T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
879.1 | Like the sergeant's hankie | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Nov 30 1989 11:45 | 3 |
| Slip it up your sleeve.
Ann B.
|
879.2 | Be brave and *dare* to carry it in plain sight!! | ULTRA::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Thu Nov 30 1989 11:54 | 1 |
| A radical thought!
|
879.3 | | ROLL::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Thu Nov 30 1989 12:06 | 4 |
| Use OB tampons (they don't have applicators) and you can carry them
around in your pockets all day.
Lisa
|
879.4 | Playtex portables... | MARLIN::RYAN | | Thu Nov 30 1989 12:08 | 6 |
| Playtex puts out "playtex portables" which are compact tampons.
They fit right in your pocket or can be carried indicretely in
your hand. Either that or pay 25 cents in the machine (if it is
working that day, and you don't mind being ripped off).
Dee
|
879.5 | Its all a matter of technique! :-) | DEMING::FOSTER | | Thu Nov 30 1989 12:13 | 11 |
|
Here in HLO, things are a dime a piece. But tampons are only regular,
and on "super" days, its a pain.
Since I'm usually in jeans, I just put it in my pocket; pad or tampon.
When I've been pocketless, I've done the palming routine as well as the
"up-the-sleeve". But the bathroom is close.
If you put a tampon in your hand and close all but two fingers around
it or better still, cross your arms over your chest with the tampon
hand hidden, NOONE will know! :-)
|
879.6 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Thu Nov 30 1989 12:37 | 5 |
| And what if someone stops to talk to you? Or, heaven forbid, _hands_ you
something? (Obviously, several alternatives reduces to Ellen's reply).
Here in BXB, they're free! But I stick to my name brands.
Mez
|
879.7 | | PACKER::WHARTON | Sapodilla gal... | Thu Nov 30 1989 13:25 | 5 |
| re .6
If someone stops me halfway and tries to "hand" me somthing, I just
say, "Ooops, I'm in a rush, please, I'll stop by the office in a
second. I must get to the bathroom now."
|
879.8 | Free tampons! Is this a great country or what? | TLE::D_CARROLL | It's time, it's time to heal... | Thu Nov 30 1989 13:37 | 9 |
| >Here in BXB, they're free! But I stick to my name brands.
You get free tampons??? How did they manage that? Boy, life in the
down there in ole Taxachusetts must be posh! :-) What, do they have
a tampon dispenser next to the paper towel and soap dispenser??
(They are only 5 cents up here in beautiful tax-free ZKO.)
D!
|
879.9 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Thu Nov 30 1989 14:07 | 32 |
| >You get free tampons??? How did they manage that?
I did it! (pat, pat :-). I had a topic in V1 called "Protecting that which is
Feminine" and bitched about the fact that BB&N and IBM had free tampons and
pads, but we didn't.
Then I bitched to the guy who ran facilities at Littleton. At first he thought
I was yanking his chain; I used my impressive logic and inter-personal
comminication skills to get him to bring it to his boss. His boss is a woman,
and dealing with real money in coin-denominations turned out to be a big
hassle. I don't know that they ever did it in LTN, because they rent those, but
feminine protection is free in BXB. Try it at your site! I can probably give
you contact names here. The points that seemed to help were:
Dealing with real money was a known pain already
Dave had tried leaving out a bunch, and they all got scooped up.
I told him of course; in an emergency, you want some around.
If they were around all the time, they wouldn't be.
See if you can get a trial period [as it were].
The toilet paper, seat cover, soap anology
Name brand loyalty. Remind him [if it is a him; a her will already
know] that the toilet paper at home is _far_ superior to what
we get a work. The anology holds for feminine protection; but
when you're caught lacking, you really can't do without.
Other companies (BB&N and IBM for sure) and other sites (BXB)
do it.
Mez
|
879.10 | | BSS::BLAZEK | names are just for souvenirs | Thu Nov 30 1989 15:14 | 12 |
|
I don't wear long sleeves and I refuse to pretend I don't get
a period and don't have a need for tampons, nor do I worry too
much that I'll pass someone who's never seen one before and'll
drop into a dead faint at the glimpse of a small white-wrapped
cylindrical object, so I always just take one out of my purse
or big leather bag and with tamp-in-hand walk into a restroom.
Periods happen. It's nothing to hide or be ashamed of.
Carla
|
879.11 | Pockets or a pouch | FOOZLE::WHITE | | Thu Nov 30 1989 15:41 | 16 |
| I try to buy business clothes with pockets. This
is especially useful when I am on the floor at a
trade show with neither a briefcase nor a
pocket book and need to duck out frequently (every
hour) to the ladies room. I can also carry a
lipstick in a pocket and a dollar for a cup of
tea (trade show price).
I also have a small leather pouch that holds 4
tampons and a pad. I use this in a briefcase and
carry it to the ladies room. It keeps the tampons
neatly together and clean. OB and similar small
designs are great, but not adequate for my heaviest
day, when I need super super tampon PLUS pad.
Pat
|
879.12 | Love that Answer | USEM::DONOVAN | | Thu Nov 30 1989 15:44 | 5 |
| RE:-1
Right on, Carla!!
Kate
|
879.13 | not just in Taxachusetts | RUSTIE::NALE | | Thu Nov 30 1989 15:49 | 1 |
| They're free at TTB too. And no taxes.
|
879.15 | just don't get sidetracked to the coffee station | COBWEB::SWALKER | metaphysics with onions | Thu Nov 30 1989 16:41 | 4 |
| This isn't a real practical answer, but this topic has piqued
my creativity. You could always stuff them in a tall coffee
mug and walk down the hall with _that_. I mean, lots of people
carry coffee mugs around, right? Or put it in an M&M bag...
|
879.16 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Thu Nov 30 1989 16:59 | 6 |
| My favorite is when I'm paying for groceries, reach in and pull out my
wallet and a couple tampons go skittering across the counter ... I
laugh; the female clerk is aghast, and the male customer behind me
tries to study the crack on the floor while suppressing a snicker.
Grins
|
879.17 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Barking Spider Industries | Thu Nov 30 1989 17:41 | 13 |
| re: .16 (the grocery line)
Ah, what a great memory you brought back, Marge. When I was younger
I used to work in a supermarket and would reguarly catch register
duty. One of the great joys we (Grocery Clerks From Hell) would
take would be when a male victi, uh, customer would come into the
check-out line with an box of tampons missing a price tag. Only
one civil thing to do in such a situation. . .yell across the
store, "Hey, Ernie - what's the price on 40 Tampax regulars?"
Gangs of fun!
Steve
|
879.18 | Dangerous weapons! | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | I am perfectly imperfect! | Thu Nov 30 1989 18:49 | 14 |
| Hee hee! Reminds me of an incident in days past when I was working at
another company that was blessed by a visit from the British Princess
Anne. (Ring a bell, Carla?) Security was *beefed* up and all bags and
concealed whatevers where thoroughly searched as we entered the building.
My supervisor was waiting impatiently while her purse was being inspected
and one of the guards pointed to a smallish cylindrical object and
*seriously* inquired of its contents. She grabbed the tampon, pointed at
him and said "Don't move or I'll pull the string!"
He just stared at her with his mouth open while she walked away.
;)
Carol
|
879.19 | Purse-free living | KOAL::VASKAS | Mary Vaskas | Fri Dec 01 1989 08:37 | 6 |
| Suit jacket pockets are a good size -- can also hold a comb and
all the badges (DECbadge, customer badges) needed for the Field-Woman
on the go.
:-)
MKV
|
879.20 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Shoot it, stuff it, or marry it | Fri Dec 01 1989 09:05 | 5 |
| I never carry a purse to work, but I do use the pockets of whatever I'm
wearing... I *absolutely* **refuse** to buy anything unless it has
pockets in it, so, I always put 'em in a pocket...
G
|
879.21 | you mean there ARE others | DNEAST::FIRTH_CATHY | owl | Fri Dec 01 1989 09:27 | 12 |
| I am amazed at this string of replies.
I thought I was the one female in the world who did not LOVE to carry
large pocketbooks around. It seems that if you have a little one then
you decide to carry more and then they get progressively bigger so in
1970 I went on strike and haven't carried one since. I have jacket
pockets in winter and summer skirt pockets. I have a slim metel holder
for license and health cards etc, and if it doesn't fit in a pocket I
don't carry it. Sort of along the line - are the clothes easy to
maintain, if yes - then buy; else no buy.
Cathy
|
879.22 | | CUPCSG::CRITZ | Greg LeMond wins: 2nd TdF, 2nd Worlds | Fri Dec 01 1989 11:40 | 5 |
| RE: 879.18
I can't help it. That reply has me rolling.
Scott
|
879.23 | Whats the big deal??? | DCPHIX::BIGSBY | | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:10 | 12 |
| Maybe being male accounts for my lack of perspective. But from the
replies, with the exception of Carla's, I have the following
curiosities:
1) Is having a period a shamefull event?
2) If so please enlighten me as to why.?
3) If not, whats the big deal with being seen with
those "forbidden" products?
Or is this one of those "women" things men don't understand???
S.B.
|
879.24 | This may or may not explain... | DEMING::FOSTER | | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:36 | 21 |
| You wouldn't believe the reactions I'm having to this.
Is a period a shameful event? To some women, yes. It is something that
the body does which is messy, sometimes painful, and over which we have
insufficient control. It occurs in a region of our bodies which many of
us know too little about and are uncomfortable with, a region which is
close to the same region where urination and defecation take place, and
we are taught that those things are not discussed.
A woman's period has associated with it hormonal changes which can
affect her in many different ways, some of them rather awkward. The
hormonal changes can cause emotional upheaval, swelling, discomfort,
increased sexual energy and increased creativity among the documented
list. Many of these things are not viewed positively by society, and
therefore it is felt that the visible indicator of these emotional
upheavals is best kept quiet.
Last of all, a woman's period is one of the most DIFFERENT things about
her, from her male counterparts. In the workplace, this type of difference
is not easily valued, it is not one which the average woman flaunts
with great gusto...
|
879.25 | | BSS::BLAZEK | thunderhead's fallen in love | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:56 | 16 |
|
There's a _big_ difference between flaunting one's menstrual
cycles and simply accepting nature.
I don't hang a big red banner on my cubicle wall during "that
time of the month" nor do I clandestinely creep in and out of
women's restrooms flushing toilets so no one will think I may
be <gasp!> swapping cotton.
I'm so surprised at the attitude I'm finding on this topic in
here! On one hand we have feminists advocating our rightness
and equality in the world, and on the other I read a suggestion
that there are some women who feel shame about their femininity.
Carla
|
879.26 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Mon Dec 04 1989 12:59 | 22 |
|
It's bothered me for a long time that women are required to
pay for their tampons and napkins (when in a public facility that
is). The general population doesn't pay for toilet paper does
it? And are tampons/napkins any less important? No. The only
difference is that *women only* use them. (AHA!)
(Oh an aside, while in TAY once, I actually saw a tampon/napkin
dispenser that did not charge for its goods. Can we make this
a corporate wide benefit?)
OK, and while on the subject. Why is it the stupid dispensor only
takes dimes? Why is it designed so that if there are none left,
the dime is lost (that is a real dilemma if it's the last dime)?
And for heavens sake, why is the dispenser designed so that in
order to reach in and get the tampon/napkin, one must risk
cutting open the top on the hand on the cute little sharp edged
'lip'?
Maia
|
879.27 | Humor | ROYALT::CORLISS | | Mon Dec 04 1989 14:11 | 20 |
| I never carry a pktbook around the building, nor do I carry tampon in
hand when heading for the restroom. I don't have a hangup about
this but feel my personal hygiene isn't the business of the entire
building. I simply carry in pocket or slip it right at the waist of
my skirt or pants. I never thought of using my sleeve! Good idea!
When I was lifeguarding during summers thru college, female guards had to
walk past the rather large pool area from the lockerroom to the women's
room and considering that we wore bathing suits all day - this was
rather difficult. I used to stick the tampon in my bra-area and hope
that I didn't have to jump in for a rescue when on a mission!!
On the lighter side.....during high school I worked at the local
pharmacy part time and one of the pharmacists there was a regular
comedian. Picture my most embarrassing moment......I was 16 years old
and an older man was purchasing a package of condoms. Not sure if
these were a taxable item or not I turned to this pharmacist and asked
"is there a tax on these things"....to which he replied.."hell no,
they stay on all by themselves!!!!"
|
879.28 | Still another reason | CUPCSG::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Mon Dec 04 1989 14:28 | 8 |
| re: .23
Another possible source of embarrassment during a woman's period is odor.
Since men in my husband's family refer to the "two things that smell
like dead fish -- and one of them is dead fish (ha, ha, snicker)," I
don't like to display any *visual* cues that might cause anyone around
me to *sniff* (*just in case*)! So yeah, it's still a source of messy,
embarrassment, something to be kept personal and private!
|
879.29 | I don't think of menstruation as "feminine", just reality. | DEMING::FOSTER | | Mon Dec 04 1989 15:33 | 38 |
|
Carla, I don't know if you've misunderstood me or not. I did not mean
to indicate that by not hiding your personal hygiene, you are flaunting
your menstrual cycles. But I think you're blinding yourself to reality
if you think that the women of the world, or of America, with the long
history of prudery and Victorian convention that we are just beginning
to emerge from are going to feel comfortable being open about something
as personal as personal hygiene.
It is a very real thing that the menstrual cycle is probably the most
gender differentiating function of our bodies. And for several
MILLENIUM has been a source of confusion and mystery. There are a lot
of taboos associated with it, and they're just not going to immediately
disappear.
I am not ASHAMED of my period. But I am frequently confronted with the
fact that it is not fully within my control. If you've ever stained a
pair of good white pants, if you've ever not fit into a dress because
your waist blew up by two inches, if you've ever had to forego a
swimming party because you didn't use tampons, and HEAVEN FORBID you
couldn't afford to just go in your suit 'cause the guys in their
ignorance might throw you in, perhaps you would remember that the
regular flow of blood is not a pleasant sight.
Yes, you can play it off, or if you're mature, you can say "Well, what
do you expect! I'm MENSTRUATING!" But the average teen cannot do this.
And I can assure you its not taught in Feminist Power 101. Maybe it
should be, but then, there are a lot of women who aren't going to take
the course.
Look at it for what it is. Menstruation is a bloody discharge. And
blood makes a lot of people squirm. It sure kept ME out of medicine!
In fact, I have yet to meet a woman who considers menstruation a
pleasant experience. If you have a positive adjective that you would
like to couple with the phenomenon, please share it. I've gotten used
to it, but I haven't grown to love or look forward to it... (with the
one exception of the possibility of missing it.)
|
879.30 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Evening Star- I can see the light | Mon Dec 04 1989 15:57 | 5 |
| >but I haven't grown to love or look forward to it... (with the
> one exception of the possibility of missing it.)
Yeah- whne it's late, you can't wait for it to start, but once it
starts, you can't wait for it to stop.
|
879.31 | My motto | ROYALT::CORLISS | | Mon Dec 04 1989 16:01 | 1 |
| My motto has always been, "Better to have than have not!!!!".
|
879.32 | bleah. | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | the warmer side of cool... | Mon Dec 04 1989 18:19 | 23 |
| re: .30 - bingo!~
I think that the menstrual cycle ("menstrual cycle" - hah! I wish
I could trade it in for a moped!.....*sorry*)....is one of the biggest
annoyances in my life. If I wasn't concerned about pregnancy and
I didn't get the moodswings and depressions and bleeding, I'd be
much happier these days . There's not a whole lot I can do about it though.
Personally, I feel about a skillion times less sexy and "together"
when I am PMSsy or have my period (as opposed to other times when
I just "thrum" with excitement and coherency, right?).....because
I'm depressed and full of angst about every little thing when I
have PMS, and I'm *bleeding* goddammit when I have my period. Somehow
I manage to hang tough, though, sticking that tampon in my pocket
and marching off to deal with life's little necessesities....
I dunno - how do men feel about women having their periods...distant?
unsure? no-opinion? squeamish? grossed-out? I mean it's just
a hormonal flux of a few micrograms or whatever, followed by 2-3
tablespoons of blood, but still...
-Jody
|
879.33 | Reality, aint it great | JURAN::TEASDALE | | Mon Dec 04 1989 18:30 | 7 |
| re: .29
How 'bout a noun to go with it: baby. Ok, maybe it's 'cause I'm in
that mode. When I was 12 and first menstruating, I often thought of
myself as some kind of biological high priestess because I could now
make babies. That thrill soon wore thin, but I wouldn't have it any
other way.
|
879.34 | Maybe you shouldn't have asked, Jody ;-) | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Mon Dec 04 1989 18:41 | 28 |
| How do men feel? Given that every woman one will ever meet
must handle menses, and yet that they all handle it in different
ways (some with terrible pain and cramping, some with wildly swinging
emotions, all with different flow levels, some lucky few with little
fuss)...this man feels mostly just a little confused.
I'm able to discuss the particulars with a woman if we are emotionally
close, and if she feels able to talk about it to me; thus I can learn
in what fashion woman "x" might be sensitive. When an SO cannot
talk about it at all, (in my limited experience) we just get moody
together one week a month; edgier. Its much better if I *know*
her calendar (and it helps to be reminded, I'm not psychic) because
then instead of me getting moody back, I can make a bigger effort.
> unsure? no-opinion? squeamish? grossed-out? I mean it's just
I've done emergency tampon/pad shopping. I've delivered to the
bathroom. Most of the mechanics are a no-op to my feelings.
[squeamish people ought to skip over this last thought.]
About the only gut-level reaction I have is a strong negative
reaction to the thought of oral sex during menses. I don't think
I'll be able to fix that one, it goes pretty deep. Other activities
are fine by me (if mutually sought, of course; individual preferences
vary widely in this area (curious)).
DougO
|
879.35 | vampires exist... | AV8OR::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Mon Dec 04 1989 20:20 | 7 |
| anecdote: [next reply if you're squeamish]
one ex of mine loved it when i had my period - he actually *preferred* to
give oral sex when the woman was in full flow.
and i thought *nothing* could gross me out...
|
879.36 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | hymn to her | Mon Dec 04 1989 21:20 | 21 |
| re: .32 (Jody Bobbitt)
> I mean it's just a hormonal flux of a few micrograms or
> whatever, followed by 2-3 tablespoons of blood, but still...
Is it really just 2-3 tbsp of blood? Wow - seems like a lot
more.
This makes me think of a high school student I was playing
basketball with who was complaining about his girlfriend's
moodiness when she was "on the rag". He asked me what was the
_exact_ composition of menstrual blood. I told him uterine
lining and blood, but he apparently wanted to know the
composition to the level of detail akin to the "contains:" list
on the back of a shampoo bottle, and was not satisfied with my
answer!
Anybody have a reference that describes the composition of
menstrual blood?
nancy b.
|
879.37 | public service announcement | RAINBO::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Mon Dec 04 1989 23:21 | 5 |
|
Safe sex reminder for the non-squeamish:
menstrual blood is a very big no-no nowadays; it's up there with semen
as an unsafe bodily fluid to share.
|
879.38 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Evening Star- I can see the light | Tue Dec 05 1989 08:52 | 16 |
| Living with three females that have periods, it's a pretty safe bet
that at any given time, at least one of them will be having her period.
And since two of them are still adolescents, the cycle is a little
unpredictable. I think that only once have all three had concurrent
periods- a stressful time for me!
And all of them suffer from varying degrees of PMS as well.
I feel bad that women have to deal with this. I can definitely
understand how (even without pain) menses can affect moods.
And I agree with Doug. Definite turnoff. (Could I say "Inconceivable?")
Lots of sympathy from this guy.
The Doctah
|
879.39 | | CUPCSG::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Tue Dec 05 1989 09:50 | 3 |
| *Some* studies indicate that women who live together (in dorms, harems,
or what-have-you) eventually sort of self-regulate to being on the same
cycle. Have fun, Doctah!
|
879.40 | do you take time off? | QARRY::QUIRIY | Christine | Tue Dec 05 1989 10:13 | 21 |
|
re: .39. My sister and I used to cycle together. Apparently, one
woman is the dominant one, and the other will follow. I think in our
case, my sister was dominant, as I seemed to follow her irregularities
-- this would take a couple of months, but eventually, we'd cycle
together again.
I was wondering. Do any of you women ever >gasp< take time off from
work because of problems associated with menstruating? I sometimes do,
and always feel a little bit guilty for it. (Because I should be able
to "take it", or because I must be exaggerating the particular effect,
making it worse than it is -- I'm sure I must be reacting to old messages,
old attitudes here...)
I'm sitting at home in my bathrobe after a very disrupted night of
sleeping due to cramps (so I slept late) and feeling guilty. I'm not
crampy now, so I'll probably log out and go into work for a half-day,
but I was thinking about this while I was trying to go back to sleep at
4:30 this morning...
CQ
|
879.41 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Tue Dec 05 1989 10:39 | 7 |
| Whenever I feel ill or tired, whether it's from my period, over-indulging the
night before, because I couldn't sleep well the night before (stress and
anger), or because I actually have microorganisms, I take the time I need.
Luckily, this doesn't happen very often. But I know what I'm worth at my best,
and I know what I'm worth at my worst, and the quicker I can get over my worst,
the more I'm worth.
Mez
|
879.42 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | All I want for Christmas is... | Tue Dec 05 1989 10:54 | 14 |
| Re: taking time off:
I normally don't, however, I know females who every month do.
The one thing regarding periods is I found last weekend, that while I
was under an abnormal amount of stress (giving up my daughter), that 1)
My period started a full week early (that hasn't happened since I was
15!), and that I had the worst cramps that climbed all the way up my
back, and all I wished for was a back rub!.. I'm never had cramps like
that in my entire life!!! Plus the period seemed to go on forever, and
wasn't the normal cycle I have.
As for regulating... yep.. my daughters and I are all at the same
time... It seems like I'm forever buying Tampax!! :-)
|
879.43 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | the mirror speaks, the reflection lies | Tue Dec 05 1989 11:08 | 20 |
|
RE: cycling together
Yep! When I lived in the dorms with three other girls,
within two months we all had "Herman" (affectionate name)
together. The funny thing is, I was the only one on the
Pill, and they all regulated to my cycle.....interesting.....
RE: cramps
I only get cramps when I'm stressed, other than that, Herman
is a minor annoyance for 1-2 days, if he comes at all....I do
get VERY bloated around that time, tho......
kat
|
879.44 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Evening Star- I can see the light | Tue Dec 05 1989 11:10 | 10 |
| >It seems like I'm forever buying Tampax!! :-)
If that isn't an understatment. Sheesh! You'd think it was fun changing
them or something. I always love the looks I get when I make an
emergency run to the store for tampax. It's always like "These aren't
for you are they????" :-)
Almost as much fun as buying condoms. ;^)
The Doctah
|
879.45 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | don't be dramatic | Tue Dec 05 1989 11:21 | 30 |
| re .40, I know we already had a big discussion in regard to taking
time off during menstruation. This comment is not aimed at Christine,
but I would really think that by now everyone would realize that
some women do get very sick during their period whereas others feel
no distress at all. It is not fair to compare women who suffer
great pain with women who suffer no pain at all, and say that the
one's who do get sick shouldn't stay home. Pain is pain, and sick
is sick. What difference does it make what causes it? If I can't
concentrate on work, or stand up straight because of pain, I'd rather
be home in bed with a heating pad. Most of the time I do just come
into work and suffer, tho, because I only get 12 sick days a year
being a WC2. But, cramps have accounted for I'd say approximately
90% of the sick time I have taken in my life since the age of 13.
Incidentally, I've never been sick more than 3 days in my entire
life something that I'm sure many women who don't take time off
for their periods can't say. I've never missed more than 3 working
days in a row, and that was for strep throat and a double ear
infection. So, just because a woman winds up in bed with a heating
pad during her period, on occasion, doesn't mean she's a hypochondriac.
As far as walking down the hall at work with tampons or pads, I
wish I had the guts to. I don't see why we should have to hide
them as though it were something to be ashamed of, and not a normal
part of life.
I've also had them come spilling out of my pocketbook at the cash
register in grocery stores. I don't see why normal parts of life
have to be thought of as embarrassing.
Lorna
|
879.46 | Candid thoughts | ELTICO::JOSEFINO | | Tue Dec 05 1989 11:30 | 49 |
|
Candid thought comming...... next unseen for the squeemish
As a man, during "close" relationships, I don't mind assisting with
the "application/removal" of such items....
Joke comming...... next unseen for the squeemish
A man is not a good soldier, if he is not willing to ride a bloody saddle.
:-)
|
879.47 | | BSS::BLAZEK | slow morpheus flow | Tue Dec 05 1989 12:01 | 11 |
|
re: .29
It probably won't surprise you to learn I was in the blissful
throes of PMS when I wrote those notes. =8-)
But I still stand by my feelings that menstruation is nothing
I'm ashamed of.
Carla
|
879.48 | Random thoughts | ROLL::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue Dec 05 1989 12:39 | 18 |
|
When I was in middle-high school, I was out every month. But then
again, I was usually unable to move, and when I did crawl to the
bathroom, half the time it was to throw-up.
The pill "cured" all that, and I can't imagine how I would plan my
schedule these days if I had to worry about being incapacitated for a
couple days each month.
I usually feel pretty disgusting during the heavier flow days, the
smell is just plain obnoxious. A shower is always a welcome relief.
And just as a random comment, I wouldn't feel uneasy if I saw a woman
walking towards the bathroom with a tampon. I hide mine because I
don't really feel that it's anyone elses business if I have my period
and I'd rather just keep it to myself.
Lisa
|
879.49 | Works Sometimes | USEM::DONOVAN | | Tue Dec 05 1989 13:17 | 9 |
| Try my special cure for menstruel cramps. It has a good chance of
working::
Have a Baby!
It worked for me.
Kate
|
879.50 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | All I want for Christmas is... | Tue Dec 05 1989 13:23 | 1 |
| nope, I had three of them... didn't work last weekend for me :-)
|
879.51 | Consider the source | SSDEVO::GALLUP | I feel a change of season... | Tue Dec 05 1989 13:36 | 17 |
|
> Try my special cure for menstruel cramps. It has a good chance of
> working::
>
> Have a Baby!
Hahahahaha....NO THANKS! Some cures are not really "cures"
at all! ;-)
kath
PS: This comes purely from someone who doesn't want
children....
|
879.52 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | don't be dramatic | Tue Dec 05 1989 13:49 | 5 |
| Re .49, that's what my mother said, too, but C-sections don't seem
to do the trick! :-)
Lorna
|
879.53 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Tue Dec 05 1989 13:53 | 5 |
| Lorna,
It worked for me, C-section and all!
Bonnie
|
879.54 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | don't be dramatic | Tue Dec 05 1989 14:20 | 4 |
| Re .53, no kidding!!! That's not fair!
Lorna
|
879.55 | Maybe it's time for another? 8-} | CLOVE::GODIN | Shades of gray matter | Tue Dec 05 1989 14:23 | 5 |
| I did it at my doctor's suggestion, and it worked for me, too --
for about 14 years. But over the past several years, those da**ed
cramps are returning in full force. Now I pray for menopause!
Karen
|
879.56 | Menopause sounds like hell to me | TLE::D_CARROLL | It's time, it's time to heal... | Tue Dec 05 1989 14:33 | 8 |
| > But over the past several years, those da**ed
> cramps are returning in full force. Now I pray for menopause!
Karen,
Don't pray too hard. My mother just started the big "M" and she says her
period are longer and more painful than they have been since she had me.
Not only that, they are happening closer and closer together. What fun.
D!
|
879.57 | Mirror image of most | BSS::VANFLEET | Living my Possibilities | Tue Dec 05 1989 15:19 | 7 |
| I never had cramps BEFORE my daughter was born...
NOW I have them.
Why is it that I always have to do everything backwards???
Nanci-YBNORMAL-VanFleet :-}
|
879.58 | Menarche composition (sorta) | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | I am perfectly imperfect! | Wed Dec 06 1989 03:08 | 22 |
| re - .36 (nancy b.)
> Anybody have a reference that describes the composition of
> menstrual blood?
Well, "The New Our Bodies, Ourselves" doesn't give percentages or
anything (haven't found any, anyway) but it says that menstrual fluid
contains cervical mucus, vaginal secretions, mucus, cells, degenerated
endometrial particles and a small loss of blood - sometimes clotted.
And the "Better Homes and Gardens Woman's Health and Medical Guide"
states that "the blood between the legs comes from inside the body in
the uterus, flows out the cervix, down the vaginal canal, and finally
outside the body. Tissues filled with tiny blood vessels break away
from the wall of the uterus every 28 days, and blood mixed with cell
debris flows to the outside of the body."
(I still wonder how much actual blood is mixed with all that goop.)
Oh well.
Carol
|
879.59 | RELAXED ABOUT IT | YUPPY::DAVIESA | A moment in the sensual world | Wed Dec 06 1989 08:32 | 12 |
|
I'd just like to say tht I've appreciated the comments from the
men of our community in this note.....made me see things differently.
I'd never thought of menstruation as an opportunity for special
intimacy with my partner before.
I liked the humour, and the honesty.
Thanks guys....
|
879.60 | ONE blessing of having arthritis is... | CURIE::HAROUTIAN | | Thu Dec 07 1989 15:55 | 7 |
| For what it's worth, having suffered with cramps from onset at age 9
I've recently discovered a medication that stops cramps dead-cold: it's
called Voltaren (diclofenac sodium), which I've been taking for
rheumatoid arthritis (it's an anti-inflammatory, and I understand it's
new on the market) for the past two months. Guess what? no cramps, no
nausea, no suffering. Worth investigating!!
|
879.61 | BTW, Why do MEN Need Pockets? | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Thu Dec 07 1989 18:14 | 25 |
| My folks didn't believe much in sex education so I was just a month or
so shy of 15 when I found out that men don't menstruate. I was
outraged! It was so damn unfair! The revelation happened this way:
I was talking with my best friend who was all excited about her older
sister's upcoming wedding. Annie was a junior bridesmaid and all. It
was *so* thrilling. Annie revealed to me that she and her sister had
figured out the wedding date together with a calendar so big sister
could wear white with confidence.
I was fascinated that the date could be predicted as well as
sympathetic to the need to not worry about one's clothing. I
innocently inquired how it fit in with the groom's schedule. (Since
boys and girls NEVER talked about it, I always wondered.) Ann broke up
laughing and told me that only girls bleed.
Well!!! I was astounded and angry as hell.
Not only did guys get to do all the good stuff, they also don't
do any of the yucchy stuff. A true feminist "Click" at an early age.
I resolved to do a lot of the good stuff anyway. Even if I have to
carry a few tampons in my pocket when I do it. :^)
Thank Goddess for tampons and pockets!
|
879.62 | pointer | LYRIC::BOBBITT | the warmer side of cool... | Fri Dec 08 1989 09:37 | 5 |
| see also womannotes-v1, topic 197 "protecting that which is feminine"
for additional discussion on this topic....
-Jody
|
879.63 | Very sneaky... | EAYV01::MMCKECHNIE | | Sun Jan 28 1990 06:43 | 11 |
|
I have a sun-glass case, plastic colour pocket. No-one would be
any the wiser.
Unless they wondered why I keep taking my sun-glasses into the
bathroom.
....................Mags
|
879.64 | | BSS::BLAZEK | night of the living redhead | Wed Feb 21 1990 13:03 | 46 |
|
This topic has bothered me for quite a while. It amazes me that so
many women are so secretive and furtive about having their periods,
a natural female occurrence.
I found an article by Judith Laura, a Native American writer, who
celebrates rather than shames menstruation. Here's an excerpt:
The Menarche
------------
The day that the first blood flows from a woman's womb shall be a day
of personal joy for her.
As she flows she shall know she is one with the ebb and flow of the
great ocean which pounds within my womb. For it is through woman
that the rhythm of the eternal spirit is manifest.
Therefore, as the first blood flows from her womb, let each woman say:
"Praised be Our Great Mother who has this day made me a woman. Praised
be Our Great Mother who has made me in her image."
And on this day, let each each woman raise to her lips a cup of red
wine, saying: "Such is the blood of Our Great Mother. From this day
forward may I be one with her, and through her, one with the eternal
spirit. I bleed, yet I am whole."
Let there also be public ceremony and celebration to commemmorate this
event. And let the occasion of the menarche be marked always on the
thirteenth birthday of the young woman, whether or not her menarche has
actually occurred, that the whole community might celebrate together.
Let each woman, on her thirteenth birthday, clothe herself in red and
let her hair be garlanded with flowers.
And let all who are gathered raise their glasses of red wine, and let
the daughter who is the celebrant lead them in saying, "Such is the
blood of Our Great Mother who is the waxing and waning of the moon,
the ebb and flow of the tides. For the father, her son, is born,
dies, and is born again; but Our Great Mother endures forever."
And let there be feasting and singing and dancing in honor of the
daughter who honors me.
- Judith Laura
|
879.65 | a blessing instead of a curse... | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Justine | Wed Feb 21 1990 14:01 | 9 |
|
re .64
Thank you for posting that! It's exciting to find that there
are cultures who have celebrated women's bodies instead of hating
them.
Justine
|
879.66 | and I really like the idea of red wine | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Wed Feb 21 1990 14:07 | 4 |
| Pretty neat. I'm a little surprised that they celebrate it on the 13th
birthday, instead of when it really happens. Anyone know why?
Mez
|
879.67 | a year and a day | DECWET::JWHITE | keep on rockin', girl | Wed Feb 21 1990 14:25 | 9 |
|
re:13
i know kids mature a little more quickly these days, but i was under
the impression that 13 was a good average age for the onset of menses
until fairly recently.
anyway, 13 has a nice connection with the number of months in the lunar/
menstrual year.
|
879.68 | ...and a tampon for all. | TLE::D_CARROLL | We too are one | Wed Feb 21 1990 15:11 | 8 |
| Going back a few....
It appears ZK has *also* adopted the idea of free "sanitary devices". Or
at least our local women's room has.
Wonderful!
D!
|
879.69 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Feb 22 1990 08:38 | 22 |
| re .64 -
Wonderful! Thanks for entering that.
I'm convinced it's patriarchal religion more than anything else that has
made women feel furtive and ashamed about this "natural female occurrence,"
in perceiving them as unclean, dangerous, and threatening. In part this
reflects patriarchal envy. In his book Symbolic Wounds, Bruno Bettelheim
suggests that in ancient times all men's initiation rites were based on
men's desire to imitate and participate in women's menstruation and
childbirth, which were viewed as magic events. But as patriarchy grew more
powerful, many of these blood ritual imitations were turned into taboos
against women's functions...so a natural, once powerful function becomes a
shame and a "curse."
I don't want to romanticize that function or deny that it can be painful
and inconvenient. But for women to be ostracized as impure and profane
because of that function is really going too far...
Bleah!
Dorian
|
879.70 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | I've fallen and I can't get up! | Thu Feb 22 1990 08:48 | 17 |
| >I'm convinced it's patriarchal religion more than anything else that has
>made women feel furtive and ashamed about this "natural female occurrence,"
>in perceiving them as unclean, dangerous, and threatening.
I fail to see the connection between patriarchal religion and a natural body
function that happens to be rather gross. Seriously, menstruation is
important, powerful, life giving etc but it is also sort of gross, not to
mention the pain and inconvenience often associated with it. It would seem to
me that religion had very little, if anything, to do with the fact that
menstruating women were seen as "unclean."
>In part this reflects patriarchal envy.
How? Men secretly wanted their bodies to ooze fluids once a month? Please
explain. This doesn't make any sense to me at all.
The Doctah
|
879.71 | Reply | WEEBLE::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Thu Feb 22 1990 09:39 | 6 |
| Primitive thinking viewed blood=life. Women bleed every month, yet
continue to live with no ill effects. Women give birth, also
associated with bleeding. Any creature capable of such miraculous
mysteries was held in awe and men were envious!
(Makes sense to me!)
|
879.72 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Grail seeker | Thu Feb 22 1990 09:48 | 30 |
|
Re: .70
Doctah,
"Kind of gross".....?
Why?
Our noses run, our bodies sweat, women bleed - it's all part of
the natural way out bodies work. What's gross about it?
Re: " .....men secretly want their bodies to ooze...."
(Sorry - I don't know how to import a bit of one note into another!)
Well, men do ooze in their own quiet way....:-)
But my interpretation isn't that men would want to menstruate -
they would/do however want the POWER that is implicit in women's
"oozing" on the most fundamental level i.e. the power of birth and
regeneration.
These are areas in which women are indespensible to men - sure, it
take two to make a birth, but men can't do it without us, or us
without them. So the power has to be, at least, shared.
Maybe some men aren't used to this idea.....
'gail
|
879.73 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Thu Feb 22 1990 10:20 | 6 |
| .70
"... that happens to be rather gross."
thanks. That's exactly the attitude we're talking about here.
|
879.75 | random thoughts | YGREN::JOHNSTON | ou krineis, me krinesthe | Thu Feb 22 1990 10:30 | 18 |
| re. celebration vs. shame
The day I had my first period, my father came and got me at school and took me
shopping. He bought for me a 'very grown up' red wool coat a la Hussar with
black velveteen trim and a sable hat to match. [I always liked red, but Mother
said that little girls 'don't' wear red] Then he took me to tea.
Both of my parents made a great big deal about my embarking upon a special
and wonderous time of life -- that when I _could_ bring for life myself.
But I was also cautioned against flaunting this particular bodily function on
the grounds that many would find it unpleasant.
Over the years I have found it to be inconvenient and sometimes destructive
of clothing, but not gross. My experience has been that childbirth is
infinitely more untidy, and I wouldn't think to be ashamed of _that_ process.
Ann
|
879.76 | I tried that withou much success | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Thu Feb 22 1990 10:43 | 7 |
| Ann
I offered to take my daughters out to lunch to celebrate their
becoming, but in both cases when the time came they weren't
comfortable with the idea so I dropped it.
Bonnie
|
879.77 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | I've fallen and I can't get up! | Thu Feb 22 1990 10:43 | 40 |
| > "Kind of gross".....?
> Why?
> Our noses run, our bodies sweat, women bleed - it's all part of
> the natural way out bodies work. What's gross about it?
I agree that it's natural. On the other hand, I do not believe that
because it is natural, it cannot be gross. Those two attributes are
separate, in my mind. Ex. people experience excess gas in the digestive
tract, gas which eventually finds its way into the atmosphere.
Occasionally, the odor from these gases can be overpowering and indeed
quite gross. Many people look upon the menses in much the same manner
(men AND women).
If it were not at least somewhat capable of causing discomfit, what
would then explain the reactions of young girls when they first begin
to experience this? My two step-daughters described the process to me
as being "gross." (as well as unpleasant, annoying, painful etc)
> (Sorry - I don't know how to import a bit of one note into another!)
try this:
hit the "Do" key, write "other" at the "command" prompt, hit return.
Move your cursor in the other window, select the text, hit "do" and
type "other" hit return. then hit "insert"
> Maybe some men aren't used to this idea.....
So you're saying that because men want all of the power, they use
religion to lessen the importance of women's power to give birth?
I guess I'm still not making the connection.
Does anyone think it's possible that women originally thought of
menstruation as a curse, since they didn't know that it was a necessary
part of reproduction, and didn't realize it's importance. I would
expect that most people would consider such a thing to be a curse if
there was no apparent benefit from it.
The Doctah
|
879.78 | | BSS::BLAZEK | night of the living redhead | Thu Feb 22 1990 11:01 | 20 |
|
.70> ... a natural body function that happens to be rather gross. Seriously,
.70> menstruation is important, powerful, life giving etc but it is also
.70> sort of gross, not to mention the pain and inconvenience often associated
.70> with it.
Whose inconvience are you speaking of? Yours? Or a woman's?
Is there a subject under the sun that can be pegged a women's-only subject
as menstruation can? Yet, some men just can't wait to jump in and tell us
how disgusting they find it when we're trying to feel pride and good about
our bodies, our functions, and our selves. Is it so wrong to celebrate a
natural body function, one that gives life and cleanses our systems?
No. Yet here we have men, who have never been women in this lifetime and
who have absolutely no idea what it feels like physically or emotionally
to have a period, telling us that it's "gross".
Carla
|
879.79 | | BSS::BLAZEK | night of the living redhead | Thu Feb 22 1990 11:07 | 10 |
|
Bonnie,
My Mom offered me a similar promise to celebrate my menarche. We
went out for a nice lunch, something I'd never done with her prior
to that day, and to finally have IT and to go to a grown-up lunch
all in the same day made it all the more special and memorable.
Carla
|
879.80 | off-the-cuff thoughts... | LEZAH::BOBBITT | there's heat beneath your winter | Thu Feb 22 1990 11:12 | 19 |
| I started about the same time as my sister - who is about 2 years older
than I am (I think she might have been a bit jealous about that...I
dunno - something about her being "more mature" and how it was unfair
or something). It was very mundane and ordinary - I was given some
pads - life went on.
I agree I've been brainwashed by the culture we live in to think of it
as gross and inconvenient. It really look as if our culture has
apportioned all the "earthy", "messy", "animal" functions to the women
for the most part (- menstruating, bearing children, breast-feeding,
changing diapers), and the men come out crisp and clean and pressed and
dressed - their logic unmussed by "lower" animal instincts and functions -
their control unbothered and unbotherable by such inconveniences as PMS
and post-partum depression.
bleah.
-Jody
|
879.81 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | I've fallen and I can't get up! | Thu Feb 22 1990 11:34 | 25 |
| >Whose inconvience are you speaking of? Yours? Or a woman's?
She who is having the menses.
>Yet, some men just can't wait to jump in and tell us
>how disgusting they find it when we're trying to feel pride and good about
>our bodies, our functions, and our selves.
That, Carla, is a load of garbage. Someone makes a statement about how
patriarchal religion is responsible for women feeling any bad feelings
whatsoever wrt menstruation. I challenge the notion, and offer a
plausible explanation for why it is not so. That is then branded by you
as men raining on your parade. Baloney!
>Yet here we have men, who have never been women in this lifetime and
>who have absolutely no idea what it feels like physically or emotionally
>to have a period, telling us that it's "gross".
I'm sure that the fact that I live with three women who have periods
and who also talk to me about their feelings regarding them would
impart no understanding whatsoever, would it? I'll tell them that they
are not allowed to feel that it's gross, cuz you said so. I'm sure
they'll be impressed.
The Doctah
|
879.82 | Oh, no, not again. | WFOV11::APODACA | I'M ROBIN LEACH & I DON'T KNOW WHY! | Thu Feb 22 1990 11:36 | 31 |
| re .78
Well, for the record, *I* happen to think that menstuation IS kinda
gross. You can pick a politer term, but that's what I thought when
I first experienced it and I suppose to those than never have, it
might be seen as such. Nowadays (some 13 years later) it doesn't
seem quite so gross, but that's probably because I am used to it.
Some bodily functions, no matter how useful and natural they might
be, are unappealing, but that's pretty much up to the beholder.
Running noses are gross. Loud belches are gross. Emissions of
gas are ground. Drooling is gross. At the risk of coming across
as a total prude, I'd even think getting nocturnal emissions ("Men
leaking in their quiet way indeed! ;) is kinda gross, altho it happens
to be a natural reproductive action , too. And I've never experienced
one of those.
Can't say I'm ashamed of it, and damned if it isn't inconvenient,
but I'm not quite in awe of bleeding once a month as some are.
It can be painful, it can be inconvenient, and it can be seen as
somewhat offputting (a politer term for gross). I hardly like to
advertise to the world it's that time of the month. If people want
to use periods as a sign of womanhood and fertility (which of course,
it is) fine, and if some don't fine, but please, let's not get into
man-bashing-because-after-all-they-can't/don't-get-it-so-they-ought-to-keep
-their-mouths-shut.
::deep sigh::
---kim
|
879.84 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | feel a whole lot better when your gone | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:03 | 21 |
| I think it's inconvenient, messy and painful. But, I'm not ashamed
of it. It's just part of life. I don't think it's gross in itself,
but I can understand that some people might consider it gross to
engage in certain activities with a women when she has her period.
(As others have said there are other natural things that are often
perceived as gross. It may be natural for people to throw-up in
some cases, but that doesn't mean I'd want to stick my nose in it.)
I have no great urge to celebrate menstruation. What I really wish
is that someone would invent an easy way to make it go away, a pill
or something? :-)
When I was a kid, if I had ever mentioned my period to my father
he would have been shocked and embarrassed. That attitude seems
so silly and unnecessary to me. My mother told me about it but
she told me to *never* mention it in front of *men* or *boys.* :-)
My mother's mother had never even told her about it, and when she
first got it, she thought she was dying!!
Lorna
|
879.85 | and now, back to ooze and ahs... | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:15 | 19 |
| To me, there's a big difference between *women* evaluating their periods as
painful, inconvenient, etc. and having a male patriarchy deem women profane and
impure when they're having them. The word "gross" would seem to me to be in
the latter category. And I think many individual women have internalized
the patriarchal attitude that periods are gross, just as they've
internalized other aspects of misogyny.
Also, I hate to spoil the fun, but the view that patriarchal attitudes
towards menstruating women are based from ancient times in fear, envy, and
hatred is well documented--as is the appropriation of the significance of
female menstrual blood into (for example) Christian ritual and symbolism--
in books, one mentioned here and others available in bookstores and
libraries.
Childbirth has inspired similar attitudes in, and been similarly
appropriated by, patriarchal religions, but we don't have a topic on that,
do we? Like women being prevented from attending church for 40 days after
giving birth to a boy, and for 80 days after giving birth to a (presumably
twice as contaminating) girl?
|
879.86 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Grail seeker | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:21 | 40 |
|
Re: .77
Thanks for the tip on how to inset other mails Doc - it worked!
"I do not believe that because it is natural, it cannot be gross."
In our culture we tend to discount some of our bodies functions
as wrong/not acceptable. It may be *impolite* by current ettiquette
to flaunt those conventions, but it does not make the natural
functioning of our bodies "gross".
This is not a personal jab, but I feel sad for the women you know
who feel disgust at their own bodies through finding periods gross.
They've obviously absorbed very well some of the general messages
around about menstruation - it can be messy, inconvenient, or
uncomfortable, but none of these is the same as gross.
It can be beautiful, but that message is not generally broadcast.
"So you're saying that because men want all of the power, they use
religion to lessen the importance of women's power to give birth?"
I didn't mention religion. I do believe that since a patriarchal
society became established men are used to having, and raised to
expect, complete self-sufficiency and control within their own
male group. Which, in turn, runs all the main functions of society.
Women can be functionally excluded from most activities, but the
most fundamental - perpetuation of the race - cannot happen without
them. So men are forced to include women in this, and fertility
and menstruation are a symbol of that function which allows us to
"force entry" into the male control groups. So the signs of our
fertility could be seen as a threat to established order.
Religion may be one of the mechanisms used to try and reduce that
threat.
'gail
|
879.87 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | I've fallen and I can't get up! | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:35 | 12 |
| > This is not a personal jab, but I feel sad for the women you know
> who feel disgust at their own bodies through finding periods gross.
I didn't say they felt digust, I just said that they felt that periods
were inconvenient, messy, annoying, and sometimes even gross. They
don't feel shame or disgust; they just recognize that waking up in a
mess of blood is not a pleasant experience. If you (and apparently
others) object to the word "gross," how about "unpleasant?" It carries
the same feeling that I was using "gross" for. Believe me, there's no
reason to feel sad for my wife and daughters.
The Doctah
|
879.88 | I know its a heated issue, but... | CADSYS::BAY | ENTP JAPP | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:41 | 16 |
| >Yet here we have men, who have never been women in this lifetime and
>who have absolutely no idea what it feels like physically or
>emotionally to have a period, telling us that it's "gross".
If at all possible, it might make this issue less inflammatory if we
avoided generalizations like this. I got the idea that this remark was
aimed primarily at comments made by "The Doctah". I don't think its
fair to generalize that comments made by "The Doctah" represent the
opinions of "[all] men". There's at least ONE exception - me.
If your comment was aimed at the originators of the discrimanatory
Patriarchal religious ceremonies, rather than "the Doctah", then I
retract this note.
Jim
|
879.89 | GROSS :-P | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:52 | 5 |
| It's pretty clear (in my mind) anyone (from this discussion) that
gross is in the mind of the beholder!
john
|
879.90 | It's gross because it's brown and slimy and smelly | TLE::D_CARROLL | We too are one | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:54 | 53 |
| >To me, there's a big difference between *women* evaluating their periods as
>painful, inconvenient, etc. and having a male patriarchy deem women profane and
>impure when they're having them.
Agreed.
>The word "gross" would seem to me to be in
>the latter category. And I think many individual women have internalized
>the patriarchal attitude that periods are gross, just as they've
>internalized other aspects of misogyny.
I disagree with both those statements. "Gross" to me does not imply
profanity or impurity, it implies physical distaste.
Secondly, I don't think my feeling that it is gross (which I used to feel,
no longer, because I am used to it) has anything to do with patriarchy.
Remember the substance "Slime" they used to sell the kids about 5-10 years
ago? It was green and slimy and...well, gross. The patriarchy didn't
teach me it was gross, it was gross because it was slimy and green. I think
boys and girls both felt it was equally gross. (Of course, its grossness
was more appealing to some people than others...more often boys. I don't
know why, but I don't think it is relevent here.)
(next reply for the squeamish)
Lets be blunt. The substance you ooze once a month is just not a
delightful substance. It is *slimy*. I tend to have a "that's gross"
reaction to anything slimy, whether it is Slime (tm), snails, KY jelly
or menses. The color is non-appealing. It isn't a bright, colorfull red
like real blood - it varies between dark red (not too bad) and a sort of
blah reddish brown, a *gross* color. It comes out in globs. It's stringy.
It has a strong odor. When it dries it gets sticky and tacky and then
it feels *gross*. It clings to your pubic hair and the insides of
your thighs and itches and feels *gross*. When it dries it leaves dark
brown spots on your clothes and dark brown smears on *you* (or at least
on me.) Those spots/spears look *gross*. Esthetically unappealing.
Do you disagree?
Now, maybe you don't feel the same revulsion about slimy things, about
grungy brown things, about sticky things, about goo on the inside of your
thighs. But you can't convince me that labelling those things as "gross"
is a result of indoctrination by the patriarchy.
Now, it is a different matter to feel *ashamed*. I do believe that shame,
that feeling guilty or that you are "unclean" when having your period
is (or at least could be) a result of patriarchal indoctrination. But
"grossness" is simply a reaction to the physical qualities of menses.
I think it is unhealthy to feel ashamed of menstruating. I don't think
it is unhealthy to feel that having your uterine lining deposited on
the inside of your panties every month is gross.
D!
|
879.91 | | GEMVAX::BUEHLER | | Thu Feb 22 1990 12:57 | 4 |
| .77
Curse?
|
879.92 | re .90 - so shall we make it a National Product? | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Feb 22 1990 13:15 | 1 |
|
|
879.93 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | there's heat beneath your winter | Thu Feb 22 1990 13:39 | 14 |
| re:.84
Actually, there is a way to make it so that you do not menstruate.
Take a dosage of the birth control pill that is just a few micrograms
shy of the proper estrogen level for your body's needs. You still get
the preventive effects of the pill - but you don't menstruate.
And the only thing *I* can think of (for me, personally, now) that is
*worse* than menstruating is NOT menstruating.
Yikes!
-Jody
|
879.94 | old quote | QUICKR::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Thu Feb 22 1990 13:39 | 8 |
| I once read the statement below. It gave me a different perspective on
many other issues:
"If men had periods, the President's would be a national holiday."
I didn't and don't think it's funny, just thought provoking.
ed
|
879.95 | | BSS::BLAZEK | night of the living redhead | Thu Feb 22 1990 13:42 | 14 |
|
.90> It's gross because it's brown and slimy and smelly
So is meatloaf gravy. So are mud puddles. So are newborn puppies.
Just because something is brown and slimy and smelly does not mean
it is necessarily gross.
re: .88
Jim, you're right, I did generalize, and I apologize for that. It's
not "men", it was just one man. Thank you for pointing that out.
Carla
|
879.96 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Thu Feb 22 1990 13:47 | 13 |
| D!
I do agree with how you are using gross in re menses. Right now, at
45 I'm in the beginnings of menopause. One symptom of this is that
my flow is a lot heavier and frankly I do feel that the occasional
resultant mess is gross.
Another symptom is waking up soaking with perspiration! :-P that's
also gross.
But neither means that I feel bad about myself or my body.
Bonnie
|
879.97 | Lots of natural things are accomodated... except menses! | DEMING::FOSTER | | Thu Feb 22 1990 15:00 | 36 |
| Bill Cosby did a monologue once on nocturnal emissions. He said a few
things that I'd like to paraphrase:
"I didn't know what it was, but I couldn't wait for it to happen
again! I'd grab me several glasses of water, a few pictures of Dorothy
Dandridge, and jump in the bed, sayin' 'Come on whatever-you-are!'
"You couldn't tell your mom about this kind of stuff. So, I'd just
roll up my sheets and take 'em down to the laundry room every night
around 3am... and there would be 7 other 13 year old boys washing their
sheets, too!"
Evidently, nocturnal emissions are gross, sticky, smelly and fairly
unpredictable. But clearly a badge of pride from Cosby's perspective.
Ironically, the only difference between menses and urination or
defecation is that there are sphincters which control the latter two.
But even though we may not discuss such, we are DEFINITELY not ashamed.
People go to the bathroom. And its normal, acceptable. Unquestioned.
And certainly not a sign of any incapacitance on anyone's part. As for
the mess, society has made sure that such an absolutely automatic part
of the lives of human beings is properly accomodated. I mean really!
Can you imagine life without toilets? Can you imagine how AWKWARD life
would be if you couldn't excuse yourself to relieve yourself? I mean
really, the sphincters don't hold on forever...
"Doctah", in reading your messages, I was simply struck by the fact
that you didn't seem to find ANYTHING redemptive in menses. Moreover,
you repeated your wife's and daughters' complaints without exploring
the possibility that it could be a positive sign, or perhaps it SHOULD
be. I think it would be far more pro-active on your part to encourage
your daughters to see menses as a positive thing, a sign of their
life-creating abilities, a sign of physical adulthood, a milestone in
their lives. On your part, it would be quite a feminist thing to do...
|
879.98 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | I've fallen and I can't get up! | Thu Feb 22 1990 15:34 | 41 |
| > "Doctah", in reading your messages, I was simply struck by the fact
> that you didn't seem to find ANYTHING redemptive in menses.
Then you didn't read carefully. In the very first note I wrote in this
string, I first talked about the fact that menses are necessary for
life, etc BEFORE I talked about the unpleasant qualities of menses.
D! said exactly what I said, or rather, tried to say. Before the
argument got blown out of proportion, I merely questioned the position
that "patriarchal religion" was responsible (chiefly or solely) for any
and all bad feelings regarding menses. The assertion, as I understood
it, was that if patriarchal religions did not force men and women to
feel bad about menses, they would be considered to be a terrific event
each month. It is my opinion that the unpleasantness associated with
menses are a result of their physical manifestation rather than
something forced down our throats by the nasty old patriarchy.
I asked for some supportive evidence, opinions, arguments, whatever to
indicate why patriarchal religion is responsible for all or most of the
bad feelings associated with menses. I have yet to see anything
substantive. I offered my own opinion for why people might have those
feelings- and no one addressed that at all. Instead, it's more fun to
start on the "he's a man- what right does HE have to say ANYTHING about
this?" Which, of course, looks really good to the noters who enter the
conference, see a few of those type of notes, and categorize =wn= as a
place where the "man-haters" go.
Contrary to the charges, I never told anyone she should feel grossed
out by her menses; I never said anything about how she should feel.
I never said anyone should be disgusted or ashamed of menses; they are
a natural part of life for <insert_PC_deity_here>'s sake.
I guess I get a reaction when I see blame for everything bad being
assigned to things where I don't see a connection. And when I ask, I
get attacked for being male and daring to ask "on what do you base that
opinion?" *here.*
So you all go home and think of "the Doctah" as some mean,
insensitive, callous, jerk. And sleep well.
The Doctah
|
879.99 | reference | STAR::BARTH | | Thu Feb 22 1990 16:08 | 10 |
| For what it's worth there is a very good book which discusses some
theories on how patriarchal society/religion has degraded and
effected people's attitudes toward natural female functions. It's
called _The_Once_and_Future_Goddess_ and is a very beautiful and
thought provoking book.
The book has a lot more to it than just the above, but I highly
recommend it to anyone interested in how patriarchy may effect us.
Karen.
|
879.100 | Are we, like, having trouble communicating here? | TLE::D_CARROLL | We too are one | Thu Feb 22 1990 16:22 | 27 |
| Carla:
>So is meatloaf gravy. So are mud puddles. So are newborn puppies.
>Just because something is brown and slimy and smelly does not mean
>it is necessarily gross.
So? I think mud puddles are gross. I think newborn puppies (before Mom
licks them off) are gross (for the PI record, the same goes for babies.)
I didn't say *everyone* thought they were gross. I said that the
perception of them being gross doesn't have to do with the nature of
the reproductive cycle and being feminine and all that, it has to do
with it's physical properties, which a given person may or may not find
distasteful.
You missed my point entirely. There is nothing *necessarily* gross about
any of those things. But if someone *does* think meatloaf gravy is
gross (BTW, my gravy isn't slimy and I don't think I would like it if
it was) is that due to patriarchy/misogyny/what-have-you, or is it due to
the fact that that person has been conditioned to find those particular
physical qualities gross?
Like I said, I find sliminess gross, so I find (found) menses gross because
they are slimy. So unless you can demonstrate that I hate *all* sliminess
because of patriarchial indoctrination, then my distaste for menses isn't
related.
D!
|
879.101 | | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Thu Feb 22 1990 16:39 | 3 |
| re .99
Thanks for mentioning that!
|
879.102 | [disclaimers supplied only upon request] | YGREN::JOHNSTON | ou krineis, me krinesthe | Thu Feb 22 1990 16:59 | 57 |
| re.98 - this one's for you, Mark.
No argument really, but you have asked about the role of patriarchal religions
in promoting shame -- or some unwholesome feeling -- toward menses.
While you may have come in for heat for using the term 'gross' the 'gross'-ness
you [and others] refer to has very little to do with your question. The mess
and the discomfort aren't the root cause of the problem; the fact that it
happens at all is.
Early on, women were segregated during menses. During this flux from her woman-
hood a woman was a fearsome thing. After all, a man with a similar flux from
his manhood could generally expect evil events to follow. Yet women experienced
this evil thing month upon month and did not die or truly sicken. Where men
define the norm and a man would die [or be QUITE ill], a woman shrugging it
off was looked upon as a manifestation of evil and could possible cause evil
by being near men, by touching a man's food, by looking at or being looked upon
by a man. It was not understood _how_ she could be so unaffected, and fear
and loathing frequently result from such cosmic lack of understanding.
Further, when women bled they would not bring forth children. Once this
connection was made, the occurrence of menses was viewed as the antithesis of
life. In a society or religion where women are viewed as necessary, but very
replacable, guarantors of posterity, this 'denial' of life by not giving it
purchase was also considered evil.
In patriarchal societies/religions women in menses were frequently the last to
eat and in times of famine were denied food. Women in menses became 'unworthy'
of even the basic requirements of life.
In many patriarchal religions, intimate relations with a woman during menses
was, and is, considered unclean. [Many non-religious men and women still
behave as if this were so. Oh perhaps 'unclean' isn't the word they use, but
the fact that semen is fairly slimy and unpleasant to sleep in doesn't seem
to stop them so there must be some other level involved.] Men who broke this
taboo were denied their 'rightful' place and barred from doing man-stuff until
they were cleansed -- frequently by some economic sacrifice.
The specific example of barring women from the Sacrament until 40 days had
passed and she had been cleansed and 'churched' after childbirth meant that
during those 40 days she was 'not part of the Body.' In other words she was
'outcast' and not of the community during that time; and, in the far-back time
meant that she could not be burried in hallowed ground if she died during this
period of ostracism from God.
So we had/have women growing up in societies/religions that told them, from the
egg:
- menses is an UN-natural process [it is not something that Man does]
- menses makes you unfit for intimacy
- menses makes you unfit to associate with other human beings
- menses is life-denying
- menses/childbirth makes you unworthy even of God.
It is no wonder that women came to be ashamed of this natural and life-affirming
process. These are patriarchal attitudes that caused, and still cause, shame.
Ann
|
879.103 | thankyou | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | I've fallen and I can't get up! | Thu Feb 22 1990 17:06 | 6 |
| Thanks, Ann, for addressing the question.
Where did you find all this out? What religions were involved? At what
point of history did this occur?
The Doctah
|
879.105 | I found the stuff, because I wanted to know ... | YGREN::JOHNSTON | ou krineis, me krinesthe | Thu Feb 22 1990 17:43 | 25 |
| .re.103
My sources of information are fairly diverse, ranging from anthropology texts
[written by both men and women] that I had in college, to instruction in
comparative religions in a Catholic convent school, to reading in my father's
library on such subjects as the evolution of doctrines, Christian and otherwise,
and history of religions [my father's a Theologian and and Anglican priest, do
I take this to True Confessions?...] to conversations with contemporary women
exploring our differences and understanding one another.
The time of occurence ranges from pre-history to the present day. There is no
specific 'point of history' but a continuum. Much of what I wrote still occurs
somewhere. Many of the traditions, such as churching after childbirth, exist in
vestigal forms for 'tradition's sake.'
Religions involved have been totemistic, pagan, Hindu, Islam, & Christianity in
their patriarchal manifestations. I am fairly sure that none of my examples are
unique to any religion/society.
One of my examples, that of waiting to eat until others have eaten, still occurs
in some Hindu households. My source on this is a conversation with a Hindu
woman about a year ago talking of her life. [She refused to 'sit out' and
thought it would be great good fun if all the women in the household 'sat out'
at once because they weren't supposed to _cook_ either...] Her family are not
backward and she is well educated.
|
879.106 | but then I don't care for religions in general | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Thu Feb 22 1990 19:18 | 26 |
| The base issue is not whether women enjoy bleeding once a month. I
certainly don't and wish I didn't. (I don't enjoy sleeping in the wet
spot men create either and they can make a mess every time they have
sex :*))
The issue is whether women feel *ashamed* that they are the ones
that bleed. As if this was wrong. I do believe that religions have
fostered that feeling. I realise I am condemming with a rather broad
brush but as a woman I have found precious little in the religions I
have seen to make me feel good about myself as a woman.
The small amount of reading I have done in anthropology has lead me
to believe that rituals ostracizing women during menses were quite
common.
In the modern sense we are also made to *pay* for our difference.
How many times have you heard someone say "ah she must be on the
rag" if a woman acts in a way they don't like? We are afraid to let
others know we "have our period" because then our decisions may be
become suspect. Everybody knows how emotional we get then. When I
think of some of the things I have seen supposidly rational
businessmen do I can only guess that they get some sort of PMS too.
On the other hand, if we are so disgusting when we bleed it can
always be an excuse to turn away unwanted sex. I wonder if women in
ancient times lied and tried to pretend it lasted longer. liesl
|
879.107 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Thu Feb 22 1990 20:12 | 29 |
| Liesl,
Recently my 16 year old daughter started taunting her 12 year old
sister when she was upset by asking if she was 'on the rag'. Finally
one night when she was cross I asked her the same thing (after telling
her several times that I found the phrase offensive.) She lit into
me for using it, and I merely pointed out that if it was wrong for
me to say that to her, it was equally wrong for her to use that for
her sister and I wanted the phrase baned.
It amazes me how such expressions continue. It is not one that I have
ever personally used but my daughter came home with it.
and yes, women do feel ashamed that they bleed even in relatively
open and liberal households like ours. Our dog has been known to
get into the trascan and chew used pads and leave them all l over the
house. This embarasses the heck out of me and my daughters and my
2nd son can only be rude about it.
I did try!
Bonnie
p.s. before entering this I reasked one of my daughters if she would
like a lunch to celebrate being a woman and her answer was 'no' and
she didn't want to talk about it. We are all embarassed as women
I guess, but we need to own this and not put blame on the past. If
we are strong we can forge a new reality.
|
879.109 | how Anne Frank felt about it. | GEMVAX::KOTTLER | | Fri Feb 23 1990 08:22 | 11 |
|
"I think what is happening to me is so wonderful,..all that is
taking place inside.
"Each time I have a period--and that has only been three times--
I have the feeling that in spite of all the pain, unpleasantness,
and nastiness, I have a sweet secret, and that is why, although
it is nothing but a nuisance in a way, I always long for the time
that I shall feel that secret within me again."
-- Anne Frank, Diary, Wednesday, January 5, 1944
|
879.112 | An answer. | DEMING::FOSTER | | Fri Feb 23 1990 10:52 | 27 |
| >
> I have a serious question regarding this remark: when is it okay
> to call into question a woman's attitudes regarding aspects of being a
> woman? ... What am I missing here? Under what circumstances should
> I think _I_ know better about being a woman than a _woman_ does? Or am
> I just misunderstanding the recommendation?
re .104
The specific reason why I made my statement is because two of the
"women" in Mark's life are daughters. And he can be a major influence
on their values and upbringing. At least, that's how *I* look at
parenting.
A parent encouraging a child to look at something positively seems
different from a peer saying it to a peer. I personally think that a
father's opportunity to help his daughters look at their female aspects
as a positive part of their lives should be strongly encouraged. Nor am
I suggesting that he do this by some means which suggests that he knows
more about this than they do. But rather, for example, to share the
Anne Frank quote with them, as something he found. Or take his
daughters out in a sense of celebration, similarly to the way some
other parents - OF BOTH GENDERS - have done. I hope this makes sense,
and answers your question.
|
879.114 | Give them choice... | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Grail seeker | Fri Feb 23 1990 12:05 | 33 |
|
Re: .104
Brian,
Just a (hopefully) helpful thought from my experience....
How about ensuring that your daughters are shown some positive things
written and said by women (or men) about menstruation as well as the
negative images (from women and men and, maybe, society)?
Then they can form their own views on their womanhood with support
from a range of opinions.
I had an unformed view of my own periods when I started - they were
very painful, and whilst I had no other ideas about them (shame,
celebration etc.) I didn't feel positive towards them.
Then I read a book called "Hygiea - A Woman's Herbal" by Jeanine
Parvarti. It has some very positive and gentle images from women on
how they view their cycles.
It changed my views, and I *learned* to view my menses positively.
You could say that this is making a virtue of necessity, but as
we're stuck with periods for a loooong part of our lives I feel
that a creative attitude towards it can make them at worst tolerable
and, at best, beautiful and welcome.
You have a choice of books, poems, and some films and novels that
give positive input. I'm sure the readers here could recommend some
suitable ones. How old are your daughters?
'gail
|
879.115 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | the promise of spring | Fri Feb 23 1990 18:19 | 8 |
|
re: 879.64 (Carla Blazek)
> "... . I bleed, yet I am whole."
What an interesting perspective.
nancy b.
|
879.116 | No Shame...Just a Pain | SALEM::KUPTON | | Mon Feb 26 1990 08:06 | 26 |
| Just a few thoughts....
In my family the period was never something to "hide". My mother
(gasp) and sister had monthly periods and that was that. The one
thing my mother told my brother and I: If a girl said she COULDN'T
go swimming and some boys tried to throw her in, defend her to the
death or risk facing same from mom. 8^) She explained the embarassment
felt by many females and what was happening. My mother and father
were not highly educated people but they had a sense for explaining
those things that needed it.
My wife and I have spent many hours discussing and exploring the
"differences" in ourselves. It was awkward at first but it's made
our marriage all the stronger because we understand a bit better
why we act the way we do. We have hopefully passed that on to our
two daughters. The youngest hasn't started yet. The oldest (14)
finds no problem in telling me there are no pads and I best get
down to the store and get some...8^).
As to the condom joke about tax:
Forget the tax.........I'll just roll 'em on!
Ken
|
879.117 | Female/Male Secretions | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Mon Feb 26 1990 15:33 | 5 |
| So how come menstruation is viewed as smelly, gross (slimey), etc., and
ejaculation or sexual intercourse is not??? Could it possibly be that
the former is only for females and is the result of a *female* bodily
function, while the the slime and odor of the latter are the
result of a *male* bodily function?????????
|
879.118 | I don't think intercourse is gross | TLE::D_CARROLL | We too are one | Mon Feb 26 1990 15:56 | 37 |
| > So how come menstruation is viewed as smelly, gross (slimey), etc., and
> ejaculation or sexual intercourse is not???
I didn't know it was. I don't view either as gross, but I once did, for
similar reasons (slimy, smelly, etc.) Eventually, through repeated exposure,
I got used to them both. I still don't consider either a delightful
substance...I don't look forward to having my period, and I *refuse* to
sleep in the wet spot! (One of the many advantages of condoms...)
>Could it possibly be that
> the former is only for females and is the result of a *female* bodily
> function, while the the slime and odor of the latter are the
> result of a *male* bodily function?????????
If it is true that some people think menses is gross and semen isn't, then
that is a possible explanation (the root of which would appear to be
misogyny.)
Another possible explanation: people get used to semen faster. Certain for
men, they are exposed to semen *much* more frequently than to menses, so they
have more chance to get over the aversive reaction. And I, for one, and
probably many women with regular sexual partners, are exposed to semen more
frequently than once a month. (True, I was exposed to menses for many years
before semen, but I considered them *both* gross for years after I began
exposure.)
(BTW, by "gross and slimy" in reference to ejaculation I assume you meant
semen. I wasn't sure what you meant by "intercourse" being gross and slimy
if not semen. Female lubrication? I never thought that was gross, probably
because I was exposed to it not only before menses, but before I even made
the connection between "slimy" and "gross", so I've *always* been used to
it. Also, probably both men and women are less likely to find that "gross"
because it is directly linked with female sexual arousal, and so has positive
associations from the start. Besides, since it is a female secretion, it
doesn't support your point anyway.)
D!
|
879.119 | Reply to D! | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Mon Feb 26 1990 16:21 | 3 |
| My comment/question was for those who *do* consider menstruation
"gross." I agree with you that repeated exposure reduces one's
personal aversion to both blood and enjaculate!
|
879.120 | I doesn't bother me but... | XCUSME::KOSKI | This NOTE's for you | Tue Feb 27 1990 08:18 | 11 |
| >that is a possible explanation (the root of which would appear to be
>misogyny.)
I don't buy into the idea that people would find menses gross because
of misogyny. Many people have an aversion to blood, plain and simple.
They don't faint, break out into a sweat or loose their lunch at
the sight of blood because deep down inside they hate woman! Stop
by the Red Cross some time, I'm sure they can tell you that many
different people find blood gross.
Gail
|
879.121 | Boy meets girl, boy and girl bleach sheets... | STAR::RDAVIS | The Man Without Quantities | Tue Feb 27 1990 10:21 | 6 |
| Now we're getting down to cases... Actually, neither of the bodily
fluids D! mentions has ever seemed gross to me separately. But, in my
experience, the consensus from both sides of the sex wall has always
been that the combination of the two IS gross.
Ray
|
879.122 | my opinion :-) | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | still haven't found what I'm lookin for | Tue Feb 27 1990 11:12 | 29 |
| Re .120, I think that finding regular blood gross is different than
finding menstrual blood gross. To me they are gross in different
ways for different reasons. :-) "Real" blood is gross because it
reminds me of people dying violently (blood & guts, violent injuries),
bleeding to death. When people lose too much blood they die. Therefore
it is scary to me and upsets me to see a lot of blood (and guts).
It also shocks me because I'm not used to it. There's something
horrifying about looking down and seeing my own life's blood being
drawn out of my arm. But, this regular blood doesn't smell and
it isn't dark red and clotted. :-)
Menstrual blood on the other hand sometimes does smell bad, it can
be dark and clotted and revolting looking in the same way, oh, vomit,
or shit, can be. But, since I am used, by now, to having my period,
I don't find just having my period to be gross. Painful, and a
nuisance, but not gross. I think it can be gross though, if people
have sex during menstruation because it can get all over everything,
and create a real mess. And, I can't imagine why anyone would ever
want to have oral sex during menstruation. Yuck! I think that
would be gross. I really don't think I feel this way because of
misogny. I think it's just a physical reaction to something being
yucky, like touching vomit. :-) (just my opinion on the matter!)
As for semen, it seems obvious to me that it's not as gross as
menstruation because it's not red, there's not as much of it, and
it doesn't smell bad.
Lorna
|
879.123 | Feeling unusually upbeat... | STAR::RDAVIS | The Man Without Quantities | Tue Feb 27 1990 14:27 | 8 |
| Yecchh, Lorna. (: >,)
Actually, I should point out that being a little gross doesn't keep
something from being worthwhile. Heck, I've seen "Dawn of the Dead"
three times now! And sex can be even more rewarding than a zombie
movie!
Ray
|
879.124 | somedays I have no control | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Feb 27 1990 14:52 | 7 |
| < Actually, I should point out that being a little gross doesn't keep
< something from being worthwhile. Heck, I've seen "Dawn of the Dead"
< three times now! And sex can be even more rewarding than a zombie
< movie!
And then there are those who feel sex is like being in a zombie movie.
;*} liesl
|
879.125 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Feb 28 1990 17:12 | 65 |
| I think mushrooms are yucky, even though most people do not. Is my
feeling necessary caused by a prejudice against mycologists? Or is my
feeling in fact quite normal (even if not universal) and not in fact in
need of explanation at all?
Some people have tried to show that menses are not gross by comparing
them with other things -- mud, newborn puppies, semen. This sort of
comparison is pointless. Some people think newborn puppies are gross,
some do not. Some people think menses are gross, some do not. One
person's opinions of gross do not need to agree with another person's
in order to be valid. Grossness is not a physical characteristic which
can be proven or disproven.
You can prove that apples are red. You cannot prove that J. Doe is
right or wrong to like or dislike them. If a person feels a pain in
their hand, that pain is real even if you can examine the nerves in
their hand and determine that none of them are sending signals -- even
if the pain is psychosomatic, it still hurts, and so it is real.
Similarly, if a person thinks something is gross, then it is gross to
them. They are grossed out by it, and you cannot say it isn't so.
Grossness and shamefulness are different things. Something can be
gross with or without being shameful, and vice-versa. Some people have
tried to say that considering menses gross is a consequence of some
attitude toward women. I do not think that has been proven. Even .102
begins with a chain that goes:
menses -> similar to something dangerous -> dangerous -> to be feared
That chain of reasoning is not deductive; it is associative, so it can
be in error. And it did turn out to be in error. Nevertheless, it is
not an unreasonable line of conjecture, particularly for the time it
was made. It is reasoning that can be born of ignorance, a natural
fear of the unknown, and an honest attempt to think about the subject
-- it is reasoning that is not necessarily caused by any particular
attitude about women or men.
In fact, given the material in .102, it is not clear whether
patriarchal attitudes first gave rise to disdain for menses or whether
fear born of the unknown aspects of menses gave rise to disdain and
then to patriarchal attitudes. In all likelihood, they may have each
contributed to the other at times.
Since dislike of menses can be explained without recourse to
patriarchal attitudes, there is not enough information to judge that
such attitudes cause dislike of menses.
As for shame, as opposed to dislike, I think it is likely that
patriarchal attitudes have at least helped to perpetuate shame. But I
think some of the notes in this topic have spread the blame too far.
Besides seeing notes that deny discrimination at all, we see the other
extreme, notes that blame dislike for women or dislike for the notion
of women as people as the cause for shame for menses. Such notes act
as an accusation, which naturally steps on the toes of innocent people.
Human ignorance can explain a great many things that people do; it is
not necessary to suppose that people necessarily made menses shameful
because they disliked women or wanted to suppress women -- ignorance is
a sufficient explanation, and it is certainly easier for people to
acquire ignorance than virtually anything else. Instead of searching
for something to blame for discrimination that has occurred throughout
history, I would lay it to rest as caused mostly by ignorance and turn
the search toward ways to change things today.
-- edp
|
879.126 | "aquiring ignorance"??? | TLE::D_CARROLL | We too are one | Thu Mar 01 1990 10:13 | 13 |
| -1:
> Human ignorance can explain a great many things that people do; it is
> not necessary to suppose that people necessarily made menses shameful
> because they disliked women or wanted to suppress women -- ignorance is
> a sufficient explanation, and it is certainly easier for people to
> acquire ignorance than virtually anything else.
As the saying goes (paraphrased) "Never attribute to maliciousness that which
can be adequately explained by stupidity."
:-)
D!
|
879.127 | This has nothing to do with upbringing | CASEE::MCDONALD | | Mon Mar 12 1990 12:53 | 4 |
| If it were up to me I would gladly let the MEN go through the
"miracles" of menstruation, pregnancy, and childbirth! I would rather
take the easy way out and let them do the hard part, while I enjoy the
children later. I think being a woman can be a pain in the ---!
|