T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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687.1 | Heartfelt Moderator-Flavored Thanks | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Thu Jan 28 1988 18:43 | 6 |
| Nice topic (as usual!), Martin. You are quite right, men can be
affected by PMS...and of course you're quite right to make a new
topic of the discussion, since the *way* men are affected is very
different to the focus of the original note.
=maggie
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687.2 | I finally wised up! :^) | QBUS::WOOD | Met him on a Monday | Thu Jan 28 1988 19:25 | 16 |
|
I have to agree! Men are definitely affected by PMS...I finally
had a hysterectomy to (hopefully) eliminate some of my problems
and even that had an affect on my SO. I was moody, irritable
and just generally hard to get along with for some time after
the surgery and my SO spent lots of time on the phone with my
DR. and a therapist asking about how to deal with it. I wasn't
even aware of "what" was causing me to feel that way...I thought
there were problems with our relationship that weren't there and
was trying to blame it all on *him*! Prior to the hysterectomy
my problems with PMS had affected my relationship with him as well.
Then I knew what the problem was but didn't know how to deal with
it. Nor did he. Thank goodness I finally took the initiative
to become educated on the subject!
My
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687.3 | ? | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Thu Jan 28 1988 21:53 | 10 |
| i'm a bit puzzled by this topic. aren't there lots of issues that
can get in the way of a relationship if the participants don't
communicate well? pms could be one, but how about
- a hard day at the office
- a technical argument that you lost
- a backache or headache
- shopping at a crowded supermarket
- getting caught in a traffic jam
- needing to renew your driver's license...
i could go on... what do you think makes pms so special?
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687.4 | sneaky physiology | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Jan 29 1988 10:06 | 20 |
| Perhaps what makes PMS so special is that it occurs for no
"apparent" cause. When I have a bad day at the office or a
headache or etc I am aware of it and factor that into my behavior.
i.e. I might snap at someone and then applogise, and tell them
about what had gone wrong that day. With PMS and also with
some kinds of allergies people tend to be snappy without having
any obvious external cause. If a woman isn't sensitive to her
cycles (I tend not to be) or if an allergic person isn't aware
that they have been exposed to something that 'gets' to them,
they can be more apt to blame the 'other' and not realize how
their own physiological state is affecting them. My husband can
get very touchy when he has been working in areas that are dusty
or moldy, and until we made the connection between that and his
moods he just seemed to be upset needlessly over little things.
Now he takes allergy medication which helps the situation a lot.
Similarly I can get very irrationally angry when I have low blood
sugar. These physiological moods can sneak up on us without warning
and cause unexplicable behavior.
Bonnie
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687.5 | ? | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Fri Jan 29 1988 10:20 | 16 |
| bonnie,
you started your note by saying that pms is special, but you ended it
by saying that it's just like any other sneaky physiological state. i
think blaming others for feeling bad is learned, and i think awareness
of what's actually making you feel bad is learned. in your case, you've
learned to recognize "bad day at the office", but you're not as
sensitive to "different cycle phases". your husband has learned
relatively recently to recognize "allergy reaction". r had to learn to
recognize "fight with the boss" syndrome, and also had to unlearn
parental lessons about venting on partners. i'm still having trouble
understanding why pms has been singled out. to me, it's still falls
into the larger category of awareness and communication.
liz
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687.6 | evolving as I wrote :-) | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Jan 29 1988 10:26 | 7 |
| Liz, that is because my thinking changed as I was writing...and
I kept thinking of other sneaky physiological states..pehaps
PMS gets singled out because it is more dramatically obvious than
low blood sugar or allergies, and because it only happens to women?
To me the answer is that we should all try to be more in tune with
our physiological state.
Bonnie
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687.7 | that is illogical | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Once upon a time... | Fri Jan 29 1988 10:37 | 14 |
| what makes PMS different for me, and difficult to deal with, is
that mine just started recently to be emotionally unhinging. When
I do get "feisty" and unhappy, I generally cannot pinpoint why until
I realize it's the "end of the month", and generally that's after
whatever damage is done has been done. I suppose in time I will
be able to pinpoint when I should expect it, and warn my SO what's
going on. The part that makes it so difficult for him to deal with
(and me, too) is that it is so IRRATIONAL. It's not triggered by
anything logical, it comes and goes in a day or two, and it's
incredibly frustrating to know I am not in control while it is there,
much as I try...
-Jody
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687.8 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Fri Jan 29 1988 11:12 | 35 |
| I think another possible reason for singling out PMS is that
it's had more recent media attention, much of it along the
lines of consciousness-raising. Where other conditions have
been accepted (more or less) all along as "medical", it appears
many women have been told over the years that what's come to
be known as PMS is a psychological or even moral (!?!) problem.
I think it's no secret that most of this "information" came
from the predominantly male medical community and this adds
a "political" element to the story. Finally, the "M" standing
for menstration means that it relates to "it" (you know, uh, like
"doing it", um, like, you know, s*x) and we all know how *that*
can help sell media.
Steve
P.S. Small side story; I once saw a cartoon that hit home for me:
1st panel: A man and woman in bed together; she's dressed in her
heaviest pajamas, buttoned to the neck, wearing a night
cap and slippers. She is lying on the bed, stiff as
a board with a tight-lipped, stressed-out look on her
face. Her SO is trying to kiss her hand, but has
a very apprehensive look on his face.
2nd panel: (Caption under: "20 minutes later")
The man is chained, spread-eagle, facing the wall,
dressed only in his shorts; she is now dressed in
spiked heels, seamed nylons, garter, leather corset,
and mask. As she's bringing out the whips with a look
of 99.44% pure animal lust, he's looking on incredulously.
The title of the two panels is: "Sometimes the male has difficulty
keeping up with the rapid shifts of mood. . ."
|
687.9 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Fri Jan 29 1988 11:44 | 14 |
| One thing to keep in mind is that men are also subject to raging
horomone cycles -- women aren't the only sex "chained to horomones".
My understanding is that men's cycles are more along a three month
schedule. The long schedule + the fact that the end of the cycle
is not marked by the onset of menstruation is likely to be factors
in why the world at large is less aware of "male PMS" :)
I don't recall the source of this info, however -- can anybody verify?
Whenever I want to curse my bod for the excessive horomones, I thank
my lucky stars that my cycle is one month instead of three: imagine
what it would be like to be "PMS-sy" for 12 days instead of 4!
Lee
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687.10 | doesn't have to be a close relationship | JENVAX::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:13 | 20 |
| PMS can also be difficult to explain to a man you don't know well,
especially if that man is your boss or your project leader or
something. Unless you know him well enough to be sure he will be
sympathetic, you run the risk that he will think you are
1. out of your mind
2. making excuses for poor work or interpersonal difficulties
3. unable to do your job
A woman, even if she doesn't suffer from menstrual difficulties
herself, understands the concept. But it's surprising the number of
men who have never even heard of PMS. It's even more surprising the
number of men who don't know enough about female menstrual cycles and
hormones to comprehend an explanation. With a former supervisor, we
just about had to start from Anatomy 101 -- and he's fathered three
kids!
--bonnie
--bonnie
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687.11 | No hidden agendas | BOLT::MINOW | Je suis marxiste, tendance Groucho | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:20 | 14 |
| re: Liz' question earlier -- I didn't bring up PMS because of any
incidents that happened to me, but as a "rathole" digression from
another topic.
Unlike backaches and bad days at the office, PMS is directly connected
to mensturation, which is a taboo in American society. [I suppose
one of the rites of passage in a long-term relationship is the first
time the man discovers "tampons" in the shopping list.]
Developing a long-term relationship requires both partners to become
sensitive to each other's moods, which is hard enough even with open
communication. (And don't look to me for any stories of success.)
Martin.
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687.12 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:29 | 12 |
| re: .10
I've also read/heard of the male cycle; thought I saw 35 days
quoted somewhere, but cannot recall. From personal experience,
I've suspected for a while that "something is cooking" here but
have never paid enough attention to get a good handle on effects
and duration. One symptom seems to be times of feeling "stale",
"blah", "everything (even IT) seems dull"; lasts a bit less than
a week and more as an emotional backdrop.
Steve
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687.13 | different frames of reference | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | What a pitcher! | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:44 | 7 |
| Liz, one reason for singling it out may be that, unlike other
areas where communication is important, PMS is not experienced
by both sides. I understand it intellectually, but not experi-
entially. This lack of shared experience makes good communication
that much more important.
Dana
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687.14 | PAMPRIN for men? A whole new market! | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:44 | 9 |
| RE: .10,.12
No reason why there shouldn't be a male cycle, too. Women's cycles
are affected by the phase of the moon, and women who live(d) outdoors
cycle(d) right along with the moon. If it can cause ocean tides,
why shoudn't it affect our bodies?
--DE
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687.15 | learn something new every day | HARDY::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:47 | 18 |
| I just had lunch with a man who does not read this file, but with
whom I feel comfortable discussing fairly personal things.
Out of the blue he told me that whenever men at work didn't like
something done or said by a woman, it was very common to dismiss
it with, "oh, she's on the rag".
I had never heard the expression, but managed to comprehend it after
a moment. Is the expression common? If so, it explains yet another
way that our anger is trivialized. It also shifts responsibility
for anything the woman is feeling back to her, and absolves the
person saying it from having to feel any...
The man who was telling me said he thought it was an unfair
generalization because the co-workers had no way of knowing if that
were the cause or not.
fwiw...Holly
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687.16 | GRR-R-R-R-O-W-W-L-L-L-L!!! | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Jan 29 1988 12:53 | 6 |
| Holly, you bet your bippy it's common! I've heard women dismissed
with *that* one so many times, it ticks me off even to hear it
repeated anecdotally!!
Dawn
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687.17 | I always thought it was an insult | JENVAX::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Jan 29 1988 13:01 | 6 |
| The only time I actually heard that expression, a male spectator used
it in relation to the poor performance of a teammate on an athletic
team I played on. Our [male] coach threatened to punch out the man who
said it.
--bonnie
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687.18 | It's important! | QBUS::WOOD | Met him on a Monday | Fri Jan 29 1988 13:03 | 17 |
|
I think the point Holly brought up is the very essence of why
PMS and the affect it has on the men in our lives is so
important. It's a hard thing for a lot of men to comprehend,
it was not taken seriously for so long, and like Dawn said
in .16 it's been an excuse for so many times...I agree, it's
not funny any more.
The other thing that makes PMS more "special" than just having
a hard day at the office is that men and women alike can relate
to the "hard day at the office" but very few men really know
enough about PMS to understand it. I for one am glad to see it
becoming more newsworthy and hopefully the general public is
becoming more educated about it!
My
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687.19 | etymology | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | The rug is not an inertial frame. | Fri Jan 29 1988 13:08 | 9 |
| I believe that "on the rag" is an old (at least the middle of the
19th century) euphimism, and was originally not offensive. It
comes, of course, from the days before tampons and pads were
commercially available, so reuseable sponges or rags were used.
I've heard speculation that it is the origin of the verb "to rag
on someone" ie. to complain about them excessively.
--David
(resident part-time etymologist)
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687.20 | | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Jan 29 1988 13:31 | 17 |
| RE: .19 - furhter down the rathole?
Yes, David, of course it came from the fact that women wore rags
to absorb menstrual blood.
The expression, however, is not used to inform the group-at-large
that a particular woman may be menstruating. Who cares?
The phrase translates to:
Ignore her. She's obviously incapable of rational thought due to
those raging female hormones.
It is a definite *dismissal*, regardless of how it came to be.
--DE
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687.21 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | Once upon a time... | Fri Jan 29 1988 15:43 | 24 |
| I remember on David Letterman's (third? fourth?) anniversary special
they had people make "home movies". Two women made a really hilarious
one about PMS (very artsy and esoteric). The line that stuck out
was: "Somewhere between Christmas and Death is PMS".
as for "on the rag", I've heard it lots (going to tech schools with
awkward ratios made the difference). I really wonder why there's a
stigma around it (well I've heard you all talk about how the stigma
came about, but not really WHY anyone bothered to make a big deal out
of it). I mean, half the population (females), between the ages of
roughly 12-45 or some such, menstruate roughly 5 days out of every
month (unless pregnant or whatever). So what's the big deal? A friend
of mine was sick one day and she asked her boyfriend to go buy her a
box of tampons. He was petrified of walking into that CVS and buying
"those things". Unfortunately, now that it is such a sensationalized
issue, it may never be toned down to the attention it really deserves -
next to none. It's NORMAL, damnit.
sorry to get off the subject...
on with PMS
-Jody
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687.22 | | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Sat Jan 30 1988 21:37 | 20 |
| I think "oh, she must be on the rag" is used to dismiss women in
the same way that "he sure has a hair up his a**" is used to dismiss
men, I think that rather than being intended to mean "ignore her"
it means "don't take it personally, she's being unreasonable". Now
that fact that menstruation is being equted with unreasonableness
is a gross overgeneralization, and thus offensive, but there is
at least a grain of truth in it, witness this entire discussion.
I guess I just wish the subject were treated sympathetically instead
of being used to dismiss and belittle.
Aside: on the subject of tampons, the last time Janice and I were
in a grocery store, she called out to me (a few aisles away) "Charles!
Get some pads!" to which I replied "What size!? Super or Extra?"
The looks on the faces of the people around us was priceless. I
must admit though, this Christmas when I was at going to the store
and was asked to pick up some tampons, I felt the slightest bit
embarrased while I was checking out. Must be my upbringing...
-- Charles
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687.23 | | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Sat Jan 30 1988 23:01 | 11 |
|
re: .22 (Charles)
>> ...and was asked to pick up some tampons, I felt the slightest
>> bit embarrased while I was checking out.
Don't sweat it too much, Charles, *I* sometimes feel a little
embarrassed (if it's a male checker) and *I* use them!!! =8*)
Carla
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687.24 | *shouldn't* we overlook failings? | YODA::BARANSKI | Im here for an argument, not Abuse! | Sat Jan 30 1988 23:24 | 21 |
| PMS and the emotional changes that women go through in their cycles is
occasionally used as a reason why women can't 'manage on a level keel', and make
bad managers, can't think straight, etc...
I know from personal experience that this can be true (at least for one woman).
What experiences of this sort have you (men & women) had? Are you unaffected?
Please remember (men & women) to be nice.
RE: Lee
That's interesting about male cycles... are these more like biorythm cycles,
though?
Do you think that it would have been any better to blow up at a woman's PMS
problems, or dismiss them as "on the rag"?
On a general principle isn't it better to be tolerant of other people's
inexplicable behavior then get all bent out of shape over something that may
have nothing to do with you?
Jim.
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687.25 | A problem for both sexes. | TSECAD::HEALY | Life is Perfectly Fair. | Tue May 03 1988 15:55 | 20 |
|
Martin, good topic and truly legit.
I can chalk up one ruined relationship to PMS. This one particularly
bothers me because she happened to be one very, very pretty and
shapely woman. (Thats right readers, I put the emphasis on physical
beauty - and honestly, who doesn't?) And the icing on the cake?
While I was trying to reason with her over the phone she actually
-bragged- about past relationships ruined as a result of her PMS
attacks!
RE: .5, Liz, I believe you're offended at the subject matter.
.9, Lee, I believe the existance of a "male PMS" is just
bunk and I defy you to substantiate this.
What happens in the event we elect a woman president (fate forbid!)
and she is particularly prone PMS's effects?
MATT
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687.26 | | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue May 03 1988 16:06 | 12 |
| RE: .25
How many male presidents have we had by now that have had
publicized hemorrhoid attacks (with the resulting surgery)?
Health difficulties are always a risk (as long as we insist
on electing HUMANS to the Presidency.)
Your foot must be getting awfully tasty by now (after having
spent much of the day in your mouth.)
You can put your sock back on now. :-) :-)
|
687.27 | cycles exist, the rest . . . y | VIA::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Tue May 03 1988 16:21 | 22 |
| re: .25
Research indicates that men's hormones do change in predictable
and cyclical patterns, and that those patterns are longer than
women's.
I am not aware of any reliable research that has connected this
hormonal cycle to behavior in normal men. However, there is a
statistical corelation between men's hormone cycles and
maniac-depressive behavior.
That leaves so-called "male PMS" quite a bit short of being
established as fact and quite a bit past being pure bunk. Call it
scientific speculation, perhaps. I haven't read anything about it
for quite some time, so there may have been a new discovery that
invalidates everything I said.
I can't cite any studies off the top of my head but if you're
really interested in the subject and not just making debater's
points, I'll try to fish out the old references.
--bonnie
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687.28 | COME ON! | NEBVAX::PEDERSON | | Tue May 03 1988 16:30 | 12 |
| RE: 25
I have a feeling your gonna catch a lot of flame
marks on your statements!
FOR YOUR ENLIGHTENMENT: there are numerous PMS clinics
around the country. If a female president is prone to PMS, I'm sure
she'd get medical help for her condition, just like Ronnie with
his cancers and Jimmy with his hemorroids.
GET OUT OF THE DARK AGES!
|
687.29 | | JENEVR::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Tue May 03 1988 18:54 | 9 |
| Re: .25
>What happens in the event we elect a woman president (fate forbid!)
>and she is particularly prone PMS's effects?
I'm sure that she would have learned to cope with the problem;
otherwise, I doubt she would have made it through the presidential
primaries. (One wrong move, and you're not history - you're just
nowhere.)
|
687.30 | | HACKIN::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, VAX PROLOG | Wed May 04 1988 00:09 | 6 |
| Its not PMS, but almost everyone I know has "cycles" of some sort. I
have fairly noticable manic/depressive cycles (although they are, like
most things, fairly controllable). Aren't there days when you feel
really good and days when you feel pretty sh*tty? Same thing as
PMS, functionally. I wouldn't want to be making critical decisions
on the bad days, if I didn't have to.
|
687.31 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Fri May 06 1988 10:02 | 10 |
| re: .25 (emphasis on physical attraction)
� . . .(and honestly, who doesn't?)
Matt - I suggest you spend a bit of time reading some of the notes
on physical attraction (there are several); I feel certain that
such an exercise will answer your question.
Steve
|