can't wait until menopause, my mum
went through hers at 47 so hopefully only another 23
years to go!
July 2009
"It seems like societal brainwashing to me that
women should bleed."
Yes I have chosen to stop by continuously taking
the pill and not the placebo week. I did this before
the new pills came out that allow you to do it. I
can't understand why anyone would choose to suffer
if they don't have to. It seems like societal
brainwashing to me that women should bleed. If you
are on the pill anyway, the bleeding is not a real
menstrual cycle. It is hormone withdrawal bleeding.
The developers of the original pill built the
placebo week into the pill packets so that it would
mimic women's natural cycles and it would be more
easily accepted. It is an illusion so doctors don't
have to explain how it works. Some doctors today
still don't understand how the pill works.
June 2009
"The short answer to the question 'Would you
stop menstruating if you could?' would have to be
a resounding 'no' for me."
My periods have always been irregular, the first
occurring when I was twelve, the next when I was
fifteen. Even though my first period ruined a ski
trip with my father, and the second my hopes of
joining the wrestling team, I still wouldn't trade
them. My family has a history of a large variety of
horrible problems with their reproductive systems,
and even though I have no desire for children of my
own, it's a comfort to know that I might one day be
able to carry a child.
I'm not even one of those women who has easy
breezy periods: I get migraines, I bleed for at
least a week, I get paranoid and snap at everyone.
Even so, I do feel a connection to women across the
world, and it's one of the rare times that I feel
most like a woman. That in and of itself is amusing,
because I don't always identify as female - not
having periods at all would make it much easier to
be fully androgynous, and yet I still wouldn't trade
them in.
May 2009
"But when I look down and see the strawberry
stain in my panties every month, a little of the
euphoria from the first time still gets me."
At fourteen, I've only experienced 18 periods so far,
but I can honestly say I do appreciate them. It makes
me so happy to think of the connection I have with
virtually every woman in the world. I will admit, they
can be such a pain; and the breakouts, moodiness,
bloating, and cramps associated with menstruation are
very irritating at times. But when I look down and see
the strawberry stain in my panties every month, a
little of the euphoria from the first time still gets
me. I can't help but marvel at my body and the
wonderful things it can do. I view my period as a
beautiful thing, it's a monthly reminder of my
propulsion into womanhood and maturity.
May 2009
"From the bottom of my heart: I HATE
MENSTRUATION!"
Since my traumatic first time until now, i have felt
that menstruation is the evilst curse in Earth. I
can't wish anybody the pain, the nasty odor and all
the other "inconvenients" better called punishments
associated with this filthy thing. I wonder why? why?
Why?
April 2009
"I HAVE WONDERFUL PERIODS NOW! No pain, 4 days:
one moderate, 1 light, 2 drainage. My periods
actually make me feel happier."
What do YOU think? Would you stop menstruating
indefinitely - for years, maybe?
Of course not! I love my period & I look forward
to it every month.
I used to have horrible painful periods. I had my
first menses when I was 10 or 11 years old. I hated my
breasts, cramps, and awkward teenage appearance. I ate
terrible fast food and RBGH milk at the time. I know
the chemicals and hormones in food and environment
caused the majority of my problems.
I have since changed my diet to all natural organic.
I only buy milk from cows NOT treated with RBGH and
stopped eating cheap beef and genetically engineered
food.
Let me tell you what.. I HAVE WONDERFUL PERIODS NOW!
No pain, 4 days: one moderate, 1 light, 2 drainage. My
periods actually make me feel happier. I get increased
blood flow to my nether regions (hehe) which at least
put me in a good mood when I'm just sitting there. I
also get excited right before it starts. I also get
"spiritual" around my period. My sense of smell
doubles and I gain an incredible sense for what people
around me are feeling. Trust me, I had 10 years of
period hatin' before I am now proud of everything
woman.
Stop buying those horrible dioxin laced disposables!
I bought a bunch of homemade cloth pads from women.
They are thinner, discreet, block odor, store &
wash easily, PLUS they are super comfy. The fleece is
warm in the winter and cotton is breathable in the
summer. The best thing is that there is no smell like
with the disposables because the cloth absorbs it all.
They seem to wick the blood right off. I have leaked
through TONS of disposables, but I have been using
cloth pads for a year WITHOUT ONE LEAK!!! Ebay has a
bunch of these for a great price and you can ask the
sellers to custom make them for you. Most of them fold
up into cute envelope shapes and snap closed- for
transportation (so you can easily stash them in your
purse before & after using without a mess).
Cloth pads are also really easy to clean. Just toss
them in a small hamper after using (don't soak/ don't
prewash). They can sit like this for a few days. The
morning before you do laundry toss them in the washer
with water and oxo-brite (or any oxygen cleaner) and
let them sit. After work (or several hours later)
throw the rest of your clothes in and do laundry as
usual. By this time, the oxygen cleaner will have
eaten away the blood and it will NOT get on your other
clothing. Wash and dry as usual. There is usually a
tiny bit of staining on the pads, but they come out
completely clean and surprisingly bright, ready to use
again.
I went from being a period hater to a period lover!
It is hard to be an all natural woman, but after the
sacrifice my life is so much more fulfilling. The
difference in my mind and body is almost unbelievable
since I stopped eating foods made with pesticides,
toxins, and hormones. My period has also become much
more enjoyable since switching to cloth.
April 2009
Yes! to the question. "God, the Creator, the
Great Spirit, who for me is revealed in Jesus
Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit, does
not want me to suffer and certainly is not the
cause of my bodily imbalances, any more than God
desires anyone to suffer at all."
After 37 1/2 years of periods since the age of 12,
three children, a tubal ligation and longer periods
after my 3d child at age 35 my answer is "Yes!" I've
had problems with flooding for the last several years
and passing large clots for the last year. Time off
from work, ruined sheets, can't go anywhere for more
than an hour for two-three days unless double padded
with a tampon or two super tampons with one pad,
fatigued and anemic. I am finally doing something
about it-endometrial ablation scheduled three weeks
from now. This is scheduled for 6 weeks before my 50th
birthday. I have completed childbearing, with two
teenagers and one 21 year old adult child and I do not
need this. My God, I know I am a woman for heaven's
sake with or without it. I've been praying and
meditating at home during my periods contemplating my
womanhood long enough to feel at a deep spiritual
level that God is perfectly fine with my decision if I
choose not to suffer with this any longer. Whether or
not I suffer through this any longer is my choice.
God, the Creator, the Great Spirit, who for me is
revealed in Jesus Christ through the power of the Holy
Spirit, does not want me to suffer and certainly is
not the cause of my bodily imbalances, any more than
God desires anyone to suffer at all.
It is natural for a woman's period to end and mine
are certainly clinically abnormal enough to end a few
years early. So, that's my decision for me.
April 2009
"I wish I could fire it [her uterus]!!!"
Hell yes!!! I am 45 with 4 kids.....had my tubes
tied and have absolutely no use for the monthly mess
any further.
I really don't understand how anyone call call it
beautiful....every month I spend six days feeling
bloated, getting blood on my fingers, feeling tied
to the bathroom, can't go quadding in the bush
etc....just because it's a pain, and an interference
in my otherwise great life.
My uterus has served it's purpose....it is now
wasting it's time getting prepared for a baby....I
will never have another....I am done....I wish I
could fire it!!!
Can't wait for menopause.
March 2009
"Definitely Stop My Period"
The main reason for this is, I HAVE HAD ENOUGH.
I'm a lesbian, and there is no reason for me to
keep having mensuration just to maintain my
fertility.
As a native Chinese, period/mensuration is
something we would not talk
about openly, and my tragedy is that I had my
first period when I was 8, and ever since, I have
been living with this monthly torture. I
used to be quite active, but ever since my first
period, I can't go to swim whenever I was like my
brother, I can't do anything active in school.
I remember one time, when I was still around 8-9
years old, I was home with my grandma, and I have to
change my mensuration pads, I was to young to
maneuver the thing in my hands that I drop it into
the toilet. And end up having to ask my grandma to
help........
My period bring me so much bad memories.......and
recently, I found out that I'm having disorder
relating to my period. My period just became
heavier, and the cramps became more painful....
I just don't what it anymore, if I can stop it
now, I would definitely stop it with no regret.
March 2009
"tokophobia"
Hi Harry,
I have a message to the girl who added the latest
comment [next page] to
your opinion page.
Honey, you're not alone with this! Just google the
word 'tokophobia' and
you'll see.
(I'm not sure if tokophobia is discussed on MUM
but I think it's an important new aspect of women's
health).
Thanks and all the best,
February 2009
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