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Your
comments, below. Read older ones
dating to 2000 at the link at the bottom
of this page. Add
yours! (I count 1115 on these pages dating
to 2000.)
The
New York Times quoted from your e-mail below for an article on
menstrual suppression in the 14 October
2003 edition, Science Times section (online here).
I'm 42 now and wishing I were like in my
60s or 70s anything that would
get me out of this nightmare forever.
I hate menstrual periods so much that I'd kill
myself if I had guts to do
so but instead I'm stuck in this endless
nightmare month after month you
can believe it when I say being able to bring
little bastards in the world
ain't worth this at all and if I could afford
it I'd have a hysterectomy
hands down end of problem I don't have any
little creeps now and don't plan
on it neither I just want this nightmare I
wish I would age faster than I
am. I'm 42 now and wishing I were like in my
60s or 70s anything that would
get me out of this nightmare forever. Don't
get me life wouldn't be that
bad if it weren't for periods it could be
better but not that bad if it
weren't for the monthly nightmare I can't even
look forward to the next
month ahead because of them I literally
dread every month that comes. This
is how much I hate menstrual periods!
December 2017
OMG I could not be happier ... No periods
since 2006!!!!!!!!!
Oh dear Lord, YES. I had very irregular,
painful periods and even more
awful PMS. I bled like a stuck pig, I was
depressed and cranky. I welcomed
contraceptive pill because it (at least) made
my periods regular. I loved
Depoprovera (no periods for 3 to 6
months at a time) but it made me gain
large amount of weight. After baby #2 I had a
copper IUD put in and it made
my every period feel like having a baby all
over again, with way more
blood, though. And it lasted almost 2
weeks!!!!! So I had it replaced with
Mirena IUD and it STOPPED MY PERIODS. OMG I
could not be happier ... No
periods since 2006!!!!!!!!!
December 2017
It's been years
since I have had a period and my OB/GYN is
now my hero in my struggle against the Great
Red Tide!
My OB/GYN told me that 95% of African American
women have fibroids, and I'm one of them. I
started my period in high school and the pain
(especially on the 4th day) only aggravated my
depression as well as my anemia. Usually on
the 1st day, my period was accompanied by
diarrhea. It was a nightmare that I thought
would never end. The pain was so intense that
it left me sore, and the fatigue left me so
tired that on the 3rd and 4th days, I could
hardly function. It made school and then work
a total catastrophe!
The flow was intense as well, and it seemed
that no product could actually help me contain
it. What a filthy bloody thing it was. Then
some years ago, my present OB/GYN prescribed a
birth control pill that virtually eliminated
the flow and hence the the pain. However the
fatigue is still there for some reason, and I
can hardly function on what was the 4th day of
my flow. It's been years since I have had a
period and my OB/GYN is now my hero in my
struggle against the Great Red Tide! [:
BTW, I saw that in one of the comments, that
the writer felt sexier when she was having her
period. Gack! ]: Sure it's natural part of
being a female, but it's really for the birds!
Let those who feel no pain during their
periods and can't empathize with those who do
take note.
February 2017
From an Italian woman: "What
you did for us, all women on the planet,
is really, really wonderful! I send you
thousands of hugs, Sara"
Oh no! Not now that I start loving them
[periods]! I'm a 48 years old Italian woman
who's probably close to their end and a little
afraid of menopause and all the emotional and
physical problems it would probably mean to
me. In any case I troubled a lot during my
life time with menstruation: cramps, PMS,
getting weight, losing working days. But now
that I am at home, I decided to study me
during the month and find out why during
pre-menstruation I can easily write or create.
So, definitively I WOULD NOT STOP THEM! I also
would like to share my experience with young
ladies who are fighting with them. I started
to celebrate my first day of menstruation and
with my daughter too and I would like to turn
those days as a real party. Our body is OK and
all women should know! It would be nice if you
could come to Italy with your MUM. In Bologna,
a northern city in Italy, there is MAMBO
(MUSEUM OF MODERN ART) and I think they could
be interested in inviting you. At least I
hope. Maybe the director is a woman…. I don't
know. Let me know! In any case what you did
for us, all women on the planet, is really,
really wonderful! I send you thousand of hugs,
Sara
September 2016
Cups are life changing
I would have stopped it in the past, but
recently, I've invested quite a bit of money
in menstrual cups, so it'd definitely be a
waste. Besides, the saying that they are life
changing, after you figure them out is true.
August 2016
"I suppose I mean
to say that I would not be without periods,
although I dislike the PMS."
I found the museum online many years ago, I
think it was when I heard about menstrual
cups.
I had wanted to find something reusable and
not unpleasant for years and I love my
Mooncup, although it does interfere with sex.
I never thought I would write to you, but
looking again and seeing people who have in
this year I see it is still a current entity.
Continued
August 2016
"I hated every second."
I'm 61 and if I could go backwards in time, I
would say NO. They are not necessary today. I
hated every second. It got in my way.
July 2016
A Muslim women writes about
menstruation, and she would not stop her
period
No. I am 20 years old, and despite its
annoyance and inconvenience, I would not want
my periods to stop. For me I suppose, it's
just another part of who I am, and it
assures me that everything is physically fine
with me when my cycle repeats every
month. What I would love is to not get any
horrible, painful breakouts on my skin
during that week, have good hair days, and not
have cramps (which are usually mild,
though can sometimes be extreme). Oh, and
also, no PMS - it would be great if my
moods and emotions didn't fluctuate before and
during my periods. That's about it
though...As bothersome as my periods are, they
do define a part of my womanhood, and
I would not want them to just stop. It's a
system of nature, and it does amaze me of
what my body is capable of, of how it knows
what to do.
By the way, you're running a wonderful
website/museum on here! It's super
informative, and answers soo many otherwise
unanswered questions (how did women deal with
menstruation in the past? How was it perceived
by different societies?) These questions and
many more often perplex me when I'm reading a
novel or watching something, and as a avid
student of history, and holding a strong
interest in anything related to women's
health, I love to learn about the historical
aspects of menstruation. Keep up the awesome
work, you're doing great! 😊
Also, I'm not sure if this would be of
interest, but in my religious practice
(Islam), there are in fact no regulations
regarding menstruation, except for during
intercourse where it's not allowed due to
health reasons. Apart from that, women can
pray, fast, read the Quran, perform pilgrimage
(Hajj), and participate in any other religious
duty during their periods, because it's a
natural bodily function. This is all according
to the Quran. Most Muslims today would
disagree with this statement and uphold
man-made laws (Hadith/Sunnah) that women
aren't allowed to do any of this on their
periods, but the Quran (what we are to only
follow by), does not forbid it.
http://www.masjidtucson.org/submission/perspectives/women/religiousdutiesduringperiods.html
Cheers!
June 2016
I hate needles, but when I found out
Depo-Provera stopped periods, I not only
demanded it from my gynecologist, I injected
myself whenever I didn't have the $30 she
charged to do it for me.
Hell yes, I'd stop! I'm 48 and every
time I buy a box of tampons I hope it's the
last one I'll ever need. I suffered from
truly awful cramps from the time I first got
my period until I was able to get a
prescription for the pill my first month in
college. I'd spend most of every 27th
day alternately vomiting and curled up in a
ball whimpering. When the pain finally
receded I'd fall asleep, exhausted for
hours. Between the pill and the
introduction of ibuprofen I am finally able to
function during my period, but I still find
the whole process uncomfortable and totally
disgusting. I hate needles, but when I
found out Depo-Provera stopped periods, I not
only demanded it from my gynecologist, I
injected myself whenever I didn't have the $30
she charged to do it for me. I only stopped
when I changed doctors & found out long
term use could cause osteoporosis. I switched
back to birth control pills taken continuously
for 3 months at a time, and as far as I was
concerned, 4 periods a year was still 4 too
many.
Just last month I had a uterine polyp removed
which was causing short, irregular cycles and
agreed to get an iud at the same time because
in spite of my nervousness about it, it was
the only form of hormonal treatment my doctor
would agree to at my age, and I don't want any
more periods if I can stop them. I was really
hoping that things would look just bad enough
for a hysterectomy. I thought about having
children, but my husband died before I was
able to persuade him to agree. Since
then the time never seemed right, even to
adopt, which I would have preferred. I don't
feel at all like my identity as a woman is
lessened because I never gave birth and have
spent as much of my adult life as possible
choosing not to menstruate. I love being
female in every other way.
May 2016
.............................................................................................................................................................................
"[W]hat I would LOVE is to get a week off
every month, from cooking, cleaning, and
working, b/c I am 'unclean.' "
When I was a teenager I would have said yes to
stop the monthly bleeding in a heart beat. But
now as a 35 year old mother of 5 it's not that
big of a deal.
But what I would LOVE is to get a week off
every month, from cooking, cleaning, and
working, b/c I am "unclean." Call it whatever
you want, getting every third week off would
be GREAT!! I curse feminists, or whoever it
was, for just about 5 days every month for
getting rid of that! LOL!
April 2016
.............................................................................................................................................................................
"I strongly dislike the thought of
putting synthetic/ extra hormones into my
body and disrupting the natural cycle. It
is also disturbing to know that taking
such pills could cause an increased risk
of cervical cancer (and yet I read that
taking them could provide a protective
effect against ovarian cancer that could
last for years, which would be a plus.)"
Hello, I came across the MUM website while
browsing Google for "I don't want to get my
period anymore." The subject matter in general
and a lot of the responses struck a chord with
me. I typed out my own rather long and candid
opinion in response to the question, "Would
you stop menstruating indefinitely?" and would
be happy to have it added to the website.
Thanks. Continued
January 2016
.............................................................................................................................................................................
"Because my menstruation made me so sick
and was so irregular, I am glad to be
without it. I don't equate the
bleeding or being able to give birth with
'womanhood' or being 'female.' "
Truly, your site is fascinating! I have
wondered how menstruation was handled
throughout the ages.
I am 35.
When I decided I wouldn't have children, I
wanted to stop the menstruation - after all,
what was the point if I wasn't going to
actually use it? Besides, I was never
regular and I seriously could have used one of
those "sanitary aprons" as I bled heavily for
2-3 days each time. My periods were so
irregular, they were as close as 2 weeks or as
far apart as 3 months.
When I was 32, I didn't stop bleeding for 3
months. By the time I saw the doctor, I
was severely anemic and passing out. I
saw her on a Tuesday, and Thursday I had
surgery - the removal of the uterus. She
told me afterwards that my symptoms, while not
exactly common, happened with autoimmune
disease. I have thus far been diagnosed
with four.
Because my menstruation made me so sick and
was so irregular, I am glad to be without
it. I don't equate the bleeding or being
able to give birth with "womanhood" or being
"female." I see that it's split in half,
those who associate it with, and those who
don't - and it's likely generational.
I'm happy for those who were born with working
systems and can embrace it. But because
I wasn't and couldn't doesn't make me any less
a woman, nor does it make those born in the
wrong body who have to transition any less
feminine. What truly makes a woman a
woman is specifically in her brain, not
between her legs (or what might come out from
there).
Thanks!
October 2015
"When I was twelve years old, my step
mother did brujería
[Spanish for witchcraft] on me. She took my
underwear to a black
magic witch doctor, who then buried
it in a cemetery."
This comment is too long for the page.
Read all of it here.
(October 2015)
"I, and many other women it seems, link my
period with my womanhood."
I found your site today and have greatly
appreciated it. I've been thinking
about how I wish I knew more about how every
day people handled every day
things hundreds of years ago, and I wonder to
what degree any of those
things were deemed important enough to record.
So, with that, I would like
to say my piece. The question involves a lot
of factors that I've been
spending a lot of time thinking about lately.
I would not stop my period if I could. I
already chose not to!
I, and many other women it seems, link my
period with my womanhood. So the
question almost sounds like, would I give up
my womanhood?
(Continued because of length as July 2015 e-mail)
"I had a uterine ablation. It was done in
my gyn's office using
the Novasure system. It was fast, and I had
one period afterwards, and been
period free since. What is great is that you
don't lose any of your organs."
I was a gal who had heavy bleeding since the
start of menses when I was 10,
yes TEN years old. I had horrible cramps,
missed school, you name it. I
prayed that one day all of this would stop. I
grew up, had my kids, and
felt I no longer needed my period. Well, my
wish came true.....
Back in 2007 I had a uterine ablation. It was
done in my gyn's office using
the Novasure system. It was fast, and I had
one period afterwards, and been
period free since. What is great is that you
don't lose any of your organs.
You still have a monthly cycle, PMS is greatly
reduced or eliminated, and
most women either have light bleeding (1-2
days) or none at all. All the
women I know who have had this are no longer
menstruating.
Of course, you have to be sure you are
finished having children, as the
procedure makes it nearly impossible for a
pregnancy to happen, and if one
does, it is very dangerous. There is more
information at www.novasure.com.
Insurance usually covers it, as heavy bleeding
during menses is considered
a medical condition.
Thank you and I love your website, I frequent
it often!
June 2015
"It would be quite entertaining to
watch a man try to give birth through the
head of [his] penis"
I would stop the bleeding from my
vagina. And, If I were God, I would
place that curse upon men…along with cramps,
worries about missed periods, and
childbirth. It would be quite
entertaining to watch a man try to give birth
through the head of their penis, and paybacks
a bitch! 😉 I live in California and
today is my 50th birthday…not that husband or
children give a damn. Haven’t even got
one “Happy Birthday”, or a thanks for giving
birth to us.
March 2015
"Instead of getting rid of it, we should learn
how to use it for our well being and embrace it as a part of ourselves."
I wouldn’t stop my menstruation. I respect my body and my cycle. I have PMDD which
affects my mood but I think it’s very important.
Spiritually, I think women are lucky to have the cycle of life and death in their
bodies. I always write down my dates so that I know, roughly, when is ovulation and
when I might have my periods. I also try to spend time under the moon to keep my
cycle timed with the moon cycle. I’m scared of menopause because I’m so used to this
cycle of death and rebirth. I don’t see periods as a separate thing it’s part of my
body’s process as a woman of childbearing age. It’s not separate from ovulation or
the good sides of having a cycle. I also think it would be terribly unhealthy for
both body and soul to stop menstruating. It’s part of the healing process of our
soul and also body. The only problem is that we live now in a world that wants to
ignore that we are part of nature. Just like our planet needs Autumn, we need our
periods. It’s part of being a woman. Instead of getting rid of it, we should learn
how to use it for our well being and embrace it as a part of ourselves.
Switzerland, 30 years old
December 2014
“Free at Last. Thank God almighty I’m Free
at Last.”
When I was 32 I had one ovary and tube removed due to
noncancerous tumors. the Doctors said that I will have
an erratic cycle with a period every other month and I
would probably go through menopause in my early 40s. I
was pleased at that prospect. But as luck would have
it, my periods were every month and heavy. I fought
pain and discomfort (no medication would help) most of
my life until I turned 54. My periods stopped suddenly
never to return. Now when asked about it, I say, “Free
at Last. Thank God almighty I’m Free at Last.”
November 2014
Why didn't the Great Creator tweak that
whole process a bit so that nothing is
lost?
I was born in 1945.
In 1984 I had my uterus removed
because I was bleeding all the time, just a
bit. I was a school teacher with one
daughter. In the spring of 84, after two
d&c's and a refusal to use birth control
pills to stop the bleeding, my doctor, a
wonderful Swedish man practicing in Florida
(whose office was later bombed because he
gave abortions) suggested I have the uterus
removed. He theorized and I think he is
right, that an IUD I had back in the 70ís
for a year caused some upset to my female
system. The IUD was painful and never
comfortable. After it was removed, I started
having sporadic bleeding. I still have
healthy ovaries.
I always considered menstruation a pain in
the neck and felt it really unfair that men
and boys had no alternative "curse."
I'm a writer and I am writing about the
differences in how boys and girls were
treated in my teenage years in Texas.
In no way did I or do I consider that
miserable bleeding every month a badge of
anything except frustration, pain and
something to be rid of. In fact, I think the
process is flawed and do not quite
understand why all that nutrient-rich blood
has to flow out. Why didn't the Great
Creator tweak that whole process a bit so
that nothing is lost?
I can't imagine using all that
paraphernalia and being in some small way
slightly incapacitated for part of each
month. And, don't even get me started on all
the ways that girls can be made fun because
of bleeding every month.
Down with Menstruation!
November 2014
"I have imagined slicing open my abdomen
with a knife and using my hands to yank
out my 'female organs' because it would be
less painful."
Good evening,
I came across this site via a link and
decided to take a quick look. As
I'm eating right now, I'll probably not
spend too long on this site at
the moment, but when I saw this, I HAD to
reply.
Would I stop menstruating if I could? Yes,
and I have. I have been
plagued with menstrual issues all my life,
from an early start to severe
cramps that have left me motionless on the
floor at work. I have
imagined slicing open my abdomen with a
knife and using my hands to yank
out my "female organs" because it would be
less painful. Since my
surgery at age 17 (to remove a
grapefruit-size cyst along with the ovary
it was attached to), I have never been
regular and I've been plagued
with clots, some quarter-size, some larger,
but most smaller. My cramps
were so severe I was, at one point, put on a
special narcotic just to
kill the pain. I seriously considered taking
steps to get a
hysterectomy.
Speaking with my doctor led me to make the
very simple choice to take
birth-control hormones constantly (no STOP
hormones) and I haven't had a
period for about 18 months now. It's
glorious! No more worrying about
clots falling out while I crumple over in
pain. No more worrying about
pads (due to a physical restriction I don't
wear tampons). No more
bloody sheets. Nothing! It's amazing,
wonderful, and awesome.
And people say being a woman is glorious.
Hmph. I'm glad I don't have
periods anymore.
April 2014
"Yes, Yes, Yes! I never wanted it in
the first place."
I'm in my mid-30's and would definitely
stop having a period if I could. To
that end, I'm seriously thinking of the
depo-provera injections. I started
my period at 11 years old and I can still
remember the shame and fear of it
every month. It took years for it to
normalize into something I could
reasonably understand, prepare for, and
predict. I hated it and still do.
It gets more painful every year and I keep
having painful ovarian cysts
develop during some cycles, but not big
enough for surgery...just big
enough to hurt like hell when they burst.
When I was younger, I couldn't
understand why God would curse me with such
an embarrassing and painful
event every month just to have kids. Now
that I'm older, I still don't
understand, but I really don't want kids and
I see my period as a useless,
exhausting, and fruitless monthly episode. I
really, really can't wait for
menopause. I know menopause symptoms aren't
pretty, but afterward I can
finally relax and not worry about this
particular problem.
March 2014
This e-mail is too long for the
page. Read it here.
(February 2014)
I love not having a period.
Probably yes. I did not like the PMS,
unexpected bleeding, cramping, etc. but mine
were never the nightmare some women have
described. Lucky me I am through menopause
and have not had a period in three years! I
love not having a period. I do miss
ovulation or as my friend called it "mating
week". My husband was suddenly extra
appealing that one week a month. He misses
that week too. I do feel as though my
50's are my favorite time of life, the kids
are grown, I love my husband, my life, my
friends, and my hobbies. I worry far less
about what others might think of me. I
am back in college studying fashion design
and having the time of my life.
February 2014
A girl in Germany conveys her
teacher's memorable opinion
To the point about stopping menstruation:
We had one memorable biology lesson where
one of the boys (after being asked) told the
teacher (the same one mentioned [below in
brackets], not actually a feminist but
rather tough) that there were three weeks of
menstruation and one week pause in a month.
To that she said if that were the case she
would shoot herself.
[This student also writes, "I heard tales
(read curses) of people who grew up with
cloth belts. For example, my German teacher
[see above] told us there were five women at
home and the bucket
where the soiled pads soaked was never empty
[a slap in the face to synchronous
periods]." Kotex indirectly showed
this in a powerful
November 1921 ad. To show this old way
in the museum
in my house I strung up a clothes line with
bird's
eye cloth hanging from it; this cloth
that women used to diaper babies also diapered
themselves during menstruation.]
[The writer also wrote, "I've got a
contribution for the Word for Menstruatioin
page: (As I'm German so are the words.) My
father always calls it "Ölwechsel" (changing
of oil) and tampons and such "Putzwolle"
(cleaning wool/fleece). Between my mom and
me it's usually the famous 'visitor'; even
though ours has no name it is not less
unwelcome.
"Also I think the can-can
girls (just been flitting over the
website) were the first to be allowed to
wear closed
underwear for decency's sake."]
November 2013
It make sense
of my life, why would I want to stop it?
I would not stop if I had the choice!
I would go on forever. I can't imagine
what my life will be like when I have gone
through the menopause, how will I know
where am. Menstruation is not
just about one week a month, it is a cycle,
every day changes, moves on around the
wheel, dreams reflect that, events and
people are seen through these slightly
different coloured lenses every day.
It make sense of my life, why would I want
to stop it? The bleeding has bought me
to bed sometimes, and is 'inconvenient' in
terms of normal everyday society, but I
don't look upon this as bad, its a
gift. Everything is made more amazing
by my bleeding cycle, its bought to
life. I don't want it to stop. I
have suffered PMDD, now I am nearly 50 and
my cycles becoming erratic this seems to
have eased, but is still part of the
richness, although terrible. I am in
the UK.
December 2013
I want it to be gone for good.
Yes. I'm a 28-year old woman and
would love to stop. I've had erratic
periods since I started in my mid-teens and
have developed severe headaches and panic
attacks before having mine along with my
periods getting gradually more painful and
heavy. I also don't intend on having
children either and thus, making this
useless.
While I have been put on the pill to help
with some of these issues and it has been
helping, I want it to be gone for good.
July 2013
This e-mail
about menstrual
customs in India affecting the
writer's desire to stop is too long for
this page. Read it here.
(September 2013)
This e-mail from Australia is too long
for this page; read it here.
(July 2013)
I already did. ... What I tell to
other women. If periods make you feel sick
don't give up till you find a doctor that
understands and will help you.
I already did. I am 32 years old and it has
been 10 years since my last
period. I take depoprovera shots every 3
months and this was the best
decision I have ever made in my life. And as
far as i am concerned I am
going like that till real menopause.
I got my first period when I was 12. I was
never regular, had periods
lasting 10 days, heavy bleeding and cramps.
With the years things started
to get worse. I started having cramps the
whole month, be swolen migraines
throwing up the whole day almost everyday,
tumor on my face during periods
and colds. The last year I had period I
spent the whole year with a cold
that would go away full of fluids on my
lungs. It was terrible. After going
to lots of doctors that said everything was
normal and that women should
have periods and passed me only normal birth
control pills. I also
discovered I have alergy to estrogen. I had
to take only progesterone.
Then I discovered the injection by one
female doctor and started taking it.
The first two months I had little spots. But
once it stopped it stopped for
good and with it so it stopped the colds,
the migraines, I lost 27 kilos in
6 months, I can wear any color of clothes
any day, go anywhere I want, have
sex at any day i want, do anything i want. I
never felt so female in my
life and it was the first time since
childhood I knew what real quality of
life was.
I thank God I didn't have the bad
things other women that took this
injection did. For me was just good things.
I will never have a period
again even it I needed it to keep me alive.
It's not worth living the way I
was living when i had periods. Now I am
free. Now I know health and quality
of life. Now I am a real woman. And for
having kids. There are so many
things in life. I don't need to have
children to be a woman. And if someday
I want one I can always adopt.
What I tell to other women. If periods make
you feel sick don't give up
till you find a doctor that understands and
will help you. You don't have
to live like that, everybody has the right
to health, freedom and quality
of life. Everybody has the right to
happiness. I found mine, and so can
you. I don't regret my decision 10 years ago
one bit.
May 2013
"I have never been labeled 'nervous' or
'depressed' by a female clinician of any
sort in the Spanish health system."
I live in Spain, though I grew up in the
US. Would I stop menstruating if I could?
Most definitely. I started very young, at
just 11. Well it was "very young" then,
though I've heard since those days (1973)
that girls are starting as young as 9. In
that place at that time, it was unusual. The
pain was horrible. I literally ran a
low-grade fever for the first couple of
days, shivered uncontrollably and had
extremely heavy periods that lasted 10 days.
My mother, a mother of 10 who had married at
15 in 1944, told me it was "all part of
life" and was less than sympathetic. My
periods were irregular, and not until I went
to college and was able to go to the student
health centre on my own, did I find out that
low-dose contraceptives would help with the
pain and regulate my cycle. Then I moved to
Spain. That was 30 years ago, and more than
one doctor told me that the pain was "all in
my mind" and "there is nothing there to
hurt" and "if you have a baby all of
that will go away." I now understand
they thought I was bored and idle and needed
a child to take my mind off myself. Any
symptom they couldn't define quickly was put
down to "nerves" or "depression." These
doctors were of course male. Of late years
more and more medical professionals are
women, and they know what I'm talking about.
I have never been labeled "nervous" or
"depressed" by a female clinician of any
sort in the Spanish health system. I am now
50 and haven't had a period for about 6
months, and I am delighted. No more mess,
pain, smell or stains on clothing in spite
of wearing the heaviest protection
available. No more feeling self-conscious.
No more mouthfuls of bubbly saliva that make
me vomit if I don't spit them out quickly.
I'll take the occasional insomnia and hot
flashes, any day of the week. Charlie
horses? Bring them on. I'll deal with them.
But I am not the sort of woman whose
identity is defined by her reproductive
capacity.
You can't patch a hole with anger.
January 2013
From
Moscow, Russia: Yes and No
I would gladly stop this monthly hell if it
would be possible and safe enough.
Sadly now there are only little few options
left for people not wanting it, and all of
them have some counter-indications and quite
intrusive themselves. First you have to
attend a gynecologist, which is not quite
possible when you actually not even feel
female enough. And explaining this to
Russian doctors... And explaining why you
don't want it... Hard and psychologically
uncomfortable. (Continued
because of length.)
30, Moscow, Russia
December 2012
......................................................................................................................................
Yes. And "I would like to post a response
to the person [right below] who thinks
everyone should know when their period is
due, and that anyone who doesn't is
basically stupid":
"The other thing I find curious or even
amusing, is that so many women have 'no idea
when they will begin their period.''Do I
HATE it...again, not really. I mean...it is
part of being who I am. There are so many
different options out there for handling
"problem" periods...the problem is women
don't find it "important" enough to actually
pay for it or make lifestyle changes. As far
as surgery, if it is an elective...you will
have to pay for it. Seems to me to be a
small price for getting rid of something
that seems to be so absolutely horrible to
some of these women.The other thing I find
curious or even amusing, is that so many
women have "no idea when they will begin
their period". Speaking generally, most
women can chart their period from month to
month..say for a year. I did this when I was
trying to get pregnant and became so tuned
into my body that I can get within a day or
so of beginning and ending my period.
Oh...and a great way to stop the staining
(because you don't know when you start...)
would be to wear a panty liner a day or so
before you should begin. My bet would be
that most women don't pay attention to their
body unless it is screaming at them. Self
awareness, not to be confused with
selfishness, is a key!"
Not everyone has regular periods! With some
people it is impossible to work out when
they're due because they pretty much come
and go as they please. Mine were like that
from the age of 12 when I started, until I
started having provera injections in April
2011 (I am 22 now). I would sometimes get
two or three separate periods in a month,
and sometimes I would have one for the whole
month. Sometimes the gap between would be a
few days, sometimes a few weeks. I suffered
from heavy, agonisingly painful periods ever
since the first one, and when I got to my
late teens they were getting worse and
worse. I had literally all the symptoms of
endometriosis and the pill wasn't helping,
so they gave me a laparoscopy to see what
was wrong. Apparently everything was normal,
which was kind of frustrating because it
felt like they didn't realise how bad it
was, and since there was nothing to treat
they were just going to leave it. I went
back to my gp after my next horrific period,
and said I simply couldn't cope with it any
more; I was bleeding so badly that a tampon
and pad would leak after less than an hour,
making it impossible to go out anywhere
because of the lack of available toilets and
fear of leaking, and I couldn't sit down
without feeling like I'd been stabbed in the
vagina (pretty difficult for a wheelchair
user!) He suggested the depo injection,
which I accepted as a last resort,and thank
goodness it has worked! I haven't had a
period since my second injection which was
well over a year ago, and although I get the
odd twinge of stomach cramps sometimes, the
whole situation is 100% better.
I don't know what I'm going to do if I want
children in the future because I'm worried
that if I stop the depo to try and get
pregnant, the symptoms will come back, but I
suppose I'll cross that bridge when I come
to it. So in answer to the main
question,along with most other people on
this site, yes, I would stop my periods, and
for the moment, I have :)
Cornwall, UK
October 2012
......................................................................................................................................
No. ... [And] eventually I realized
that tampons were the cause of my never
ending yeast infections.
In a nutshell, no. However at age 53
now I think maybe they have stopped.
At least I haven't had one for 4 months
now. We shall see since I have never
been
particularly regular.
I guess I have been lucky in that my periods
didn't usually bring pain. I didn't
often get cramps. No breast tenderness
or bloating either. No food cravings,
irritability or mood swings. But in my
late 40's and 50's I did get migraines and
those were no fun. They would
sometimes start at the beginning of my
period.
And I did have heavy periods. Not in
the beginning. They got worse in my
30's so
no tampon was good enough. I had to
use pads as backup. And then
eventually I
realized that tampons were the cause of my
never ending yeast infections.
My 40's became worse still with not only
longer periods but super heavy ones as
well. Night time was the worst.
I would use two Overnight pads overlapping
and
then an assortment of smaller pads all over
my panties until they were almost
covered. Because I often sleep with my
feet elevated, the flow was shooting past
the pads and up my back. I couldn't
sleep well because I was always getting up
to
change pads. And I was sleeping on
underpads and still managing to get stains
everywhere. I had little washable
underpads that I would sit on when I
could. If I
didn't have those with me, then I might sit
on a stack of paper towels. And I
would
try not to sit on light colored surfaces.
I had to change my wardrobe. I could
no longer wear colored pants. It was
black
pants almost all the time and if I did wear
any other color it was dark brown or
navy blue. I never knew when my period
would arrive. I rarely had
symptoms. I
never knew when it would end.
My mom told me to have a hysterectomy.
That's what she did. And she is paying
for it now. Once you remove it, other
things shift around. Her bladder
did. She
needed surgery for that. Of course I
could see a hysterectomy if it is medically
warranted but I don't think mere heavy
bleeding would qualify.
I became anemic off and on. I
took low doses of iron to try to prevent
this. I
took Black Cohosh. It seemed to really
help! Or maybe it was just my
age. But the
periods eventually got lighter. They
got more normal as far as the amount of flow
coming out of me. But they were still
irregular and might last a while.
And then it would seem that they
stopped. Do I miss them?
No. Do I even think of them?
No. Not very often. Everything
seems pretty normal now. I never had
any other the problems that I was dreading
that are associated with menopause such as
hot flashes or weight gain.
But thing I won't do is start wearing the
white and pastel pants. I have noticed
that older women often gravitate towards
these colors. And why do I think this
is?
Because they can!
October 2012
......................................................................................................................................
"Now I have Mirena IUD, which I was
terrified of getting, but fortunately
the insertion pain was not even as bad as
the cramps I used to have, so it
seems worth it."
I can hardly wait till I no longer have
periods. I'm 43, never had children
and don't want to at this point.
It took half my life to get diagnosed with
Endometriosis,
Ovarian Cysts, & Uterine polyps despite
my telling EVERY doctor that I had
excruciating cramps and awful periods since
my teens.
The b/c pills I tried back then all made me
feel crazy and didn't do much
else for me..
So I just tried to deal till I had a
ruptured ovary cyst take me to the
hospital 5 years ago.
Finally I've had 2 operations for these
conditions, and had no more
periods while taking b/c pills for the last
2 years. [I highly recommend
this! It was great! If the pills can be
safely tolerated.]
Unfortunately, I had to go off them due to
high blood pressure and
interactions with other medications I have
to take..
Now I have Mirena IUD, which I was terrified
of getting, but fortunately
the insertion pain was not even as bad as
the cramps I used to have, so it
seems worth it.
Downside is that I am back to having periods
again, but at least now they
are much more tolerable, and they may go
away after a year.
That would be SO nice! To me these options
seemed better than a
hysterectomy, because usually people need
some type of Hormone Replacement
Therapy forever after that anyway. So, If I
can tolerate IUD till
menopause, I'll be SO glad that I'll have a
party to celebrate!! Thank you
for your informative and archival site, it's
very interesting and helpful.
October 2012
.....................................................................................................................................
"WHY do women get saddled with this crap
while men can la-dee-da their way through a
whole month?"
Y-E-S spells YES! I am sick of having to be
prepared for it, always on the lookout for
it, and then it comes and I get awful cramps
and moodiness. I am prone to leaks, so I
have to take extra time and effort into
making sure that It doesn't happen, or if it
does, I have to pray that I can clean off
the "evidence". Travel is a nightmare during
my period, trying to keep from leaking onto
motel or guest beds (that happened just
recently, and I bawled for over half an hour
out of embarrassment for having to leave a
red splotched sheet for the poor maid to
clean! just recently, I went to visit
family, unintentionally and inavoidably
during my period. I tried not to shift when
sitting or laying down and was in constant
fear of leaking onto something. I stayed
standing as often as possible, and one night
I had such heavy flow that I had to sit on
the guest toilet for several hours, feeling
absolutely miserable and angry. Now I am
trying to use Ibuprofen to control the flow,
but if that doesn't work I am going right to
my doctor. I do try to see the period as a
natural process, for I am interested in and
connected (I feel) with nature, but I fail
to understand how our evolution resulted in
the female human bleeding constantly for up
to a week every month. In fact, it's
surprising we're still here--surely the
blood was great advertising for hungry prey,
back when humans lived (and some still do)
in primitve rain forests, etc. Now I have a
job, and soon it will be time to deal with
my period while at work! :*( WHY do women
get saddled with this crap while men can
la-dee-da their way through a whole month?
October 1012
....................................................................................................................................
"I am so done with it, I can't wait to be
rid of it and I hate the fact I'm probably
looking at at least another ten years of
this torture."
I've been reading all the stories on your
website; for the most part enjoying the
black humor with which many women look at
the subject, and sympathising with those who
suffer too badly to find anything to laugh
at.
To add my voice, YES, I would get rid of it
in a heartbeat. I'm 41 and got my first
period aged 11. Until I was well into my
20's I suffered excruciating pain every
month, to a point where, if I was driving, I
would have to pull the car over and stop
until the pain passed as it was too bad to
concentrate on the road. These days the
actual pain is not so bad but now I get
headaches and migraines and an upset stomach
for the duration, and the bleeding goes on
for 2-3 weeks at a time. My doctor says this
is normal, though frankly I don't know how
she can say that without running any tests;
unfortunately I live in America and don't
have any medical insurance so more in depth
medical care is not available to me. I have
been suffering symptoms of menopause for
four years, including crippling hot flashes
which exhaust and overwhelm me, but the
process is not progressing and my doctor
informs me it's not uncommon for people my
age to suffer pre-menopausal conditions for
up to ten years. I've had the only child I'm
going to have so it's no use to me any more;
my fiancee won't come near me while I have
my period and since that, on a bad month,
can be 3 out of 4 weeks, our relationship is
not what you might call close. On a low
income I can only afford the cheapest pads
and tampons so I frequently have rashes and
skin problems in the most sensitive areas;
similarly while I am on hormonal birth
control it's the cheapest money can buy. It
stops me getting pregnant but it doesn't
have any of the other benefits good hormonal
birth control can provide and in fact has
some pretty awful side effects. I've tried
skipping the sugar pills to try and avoid
the period but it doesn't work on this
brand.
I have NEVER been one of these "embrace your
womanhood" people, I am sure I would feel
just as female without a period, maybe more
so as I wouldn't have to limit my activities
and mode of dress to accommodate the monthly
curse. I am so done with it, I can't wait to
be rid of it and I hate the fact I'm
probably looking at at least another ten
years of this torture.
Thanks for an interesting site, and for the
contributor stores which help me feel not so
alone :)
September 2012
....................................................................................................................................
"We don't live in a natural world
anymore."
I take birth control pills and skip most of
my periods by skipping the sugar pills. I
don't intend to have children and it seems
unhealthy to keep having periods when I have
no need to. If I changed my mind I could
easily just top taking birth control pills.
I feel that because women now experience so
many more periods than in pre birth control
days it may not even be healthy to keep
having periods. I have done this for several
years. I am 24. I don't enjoy anything a
period. No sex, inconvenience, I could never
remember to keep tampons handy. I don't need
a period to feel like a woman. And so I had
four periods a year. Unless I don't refill a
prescription in time and end up having to
take the sugar pills. From those who states
it's what natural keep this in mind. Women
of yore married young, had frequent
pregnancies and miscarriage and had far
fewer periods as we do today. That is what's
natural. We don't live in a natural world
anymore. Some technological advances have
changed the playing field.
Periods are icky gross and annoying. Sticky
stinky blood coming out of you against your
will? I can be a strong independent woman
without them, thanks.
September 2012
....................................................................................................................................
"I really enjoy my period." Not.
I really enjoy my period. The little
reminders left behind on the sheets, ruined
underwear, extra bathroom trips! My dogs
really appreciate it also. They just love
chewing on the plastic applicators.
September 2012
....................................................................................................................................
Yes, I would stop menstruating
I've never had major problems with my
period, but it is definitely a
pain. I usually have cramps for the first
few days, then am stressed
for the rest of the week. My periods are not
quite regular, so I
always have a week beforehand of stress
waiting to see if it's come
yet or not.
I know I'm just 18, and I suppose I might
want children someday, but
if the choices were between getting rid of
my period and having kids,
I'd definitely take the no periods. If I
ever really want a baby,
there's always adoption. Menstruating is a
messy, expensive business,
and natural or not, I'd really rather go
without.
(Also, quite unfair. Men really have nothing
to compare with it.)
18, Hawaii
August
2012
....................................................................................................................................
Those who say that menstruation should
"cherished," OBVIOUSLY have never had a
period problem in their life.
The answer for me is an emphatic YES YES
YES. I have suffered endometriosis
from my teens and have surgery for it.
I have the growths so severely that I would
loose too much blood to have all of them
removed. I also suffer from severe
pain, bloating, mood disorders, and
flatulence each month from my period.
I also suffer the "cramps" (feels more like
being stabbed) some report feeling when they
ovulate. My doctor confirmed I develop
large cysts during ovulation. (Confirmed by
ultra-sound.) My hormones are all
screwed up. I have to wear a Mirana as
it's the only method I found to control the
bleeding. (I get uncomfortable frequently
with that every once in awhile due to the
severe muscle contractions I get in my
uterus during my cycle.) I have bled
so badly, I have had to replace a mattress
set, unable to work because I couldn't get
out of bed, and have had a developed a
semi-lunar valve murmur during my periods
due to blood loss. In fact the
rip-roaring yeast infections that always
start right before my period and can't be
controlled with prescriptions are the least
of it. If this is a "natural,
beautiful, introspective" process, I think
I'll go with the artificial. I am
severely sick from my periods. This is
auto-immune and my body is destroying itself
because of a menstrual cycle. I knew
that motherhood was never an option for me
from my early teens due to how severe my
period problems were and I am completely
GREAT with that. Those who say that
menstruation should "cherished," OBVIOUSLY
have never had a period problem in their
life.
July 2012
.......
It's been utterly useless. [But] I've kept
it.
I've been looking forward to menopause,
just because I know I won't
have my period anymore. As a woman who has
no reproductive goals
whatsoever, my period has been nothing but a
nuisance for the last 34
years! Not to mention a huge expense! It's
been utterly useless. If a
hysterectomy wouldn't have interfered with
my natural hormone balance,
I'd gladly have had one done. However, in
this patriarchal society,
not enough is known about the female
reproductive system, and
hysterectomies are often done much too
radically. I would never trust
my body, particularly my uterus, to this
medical system, so I've kept
it, and my period, all these years. Someday
my menopause will come! :)
July
2012
....................................................................................................................................
NO
We cant stop menstration [sic] because it
is the work of nature
----------
Sent from my Nokia phone
June 2012
....................................................................................................................................
No. Not until my body comes to that point
naturally through menopause.
My maternal grandmother grew up in a
culture that obsessively hid any evidence of
a woman's reproductive stages, including
pregnancy.† While raising her own daughters,
she strongly avoided discussing any part of
the menstrual cycle, childbirth, menopause,
or other "women's topic" with them.† When my
mother began her period at 13, she thought
she had damaged her internal organs and was
bleeding to death.† It was a kind teacher
who explained to her what was going on and
what to do about it.† Neither my mother nor
my aunt have a "comfortable" relationship
with their reproductive cycles.† My mother
swore that the situation would be different
for any daughters she had.
†
Mama never hid the fact that she menstruated
from me.† She called it her "period,"
instead of using any scientific terms (which
she was unlikely to have been taught), never
acted as though it were a big deal, but did
say that she would be glad to get to
menopause, so she could be done with it.† I
knew where the pads were kept and how they
were used as early as age 6.†In fact, she
had to scold me once for taking one to
school to show my classmates on the
playground, because they didn't believe what
I'd told them...
†
I began menstruating at age 11. I have
migraines for 2-3 days at the beginning of
my period.†At first, I also had severely
irregular and heavy periods.† This lasted
until I was in my 30s, when I discovered
that I was allergic to the drugs given to
most commercially raised meat animals.†
Shifting to a vegetarian (not vegan and not
macrobiotic) diet resolved the irregularity
problem.† My periods have been on a 22-day
cycle for over 10 years now.† I still have
the migraines.† Those, I could get rid of
and happily never miss.† But I take it as a
sign that my body is ready for a rest and a
little pampering, so I slow down during my
period and indulge myself a†little.†My
husband shares the same philosophy,
especially as he is grateful that he doesn't
have to try to cope with wild mood swings
and irritability.† I differ from many of the
ladies who have posted here in that I don't
feel I am "getting in touch with my feminine
side," "connecting with womankind," or any
of the new age silliness.† I am not a white
light and unicorns kind of person.† Instead,
I am "recharging" my creativity and my
connection with the inner me, both of which
strongly enhance the other areas of my
life.† Also, the wait until the bleeding
stops seems to strengthen the desire between
me and my husband.† No loss there!
†
I have two daughters of my own.† They are
being raised with the same openness toward
information that will impact their bodies as
I was.† I don't call it a "period," because
that is for me a "common" way of expressing
it that doesn't really describe what's going
on.† I've always called it my "moon time."
One of my daughters is out on her own now,
and would gladly dispose of hers if she
could, because she was born with a birth
defect that damaged her reproductive system
when the surgery was done to preserve her
life.† Her periods are painful. I truly feel
for her with them.† She needs and deserves
pampering on those days.† My younger
daughter is not yet old enough to know
much.† But I am preparing her to take pride
in ALL the distinctions of womanhood.† She
sees the best and worst of it from her
sister and from me.† But she loves the days
when I am bleeding, because we cuddle up on
the bed and talk, read stories, nap, snack,
whatever we feel like doing.† My bedroom
becomes the Red Tent for those days, and is
a female-only sanctuary devoted to fostering
a sense of quiet, calm, serenity, and
creativity.†My husband only comes in when
he's bringing us something to snack on or
another video.
†
Menopause?†I have begun to show symptoms of
it, but only just.† I am planning a natural
menopause, using whole foods, herbs, and
yoga to make the transition easier and more
pleasant.† There is strength in knowledge,
I've always heard. My research and planning
for this phase of my life started years
ago.†I plan to handle this stage with an
attitude of peacefulness, also.
†
No. I would not give up the bleeding years.†
They have taught me too much about who I am
and how strong I can be.† They have taught
me to slow down and give myself time to
reflect.† They have given me opportunities
to become closer to my mother and my
daughters.† That's worth the discomfort and
the occasional mess.
†
Age 47 in Tennessee, USA
May 2012
....................................................................................................................................
So, based on the experience of NOT having
my period for 23 months straight, I would
definitely be happy if I could make it
cease.
Definitely!
I don't know the exact age I began
menstruating, but I think it was around
age 12 or 13. I am now 40. I had
pretty severe cramps in my teenage
years. The timing of my periods have
always been fairly regular, and the
flow has been light, with the duration
usually being about 1 week. I've
never recorded them on a calendar, as I have
not really been concerned
enough to do such a thing.
Occasionally menstruation has started while
being completely unprepared for it, but for
the most part, it tends to
notify me that it is there during my first
bathroom visit and wipe in the
morning. So, thankfully, not too many
messes. I had always just accepted
the fact that, as women, we have to endure
this every month. It is mostly
just an annoying inconvenience for me.
Kind of like when you cut the tip
of your index finger by mistake, and have to
modify some of the things you
do daily because you don't want to apply
pressure at the end of your index
finger until it has healed. I guess I
had never really given too much
thought to what life would be like without
menstruating until I became
pregnant at 37. Nine months without
menstruating was so wonderful!
(However, pregnancy introduces some unique
new physical challenges!) Then
on top of the nine months, your period
normally doesn't return while
breastfeeding. Another year passed
after my son was born, and still no
period. Yay! I had planned to
breastfeed long term, and was incredibly
disappointed when my period returned 14
months after giving birth, despite
the fact that I was still
breastfeeding. After a quick online
search, I
discovered that 14 months is the average
length of time for menstruation to
return for a woman who continues to
breastfeeding. I have to admit... I
immediately starting thinking about becoming
pregnant again! So, based on
the experience of NOT having my period for
23 months straight, I would
definitely be happy if I could make it
cease. And that is coming from
someone who doesn't really have any adverse
side-effects from it. I am
definitely going to read more on the vegan
diet!
April
2012
....................................................................................................................................
I like being in tune with my body.
I don't think so.
As I type this, I am holding my 2-week-old
daughter, my third child. I know
that I was able to have my precious
daughters because of my periods. I see
my period as a natural part of being a
woman, and was taught this. I have
never really felt a stigma or
"uncleanliness" associated with
menstruating.
I also know other women who are currently on
birth control, and haven't had
a period in over a year, and feel that it
isn't right. They are young and
want to feel that their body is doing what
its supposed to.
When I first started my periods at 11, they
were weird, and inconsistent. I
know I went through quite a few really
painful cycles in my teens, where
all I could do (when not at school) was lay
in bed with a heating bag on my
tummy or lower back, but by the time I was
17, my cycles had settled down.
I was able to accurately predict within 1-2
days when my next one would be
by the time I was in university, and only
missed that count a few times,
mostly due to stress and improper nutrition.
I also learned to predict my
ovulation based on body temperature and
other clues. I like being in tune
with my body.
I am currently 29, and don't plan on having
any more children. However, I
would not give up my period. I also don't
plan on using hormonal birth
control, as the times I used it between my
children, it messed up my
period, made it unpredictable, and didn't
actually prevent me getting
pregnant. I would much rather just deal with
it on a monthly basis they way
I did before getting pregnant the first
time, letting my body run its
natural course.
In response to those who say that its unfair
that we have monthly menses,
and many mammals don't - many larger mammals
only ovulate for a few short
days each year. We are able to get pregnant
12 times a year, instead of
only 1 or 2 times, and are also able to
control when/if we get pregnant. I
personally feel that this choice is worth
bleeding once a month.
*Sent from the west coast of Canada*
April
2012
....................................................................................................................................
I think it should be treated as normal and
not gross or unsanitary.
HI- I have been reading the different
articles on your website and I find them
fascinating. I am e-mailing in response to
if I would stop having periods if I could.
My answer is below.
I would definitely stop menstruating if I
could. I don't get periods much and when I
do they aren't very bad, so they're almost
pointless .I don't want children and I don't
see anything magical about birth, pregnancy,
or menstruating. That said I don't think it
should be looked at as a bad thing, and I
think, despite the discomfort some women
have and the drag it is, I think it should
be treated as normal and not gross or
unsanitary. Isn't this blood supposed to be
the cleanest thing that can come out of the
body, considering it is meant to feed a
baby? So I think it would be nice if people
didn't label menstrual blood as dirty. I
also think that people should use
menstruation and all that be the only source
of empowerment for women. Again, I'm not
saying it's bad, but frequently in women's
art, for example, it is through depictions
of periods or blood or birth or pregnancy
that women are depicted as strong. I think
there are other ways that women are strong
and it sometimes depresses me that this is
the only source of strength we are sometimes
labelled with.
17-year-old
Canadian
March 2012
....................................................................................................................................
Girls and women do most of the physical
work and
yet suffer this damn thing.
I have started my menstruation when I was
eleven and not even a year has
passed. I'm only twelve now. I know it's too
early to hate periods but I
hate it so much! It's so irritating! Damn! I
want to get the hell rid of it!
I wish I was a boy. I hate being a girl.
Plus my mother has so many rules
against roaming around here and there,
watching tv etc during periods. She
tells me to sit in one place. Hell, is this
a life? Sometimes, I feel like
killing myself. I'd rather die in hell than
get this awful yucky
menstruation. I always have heaby flow on
the first day and I keep counting
until my periods will be over. But how long
do I have to stay like this?
Years and years, hell that's too much! Do I
now have to wait until I'm 55 to
get rid of this awful thing. Why doesn't
modern science find out some ways
to kill this awful *** periods. Oh! I hate
the thought of having children
when I grow up! I don't want children for
whom I have to survive through
this pain all long. And why do girls
menstruate right from the age of 10 or
11. Does anyone marry at this time or what,
huh? Why doesn't period occur
when a girl turns to a women. Hell of a
period! Cannot the modern scientist
find out some way to help us women. What
does a man do, anyway that he has
to be compared to a god? Girls and women do
most of the physical work and
yet suffer this damn thing. Why doesn't men
understand our problem and
please, I request you to find out some ways
to stop this ***
February
2012
....................................................................................................................................
Yes Yes
Yes
Started my period at age 10, and I am
turning 50 this year, so it has been with me
for 40 years! 40 years of spending 1/4 of my
lifetime bleeding. For what? I was
diagnosed with PCOS some years ago, and have
had several bouts of tumor removal over the
years. I was never able to have children,
why do I need this to continue? I am
not ashamed of it, nor do I feel that it is
"dirty" in the sense of my doing something
evil or shameful, but it is surely a mess- I
get diarrhea for the whole 6 days, I should
buy stock in Advil since I need to use so
much of it, I soak through a super
tampon worn with a pad every 3 or 4 hours
for the first 2 days, I sleep on a
towel and hope that I can get through the
night without soaking through the sheets, I
casually drop my black jacket on my chair at
work in case I leak through, I get cramps
that make me consider yanking out my uterus
with pliers, I have a closet full of dark
colored pants and skirts and have not worn
white in years. When it starts now, it
almost makes me cry. Enough already!
Why can't modern science find a way to turn
off your periods and only restart them when
you are trying to get pregnant?
Most other female mammals are spared it, why
not humans? I don't see any
evolutionary advantage to it and if it is an
example of intelligent design, it is a
pretty mean spirited one. As a
teenager, mine were rather irregular, but
now they are usually right on time, regular
as clockwork-figures, doesn't it? I am
writing tonight because I thought of this
website when I started bleeding this
morning, at the airport on the way back from
a trip-I could almost hear it saying "Hi,
did you miss me? I didn't want you to go
home without me!, Now you get to sit in a
comfy airplane seat for 5 hours with
cramps!" Early last year I went
2 months without my friend and was hopeful,
but of course it came back. I have a
nightmare vision of being 80 years old,
toddling down the street in Florida with a
walker,wearing a purple hat and a huge
purse, and still having to buy ##$$@@
tampons!
I do like some of what I have been reading
on this website about women who embraced a
healthier lifestyle and saw changes for the
better concerning their periods.. I am
not sure that I am ready to become a vegan
but cutting out processed carbs, white
flour, and sweets, de-stressing, and
exercising more can't hurt and may
help. I hope that if I continue to
make these changes I may see some
improvement during these last years of my
cycle. I am in fact finding
myself craving healthier foods, I want to
eat fruit and vegetables and salad all the
time, and I have discovered that if I avoid
carbs and sweets I crave them less, so I
hope I can improve my overall health this
year in all ways. I am at the
age now where I don't really care what I
say, so I have told everyone I know that the
only thing I want for my birthday is my last
period! I don't hate being a
woman or hate my body, but enough is
enough.
Age 49.5, USA
Feb. 2012
...................................................................................................................................
YES.
I have endometriosis, and have been
crippled by my periods since day one. I am
now on birth control pills for the rest of
my bleeding career to be able to live a
normal life and not allow the diseased
tissue to spread even more.
The vast majority of mammals do NOT bleed as
part of their cycle, so why should I?
Absolutely pointless and not necessary to be
a fertile animal. How did it evolve that an
upright naked mammal was to bleed all down
the insides of her long legs for years on
end....?
January
2012
...................................................................................................................................
Read a long contribution
from a man (on another page to save space).
January 2012
...................................................................................................................................
Now I know it happens for a very good
reason.
I probably wouldn't want it to end. I want
to have kids when I'm older. It doesn't ruin
my life in any way.
[Later she wrote] I don't have any pains
from it. It doesn't affect my life in any
way. I wouldn't be able to have kids if it
stopped. I started in when I was 12 and
thought it was pointless. Now I know it
happens for a very good reason.
December
2011
...................................................................................................................................
Yes.
I’m only 13 but i sure would as long as I'd
still be able to have kids when i was older?
i get dizzy and faint and before and after
my periods i get a brown discharge, which
warns me when I’m going to get my period.
It is sooooooo annoying and all the blood
goes to back where my bum is when im
sleeping ANNOYING much??
December
2011
...................................................................................................................................
Read 2 long
contributions from the same person (on
another page to save space).
December 2011
...................................................................................................................................
Why not have a time, monthly, that is
devoted to slowing down and turning
inward and comfort and warmth and just
being?
For most of my life I hardly menstruated at
all. Three-four times a year,
mainly brownish spotting. I always felt that
this indicated that hormonally
I was not quite normal sexually speaking.
Throughout my 20s I never
conceived (with first husband, who later
easily got another woman pregnant,
so obviously it wasn't him) and then with my
second husband I suddenly
became fertile and had four children in a
decade (my 30s). After my last
child was born I had an IUD put in. With that
my periods absolutely
vanished. Nothing. Which I always felt uneasy
about -- what was it doing to
my body?? It gave me some trouble the last
year and was near the end of its
life expectancy anyway, so I had it taken out
and since then have had
frequent periods (<28 days) and actually
*bleed* now, bright red blood.
This is something really new and different for
me -- and wonderful. Every
time it happens, I keep finding myself with
this sort of smug pleased
feeling that my body is finally working the
way it's supposed to. At 45 and
not yet mentally ready to be a crone, it makes
me feel like, "Oh. Yes, I AM
still young." Not ready to give that up.
There's also a romantic aspect to it, an
animal primality that I find
compelling, and associated with that is my
interest in cultivating a more
simple, natural lifestyle that acknowledges
human life as optimally alive
when in harmony with the earth and its cycles.
Why *not* have a red tent? [Women still
use menstrual
huts
around the world.]
Why not have a time, monthly, that is devoted
to slowing down and turning
inward and comfort and warmth and just being?
Having spent my life
bombarded by the relentlessly scheduled
structure of our society, it sounds
lovely. Makes me wonder, how might women
experience their periods
differently if they did that, if they were
supported in doing that, if we
as a society treated it as a special,
life-affirming thing?
November
2011
...................................................................................................................................
In
response to your question about whether I
would want to stop
menstruation,
I wholeheartedly answer YES. [The
writer is 57 and British]
It's disgusting, humiliating and DEGRADING.
And it causes severe physical
and mental pain and discomfort. I reckon
that's more than sufficient reason.
At age 17 I went on the pill which did help a
bit, but not much. Eventually
my gynaecologist put me on a pill called
Cerazette about 6 years ago. This
pill is truly amazing as it STOPS all
menstruation completely! It does take
a couple of months before it actually works,
but I can recommend it to all
my fellow sufferers.
However, the fact that I had to wait almost 35
years before a gynaecologist
came up with a real solution just goes to show
that researchers, doctors and
gynaecologists don't take the menstruation
problem seriously. My
gynaecologist could have put me on Cerazette
immediately after it was put on
the market (I believe it came on the market in
2000) instead of waiting 5
years, even though I had been begging her to
help me for decades.
Cerazette is one of those pills that you take
continuously without a week's
break. It also seems to eliminate
perimenopausal symptoms as I have none of
these whatever. Either that or I haven't
entered the perimenopause yet :-).
And yes, I'm still taking it. My gynaecologist
suggested I stop as she
thought I might have arrived at menopause, but
I'm not taking ANY risks as
far as that sort of thing is concerned.
I just wish this wonderful pill had been
available when I started
menstruating, so I could have avoided all
those years of hideous suffering.
November
2011
...................................................................................................................................
"I now take low dose birth control pills
continuously
and must only have a period about every 4
months. It surprises me how few
people know about this method and how
apparently underused it is.
Hi! Great site - I'm on it to research for a
paper and I ran across this
forum, which perplexed me. You can easily stop
your period by a far less
drastic and nonsurgical method than the ones
suggested by the commenters.
I and several people I now take low dose birth
control pills continuously
and must only have a period about every 4
months. It surprises me how few
people know about this method and how
apparently underused it is. My
period was pretty mild, but I just didn't like
bothering with it. Hope
other people find this useful!
Best, ******
November
2011
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"Of course I would!"
If I had the option of removing my period all
together, I would.
I'm 19 at the moment and I am had it with my
period. I started when I was 12
I'm sick of the monthly pains, the staining of
the sheets and clothing, the
hassle of finding a toilet to change pads when
I am out, disposing of them
in the most secrete way I can and still being
found out what I'm disposing
of. Then there's the running out of pads and
the humilation of buying them
at the store, my mum telling my dad when I'm
'on it', the mood swings and
then there's the awful heavy flow I get on the
first 3 days which drives me
crazy.
I'm seriously fed up!
October 2011
...................................................................................................................................
"I am delighted to be a woman. And
menstruation is part of that. . . . I live
in the Midwest, USA, where menstruation is
never discussed."
I love my period. It's a periodic check that
my body is functioning
properly (or not). My first cycle came when I
was 10 years old. It was
regular as clockwork for over a decade -except
during pregnancy. I had
my period while breastfeeding, although not as
often. After my third
live birth, my husband gifted me with a
vasectomy. It's the only birth
control that actually worked for me. The time
between periods shortened
as I hit my 30's. Soon, I was beginning my
cycle every 17-19 days. At
39, I had an endometrial ablation to stop
excessive bleeding. I also
received 2 units of whole blood. Thank you,
anonymous donors.
I'm one of the few who still have full periods
after ablation, although
they usually only last 4 days. It's like being
a teenager again!
I'm sure to many this sounds like a horror
story, but it's not. I am
delighted to be a woman. And menstruation is
part of that. Menopause
will catch me eventually, and I guess that's
part of being a woman too,
but now for a while yet. Women in my family
hit menopause around 60. I
am 42. And I live in the Midwest, USA, where
menstruation is never
discussed. [People
who visited MUM
in my house sometimes told me it was
the first time they had discussed
menstruation with anyone, like their fellow
visitors.]
October 2011
...................................................................................................................................
I've been using a menstrual cup . . . .
I'm 46 now, I began when I was 11, I don't
have children and I never wanted
to, but I can't see a reason for me to stop,
since periods never gave me any
problem. Actually I find it a sort of
reassuring periodic check. I'm quite
on the take it easy side, and a spot on my
underwear won't ruin my day.
Last summer I had a nasty rush on my inner
upper thighs (heat - sweat -
trekking and pads!), since then I've been
using a menstrual
cup, (too lazy
to change my routine before..) and now I can't
even talk about mild
nuisance.
September
2011
..................................................................................................................................
Oh YES I
would
I would DEFINITELY stop my menstruation if I
could. Right now, in fact. I'm
only 18 but I'm already looking into methods
to do so when I save enough
money. I can't WAIT. Originally I wanted to
get a ovariohysterectomy, but
after reading through all the risks and
dangers and significantly decreased
life expectancy, I've had to search for other
options. Currently tubal
litigation seems to be the most viable option.
I have absolutely no desire to have kids - for
one thing, I value my
personal freedom too much. For another, it's
exceedingly improbable that
I'll ever have a partner, and I definitely
don't think I should be allowed
to bring up a child all by myself. Should all
the aforementioned factors
change, I could still adopt. Menstruation
brings nothing but pain and
frustration for me - first mood swings, then
debilitating pain, and then the
sheer discomfort of bleeding all over the
place without being able to
control it. Not to mention the psychological
discomfort - I'd rather not
have a monthly reminder of my female body. I'm
definitely not male either,
though, so I can't speed up the process by
having myself be certified as
transgender.
So yes, if my fairy godmother appeared right
now to grant me three wishes,
getting rid of this thrice-damned menstruation
cycle would definitely be one
of them.
September
2011
...................................................................................................................................
Oh, yeah!
When I was about 40, my periods got really
heavy, and I became anemic. My doctor put me
on birth control pills (I had one child, at
21) and my periods stopped; if any doctor had
suggested that I stop the pill I would have
laughed in his/her face. At age 49 or
50, I stopped the pills to see what would
happen and found that I had hit menopause.
Yay!!
Evolution hasn't kept up with civilization. In
the 21st century,we certainly don't need to be
fertile every month.
Sent from my iPad
September
2011
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OMG YES I
WOULD.
I know I’m only 18, but ever since I first got
mine around 15 or so, I’ve hated it with a
passion. I don’t have kids, I don’t really
want kids (maybe that’s just because I’m 18..)
But there’s got to be a permanent way for
getting rid of the monthly horror! I have
cramps,irritability, the works...nothing seems
to help, no amount of ibuprofen works for even
an hour for me. And I can’t get my tubes
tied..no doctor will even think of doing it. I
think periods should be optional. I don’t want
to have to wait until I’m like 50 or until I
have a kid for my body to say “Ok! I’m done!”
Periods are just a huge irritation.
September
2011
..................................................................................................................................
"Damn Right I would"
I have just finished my 438th period.
Any sane individual at this point in her life
would plead, beg, whimper, and fall to her
knees in prayer if it would mean finally
putting a stop to having to endure another
monthly horror show. I have been flirting with
the idea of taking bcp's continuously as a
means of stopping my period, but at the last
moment would ditch the plan for fear of all
the potential side effects. At this
point I can almost say I don't even care about
getting cancer or a life threatening blood
clot if I could just stop having a
period. That's how bad it's
gotten. It sounds so dramatic but all
the moments, days, weeks, years of going
through the endless debilitating side effects
of menstruation has pushed my drama levels to
exceeding heights! Also, it's such a
huge part of women's lives but it hardly is
talked about or reflected back in art,
television, newspapers, magazines, etc.
It's like the purple elephant in the
room. No one talks about it so nothing
really bad is going on........
I have tried the 'natural' approach;
acupuncture, supplements, diet, meditation,
positive thinking, you name it. But the
bottom line is having my period is
debilitating and wreaks havoc on my life. What
bothers me most is how desempowering it is for
me - producing & creating anything long
lasting seems impossible as just when I get
focused, energized, and creative, the next
horror shower is there and pulls me under yet
again.
48
Devon, England
August 2011
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"[M]enopause was THE BEST thing that ever
happened to me!"
When I was younger and still menstruating,
although I HATED the pain,
bloating, diarrhea, and, most of all, the MESS
of getting periods, I feared
and dreaded the prospect of someday going
through menopause because I
thought it would make me instantly
"old." Still, if someone had offered me
a safe way to stop menstruating without
"getting old," as I saw it, my
answer would have been Sign me up right now! I
began menstruating at 10, and although it
wasn't the biggest deal in the world, I always
hated the
mess and discomfort. Never found anything to
enjoy about it.
I went through menopause in my early 50's, and
to my surprise, I DIDN'T at all feel like I
had suddenly gotten "old" - in fact, in some
ways, it turned
out that menopause was THE BEST thing that
ever happened to me! At the beginning,
when my periods were getting irregular and
more infrequent, I remember that there were a
handful of times when I was sure I'd finished
for good ñ and I was EXTREMELY resentful and
angry when that turned out not to be the
case. When I finally knew the whole
thing was over and done with (i.e., I hadn't
gotten a period in well over a year, maybe
even closer to two years), I was elated.
I'm 59 now, a life-long New Yorker, and I
don't miss it at all!
August 2011
...................................................................................................................................
Reply to
earlier comments down the page
"The other thing I find curious or even
amusing, is that so many women have 'no idea
when they will begin their period'. Speaking
generally, most women can chart their period
from month to month..say for a year. I did
this when I was trying to get pregnant and
became so tuned into my body that I can get
within a day or so of beginning and ending
my period."
Well, bully for you. I have been
menstruating for 35+ years, and I would say
that the first 20 years were predictable and
uneventful. The last 15 years have been
hell. Every 24 days? 35 days? Sure,
whatever! Two periods in one month is the
ultimate cruelty. Just when you think
it's normal, its not. Yes, I have kept a
calendar, for years...a calendar of TORTURE.
August
2011
...................................................................................................................................
"The many problems mentioned on your
website are a direct result of a woman
taught to hate that aspect of her self,
including poor nutrition and decreased
exercise."
Good afternoon,
Menstruation is a gift given to women that
patriarchal societies have turned women
against. As a little girl growing up,
I was taught that having my period was
dirty. I dreaded having periods once
upon a time. What's more, I wished I
was a man because I was taught that women
were a disgrace to God.
My perception of Self was shaped by family,
community, research on female anatomy
conducted by prejudiced males, research
conducted by male psychologists, religion
and even other women whose perceptions of
Self had been altered. This perception
of course caused me to resent that aspect of
Self that is empowering, spiritually
powerful and natural. Furthermore, my
periods at the time were painful and
uncomfortable. They also lasted four
or more days. My menstrual flow was
heavy and it smelled. It's amazing
what the Mind creates, not just in our
thinking, but how it affects our body
physically. Mind, body and spirit,
it's all connected.
Women, in patriarchal societies, were taught
to disconnect body from mind and
spirit. The many problems mentioned on
your website are a direct result of a woman
taught to hate that aspect of her self,
including poor nutrition and decreased
exercise. It's true that nutrition and
exercise impacts quality and duration of a
womanís menstrual flow. I know this
from personal experience. With good
nutrition, exercise and a healthy state of
Mind toward life and Self, my periods are
only 2 to 3 days long. My periods do
not smell. I only have a heavy flow
the first day I start. The cramps have
significantly decreased.
I have learned over the years that
menstruating is a time of receiving
spiritual medicine. This is when a
woman is in her greatest power.
Perhaps this is the reason why women were
taught periods are dirty and unwomanly,
because a woman in her power is a time when
she is closest to God. It's a time
when she is most spiritual. Why?
Her womb is expelling the old to prepare for
the new. It is always keeping the
uterus healthy for a new life. This is
on a physical level. On a mental level
she is being challenged to throw out
thinking that does not serve her well so
that she can embrace the state of Mind that
will serve her well In return, a
healthy Mind produces a healthy fetus.
She is also challenged to exist on a
physical plane or to become connected to her
spiritual Self. Menstruation is a time
to realign body with Mind and Spirit;
bringing the three in harmony so that she
can produce a strong and healthy
child. What is wrong with that?
Nothing.
The blood tells the woman the state of
health she is in, not just
physically, but mentally, emotionally and
spiritually. If she is having a bad
experience it's a time for her to re-examine
her overall health. It's a time when
she is able to decide what course of action
to take. For example, blood that
smells could be a sign that she is consuming
too much sugar, refined carbohydrates,
refined fats or that her body is too
acidic. A heavy flow could indicate
lack of exercise, poor nutrition, stress,
obesity, diabetes or perhaps it could be a
medical condition needing professional
care. Pain and cramps can indicate
stress, caffeine, smoking, excess sugar
consumption.
It is time woman know their truth, one
that has not been altered by illusion. It is
time she knows her truth so that she can
help other woman come to know their
truths. Menstruation is not what it
seems for many. That is
illusion.
There is a resurgence of truth that is
resurfacing about women and their cycles;
one that will help women to love them Self,
womanhood and menstruation. Woman will
once again feel empowered instead of
disempowered, like so many feel now.
She will once again love her divine Self,
being a woman. And her experiences
with periods will once again become
positive.
Aho.
Respectfully,
I love being a woman and I love the fact
that I bleed once a month
P.S. A healthy vagina does not
smell.
August
2011
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"When I
had a traumatic brain injury the cycle
became shorter. . . . When menopause hit
I was never so happy."
The day my older sister's explained to me
that I would soon be getting my period I
vividly recall telling them I would get rid
of as quick as possible. Just 6 months from
that talk I started my cycle. At 10.5. I
hated it then, I hated it till the very last
day. It was always reliable. I could count
on it coming very 21 days.Ý When I had a
traumatic brain injury the cycle became
shorter.Ý Because I didn't have children I
had my cycle most of adult life. When
menopause hit I was never so happy. Other
then the hot flashes. I am greatful to get
rid of the bother.
Looking back now since I didn't have
children, I had my cycle longer then any of
my sisters.
July 2011
"The other thing I find curious or even
amusing, is that so many women have 'no idea when they will
begin their period.'"
I am quite entertained by some of your
respondent's regarding their monthly cycle.
It is what it is! Do I LIKE it...not really.
Do I LOVE it...no.
Do I HATE it...again, not really. I
mean...it is part of being who I am.There
are so many different options out there for
handling "problem" periods...the problem is
women don't find it "important" enough to
actually pay for it or make lifestyle
changes. As far as surgery, if it is an
elective...you will have to pay for it.
Seems to me to be a small price for getting
rid of something that seems to be so
absolutely horrible to some of these women.
I am 47 and have never had my own
biological children. Would I have liked to
be rid of my period when I realized I would
never have my own children? Yes! Did I want
it bad enough to pull the money out of my
pocket for it...no!
The other thing I find curious or even
amusing, is that so many women have "no idea
when they will begin their period". Speaking
generally, most women can chart their period
from month to month..say for a year. I did
this when I was trying to get pregnant and
became so tuned into my body that I can get
within a day or so of beginning and ending
my period.
Oh...and a great way to stop the staining
(because you don't know when you start...)
would be to wear a panty liner a day or so
before you should begin. My bet would be
that most women don't pay attention to their
body unless it is screaming at them. Self
awareness, not to be confused with
selfishness, is a key!
Thanks for your time and ear...
April 2011
"To all of the women and girls who said
that menstruation was unnecessary/obsolete:
you may have been right!!"
Hi Harry! This is a contribution to the
"would you stop menstruating if you could?"
And also, thank you very much for making the
awesome site, too!!
To all of the women and girls who said that
menstruation was unnecessary/obsolete: you
may have been right!!
But I'm not talking about using birth
control or getting surgery; I mean NATURALLY
women may not have to bleed at all!
You see, I was reading about vegetarianism
and how that type of diet affected the
menstrual cycle, because I just became a
vegetarian a few weeks ago. So I found this
site where a lady, her name is Debbie Took,
went into a lot of theories on how
menstruation may be normal, but NOT healthy.
Because when people switch over to eating a
vegan (which is a bit different from
vegetarianism btw) diet their menstruation
may either get really light... or totally
stop, and never come back! Now, a lot of
people may think that absent menstruation is
really unhealthy, and that the person must
not be getting enough nutrients in their
diet. But the lady's article explains why
the opposite may be true! Here's the link to
the article, and I'll post some quotes from
the article below:
http://debbietookrawforlife.blogspot.com/2009/04/periods-they-may-be-normal-but-are-they.html.
Before I read her article, I would have
said NO, no way did I want to stop
menstruating! Because I like to bleed and
use my awesome menstrual cups and cloth
pads!! But after reading the article, I've
decided that I like my body being healthy
more than I like bleeding, so...my answer
now is yes, if it meant that my body was in
good health, then YES I wouldn't mind if I
stopped menstruating.
Ok, Here's some quotes!
In the 21st century 'developed' world, the
women most likely to report light or
'absent' periods are so often the
healthiest. They're often athletes - women
at the peak of physical fitness. And/or
they're women who have at least eschewed the
disease-causing substances listed above and
following diets high in raw plant foods.
They may eat voraciously, but they eat
healthily.
In general, the less healthy women are, the
better the diet (in terms of eating refined
foods; she explains that in the article
too), the more they are likely to be plagued
by heavy periods. Studies have shown that
overweight women tend to have heavier
periods.
'Little bleeding', 'no observed flow',
'tablespoon of blood', 'half a day mucous
flow' - doesn't seem to make sense, does it,
when we've been led to understand that the
'womb lining' has to be shed each month.
But, many women in developed countries
following healthy diets/lifestyles, some
indigenous women, and gorillas, don't seem
to be shedding any womb lining, but are
still having babies! Why is that many, if
not most, women in developed countries do
appear to shed a lot of gunge along with the
blood, but the most natural-living women
don't appear to?
One theory, (and this is backed to some
extent by scientific observations of
monkeys), is that the womb lining can,
instead of being shed, be reabsorbed by the
body when not needed as a bed for the
fertilised egg.
'If the endometrial tissues are not needed
- in a truly healthy woman, as in animals in
their wild state, those tissues are mostly
reabsorbed. What remains is expelled over a
short period of time as a slight mucus
discharge.' (Dr H G Beiler)
So - could it be that the womb lining that
the average woman has built up contains
toxic substances due to things ingested
(like refined foods) and the body is saying
'No way - don't want that reabsorbed thank
you!' and chooses instead to dump it?
Viktoras Kulvinskas in 'Survival in the
21st Century' reports the case of a woman
treated by Dr G S White, who changed her
diet to vegan. '[She] flowed bright blood
five or six days of each month [and] had
such severe cramps that she could not hold
her position as stenographer. [He treated
her for six months, after which her]periods
changed to half a day mucous flow with no
blood at all. She was able to resume her
work and did so for two or three years. She
married and has had three daughters. Each of
them had a mucous flow for about half a day
each month and are in perfect health. One is
married and had a healthy baby girl.'
'Menstruation (bleeding) is NOT a necessity
following ovulation...We have been
conditioned to believe that menstruation
goes hand in hand with ovulation...Most
women, including myself, experience
menstruation because they are not truly
clean on the inside...Menstruation is the
body's desperate attempt to free itself from
toxins, and many females experience PMS in
addition to the needless bleeding. Abdominal
pain (cramping), headaches, fatigue and
irritability do NOT signify an optimal state
of health, yet most of us brush these
symptoms off as the norm. If you feel such
symptoms, this is how your body is
communicating that it wants you to change
what you are doing; we must listen to
Nature's messages...Presently, on a mainly
raw diet, I do not even realize that I am
menstruating until I feel moist and decide
to take a peek'.
From a 16yr old living in Georgia, U.S.A.
(I'm orginally from New Jersey though!)
April 2011
"[M]enstruation meant saying good bye to
freedom" - and what's this about whistling?
If I had been asked the question before I
hit menopause, the answer would have been a
resounding Yes! After nearly 4 decades of
menstrual problems, I didn't have any
problems with menopause, which I felt was a
case of "Justice at last" I SO do not miss
menstruation.
I began menstruating at 12, which I felt
was way too young. (I know some women begin
even earlier and they have my deepest
sympathies.) There were two reasons for
this: the memory of potty training was still
reasonably fresh, I had achieved a control
over bladder and bowels and menstruation
felt like that control had been ripped away.
The second reason was that menstruation
meant saying good bye to freedom, women
definitely had a lot more restrictions
placed on them back then than men did.
I was most interested to read that many of
the other women who have had problems with
menstruation mentioned diarrhoea. I always
got what I thought of as "period diarrhoea"
but no one ever mentions it.
The cycles of the moon story never cut it
for me, as I tended, if left to my own
devices, to have a 3 week cycle, of which
about 10 days were spent bleeding. In
reality, you have a lot more chance of
getting in touch of your feminine side
during ovulation. I don't see anything
"feminine" or "girly" about the bleeding. I
think of "feminine" as clean and
sweet-smelling. Oozing blood isn't clean,
it's messy, I don't think we are going to
see menstrual blood scented products on the
market any time soon and period diarrhoea
has its own particular stench.
As a teenager, my belly would swell a dress
size with menstruation, when the period
started it was not unusual for me to lose
consciousness (did that one time on a school
trip, going down marble stairs). On
occasions, the pain was such that I would
chew my blankets to stop crying out. No one
needs to be tortured. The worst part was
knowing that the same torture was coming
next month. Once the first couple of days
were over, it still felt as if I had been
kicked in the guts.
If someone found that urinating was agony,
or lifting their arms, or chewing or
whatever, then the medical profession would
admit that they had a problem. When it comes
to menstrual pain, especially in teenagers,
it's not seen as a problem. The doctors
warble on about possible risks to future
fertility if they try to treat the problem
with something effective (I already knew I
didnít want to have children) and even trot
out the "Once youíve had a baby, the
menstrual problems will go away" line.
Again, as other women who've described their
experiences here demonstrate, this is
egregious bullshit. When I was a teenager,
there was a story doing the rounds that
Catholic and Jewish women were more prone to
dysmenorrhoea than Protestant women because
they were trained by their religions to feel
more guilt. My Protestant friends assured me
this was bullshit.
I would see the female reproductive system
as possible evidence of "intelligent
design", or rather, "dumb as dogshit
design", as it is hard to imagine how a
system that works so badly for so many women
could survive evolutionary selection. The
fact that people look after each other when
they are unwell - and menstruation can make
you feel exceedingly unwell, may explain how
the system got past the selection test.
[An interesting side note here: youíve
probably heard that "breastfeeding stops you
getting pregnant" and also met women who
fell pregnant whilst breastfeeding. That
breastfeeding stopped pregnancy used to be
true, about 15,000 years ago, before humans
took to basing their diet on grains. I have
wondered if a diet without grains would
reduce menstrual problems.]
If I could redesign humans, I would make
menstruation optional, unless you were
specifically trying to fall pregnant, in
which case it does have a point. I would
also get rid of underarm hair, pubic hair,
facial hair and underarm sweat, I'd build in
immunity to colds and 'flu and I'd make whistling
impossible [yer MUM hates that nervous,
barely audible whistling]!
52 year old
North Queensland, Australia
March 2011
"I just have to wear a pad and pray it
doesn't leak."
Yes, perhaps. If I was able to control it,
like urination, I wouldn't mind it at all -
the pain sucks, of course, but I can handle
it. But I hate the feeling I get that I'm
not at all in control of what happens down
there. I just have to wear a pad and pray it
doesn't leak...I'm not young or ancient
enough to have incontinence problems! I am
not sexually active, nor do I plan on having
children, so I don't use my period as a
pregnancy test. I'm glad when my medications
get switched around a lot and causes my
period to skip or be very light.
I think I would miss it if it went away for
a long while though.
Memories, you know?
- A girl from California.
March 2011
End periods forever
I started my cycle when I was 11. I will
turn 42 in March. I have had enough. I do
not have kid and do not plan on having any.
I had my tube tied almost two years ago so
there would be no accidents. If there were a
way that I could get rid of my periods
without surgery, I would take it without
hesitation. I have been trying to find a way
to permanently end them without having to
take the pill for a couple of years. All
they are is a bother to me. I can never plan
spontaneous sex with my significant other
because I am never sure when old mother
nature is going to show up. Now he works out
of town and I cannot plan on when to go
visit him because I never know when it is
going to occur. I hate my periods. If they
were going to serve me a purpose I could see
them continuing but I am not going to
reproduce so why continue in the monthly
disgusting body function that God gave us.
We should be able to say when we want it to
stop. It is our body. We should have the
right to chose if we want to end our
menstruation just like we have choice of
right to life. Doctors and insurance should
not have a say so.
**** *****
February 2011
YES! Sign me up NOW!
Yes!! Please!!! I was on Depo for about 11
years and after so much nagging from every
doctor that Depo is not healthy to use for
so long and I'd have osteoporosis, etc I
finally stopped using Depo 3 years ago, got
my tubes tied and MEA. I have no interest in
having children and even the thought of
being pregnant is my worst nightmare and
absolutely disgusting to me. I'd rather have
tapeworm! So OK, I got the whole
contraceptive thing out of the way, but I
still get a period and I hate it! This is so
primitive! Birds have the right idea; lay an
egg and wait till it hatches to a baby bird.
Better yet, bury the eggs like a turtle. If
this were a man's issue, there would have
been a better solution ages ago! But no,
there are too many feminist women that feel
empowered and more 'womanly' or something
because they have a period. Right now, I
know I should start my period today or
tomorrow. Tomorrow I have a race to run.
Would my period interfere with my run? You
bet it would, just like it will interfere
with everything else in life. If you look at
the math, you get your period once a month
for 5-7 days. So you spend nearly a quarter
of your life from your teen age years until
you're in your 50s with this misery.
Somebody fix this please! It's just not
right!!
~*****
CO, USA
February 2011
Yes. "I think for me the reason I don't
like having a period is...the mess."
I am working on my Masters in Women's
Health, but I still hate having a period
every month. I find it very interesting to
read people's responses. I have to write a
response to a discussion question that asks
us to contrast and compare modern day views
on coming of age and a girl's transition
into womanhood...including menstruation to
those in Biblical times. I found a site that
spoke of how the transition into womanhood
(in the Bible) was a time of celebration and
the women did not have to do there regular
duties of cooking, serving, etc. The rested
and relaxed for the days they were on their
period. I think that I wouldn't mind my
period so much if it were like that
nowadays! hahaha. However, I think for me
the reason I don't like having a period
is...the mess. I don't have a long period,
but it is heavy for the 1st two days. I feel
so dirty, yucky and stinky. I think that I
would still feel that way no matter how many
showers I took during that time of the
month. I don't feel girly or anything
pleasant when I feel that gross. Others may
think that I am not proud to be a woman or
some other granola crap, but it is not true.
I am proud to be a woman! I don't think a
period or female organs define ones
femininity. It is all about attitude!
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion
because that is what it is...an
opinion...not fact. I did say "I", which
means that is how "I" feel and I don't
expect everyone to agree with me and I'm not
pushing my opinion on anyone.
Texas, USA
January 2011
Yes. "I don't need to be unhappy,
unhealthy and in pain to prove my
womanhood."
I'm 45 and have had my period since I was
11 years old. I have had cramps, diarrhea,
moodiness (to the point of annoying even
myself), headaches, backaches, iron
shortages, tiredness and a laundry list of
symptoms the entire time. I have had doctors
prescribe heavy drugs that knock me out and
make it impossible to function. I have had
other doctors tell me there was no such
thing as PMS. I have had a few doctors who
have helped, so it was not all bad on the
doctor front, but unfortunately too many
doctors all together for a problem only some
of them think is real. I past any age of
wanting more children and am more than ready
for the periods to end. However my mother
and grandmother both had the cycles well
into their 60's, so no hope for an early
end!
People have included how proud they are to
have periods to prove they are women. I
believe I would still be a woman if the
menstruation stopped. I don't need to be
unhappy, unhealthy and in pain to prove my
womanhood. Every woman is different and I am
happy (and jealous) of the women who do not
have any the of extreme problems that
afflict others. But those of us who have had
problems should be able (if ever possible,
please!!!) to put an end to a very unhappy
situation.
January 2011
Yes! "Enough already"
Hell yes. We need a once a year pill that
allows you one cycle a year--you take it,
you predictably get one cycle, lasting no
more than 3 days, and you're done for
another year, with no weight gain/loss, loss
of sexual desire, effect on future fertility
or increased risk of malignancy.
It would be a blockbuster drug. Someone's
gotta come up with it.
Enough already in Los Angeles
January 2011
"No, absolutely not."
Oh dear. No, absolutely not. (Unless my
current circumstances changed and I started
having such heavy periods that were a threat
to my life.)
It makes me really sad to read some of the
comments from women who say they hate their
uterus, that must be really heart-breaking
to feel that way about one's own body. There
are lots of diseases (cultural and physical
based) that can provoke people to start
hating parts or all of their bodies, and it
always makes me sad to hear about people
suffering that way. I know some people think
that the whole "connection to the earth and
moon" is much too new-agey fru-fru for them
as a rationale for keeping the menstrual
cycle, and I certainly don't think that
women that don't menstruate (for whatever
reason) are less than fully WOMEN, but I
definitely like to connection to myself that
my cycle gives me. A lot of the time I lose
track of time, the passage of days and
weeks, in the chaos of everything I'm trying
to remember to do, but I like that my body
keeps right on progressing with it's
functions without my conscious thought
needed-- my lungs breathe, my heart beats,
my uterus sheds it's lining monthly. All is
in working order! And, as a sexually active
adult female, it's always nice to have a
check in to let me know I'm not unexpectedly
pregnant...!
I have found my own ways of managing and
handling the blood and occasional cramps
(raw kombucha, moon cups and fabric pads,
here I come baby!) that work for me, so I
would never want to give up my menstrual
flow artificially. Maybe if they didn't
work, I would feel differently. I'm sure the
onset of menopause will produce it's own
issues! But hopefully once it's over, I
won't be fertile anymore and won't have to
worry that a lack of blood is an indication
that I might be pregnant.
It's worth mentioning however, that for the
girls and women who have already commented
while in their teens that they absolutely
HATE their cycles, that the first several
years of menstruation can be the most
chaotic-- onset of menarche doesn't actually
mean that all of the bodily organs are FULLY
mature, it'd be more accurate to say that
the body is gearing up and kicking into high
speed. It still needs time to adjust which
can actually take several years, into the
mid-twenties, before one's cycle becomes
more regular, and some women find they get
lighter cycles as they mature also. So it's
worth considering that their experiences may
change as they get older.
Also, I sincerely hope that no one
considering how much they dislike their
monthly cycle, thinks that a hysterectomy to
actually remove the 'offending' organ is a
simple matter -- it isn't, and, there can be
life-long consequences that have nothing to
do with bearing children. (Believe me, this
isn't coming from a woman that thinks that
childbearing is god's gift to women to make
them feel whole-- I don't really like kids
very much, never intend to have any of my
own, my own body being impregnated creeps me
the hell out.) Some women have reported a
loss of sexual pleasure after their uterus
was removed, in part probably because the
sexual and reproductive systems are quite
complicated and interconnected. Personally,
I KNOW that losing my uterus would be
devistating to me, because I quite enjoy
deep penetration at times during intercourse
as well as the heightened intensity of
orgasm that I often achieve while on my
monthly flow. I would be very sad to lose
those.
Lastly, just to the commentor that talked
about the sewage problem related to the
disposal of so-called "sanitary products,"
specifically, "...the tampon applicators,
not to mention pads and wrappers that get
flushed. These products break our equipment,
clog pumps and dull the teeth of the
grinders." That's a totally legitimate-- and
also inexcusable, problem, that isn't caused
so much by menstruation as it is by women
flushing things that were never intended to
be flushed! Most applicators shouldn't be
flushed, unless they're cardboard (in which
case the lady or gentleman commentor would
know more than I as to whether even the
cardboard ones cause problems), and
certainly not pads or wrappers. That's
just... ridiculous. Read the directions
people.
Oh and, for the record, I'm 26 years old
and from the US. (And I'm a Gender &
Sexuality Studies major at University, if
that lends any credence to my claims on
scientific facts, since I don't have the
names of the studies on hand to quote from
directly.)
January 2011
Yes. "I'd be over the moon!"
Absolutely I would!! I have two children
and only ever wanted two. All my period does
is make a huge mess and prevent me from
making love or going swimming. It lasts for
at least 8 days and has precisely no good
function.
What a waste of good iron! If I could stop
having them from now until I die I'd be over
the moon!
****, Surrey, England
December 2010
From the Czech Republic: Yes. "I'm 18
and really have had enough."
Hello!
Yes, I would absolutely like to stop
menstruating forever. I started my period
when I was just 10 years old, at the moment
I'm 18 and really have had enough. I can
imagine a life without: fear that I get my
period unexpectedly, ladies sanitary aids
and not forgetting to change them, loads of
painkillers, general physical discomfort
resulting from it (like bloating or
digestive problems) etc. And infertility
wouldn't be an issue to me - I also never
want to have kids; if I wanted, I would
adopt, because all the pregnancy and giving
birth frightens me too much.
That is just my point of view.
A girl from the Czech Republic.
October 2010
"No, I am proud of my period."
Hi Harry - I love the MUM website, it's got
so much information about the history of
menstruation - thank you for keeping it
going!
I want to add my voice to the long ongoing
debate of "would you stop menstruating if
you could?":
No, I am proud of my period. It's been a
part of my life for 13 years, and I wouldn't
want to part with it now. It's helped to
shape my self-esteem, my identity, and who I
am. Menstruation is a mixed blessing for me,
I can't change it so I like to focus on the
good things about it. I don't like the pain
but it is manageable now at the age of 23 (I
used to get very bad pain sometimes as a
teenager). The pain has made me a stronger
person. Menstruation makes me feel more
connected to other women & prouder of
being a woman. Menstruation has brought me
closer to my mother, and makes me feel more
connected to her & my sister. I also
like the blood, I find it fascinating (to
me, blood and the colour red symbolize
women). The blood tells me about my body,
and menstruation makes me feel more
connected to my body. I see my period is a
welcome excuse for me to take time out,
watch television during the day and nurture
myself.
Thank you ;)
****** (Auckland, New Zealand).
No
Hello!
No, I don¥t want to miss my period. It
makes me feel healthy and powerfull.
**********, 38, Berlin, Germany
October 2010
"Hell Yes!"
So you ask, "Would you stop menstruating
indefinitely - for years, maybe?"
My answer would be a resounding "Hell Yes!"
I have never in all of my 31 years been able
to justify why I personally should be
subjected to such a monthly ordeal. I have
known since I was 13 that I would NEVER
breed or bring another life into this world
and have taken such measures to
accomplishing that. I've been looking into
the option of getting a hysterectomy since I
was about 27 and naturally I was told that
surely I wouldn't want such a procedure
because what if I wanted kids in the future.
I think this is the most ridiculous
argument. Do they discourage people who need
amputations with similar arguments? Surely
those people would like to continue walking
in the future. Frankly, I think by denying
young women the option to stop menstruation
by surgical means is nothing short of
typical misogynistic medical oppression. It
is a complete disregard of what a woman
wants for her own body.
And as for those delusional women who think
that bleeding every month defines them as a
woman, take note: you are so much more than
your genitals.
--
*"Killing for peace is like fucking for
virginity."*
October 2010
No!
HI
thanks for a very informative guide. I
always enjoy my periods, and always look
forward to it coming. As you said, I feel so
girlish and feminin.my boyfriend loves me
more during these times. [Actually I didn't
say that but many contributers to this page
have said similar things.]
October 2010
No. "It makes me feel so feminine and
girly."
No, I would not. Yes I've always had a
heavy flow in which I would bleed through
SUPER tampon in about 15 mins. Even my first
period was very heavy...etc but no I would
not stop menstruating if I could. I say this
because for whatever reason, my period is
kind of like my own sweet little secret. It
makes me feel so feminine and girly. It's
special and intimate and nobody knows except
for me.
August 2010
"Right now I'd say HELL YEAH NO MORE
PERIODS, because I'm menstruating at the
moment and it sucks. . . . I still wish I
was a guy sometimes."
I like reading all the different answers to
this question. I suppose I'm in the middle
as to how much this monthly business affects
me physically and emotionally. Right now I'd
say HELL YEAH NO MORE PERIODS, because I'm
menstruating at the moment and it sucks. I
began when I was 11, and had some pretty
painful periods right from the start.
Throughout high school they weren't so bad,
because I was very physically active: I had
to walk everywhere and was forced to go to
gym class five days a week. Now that is more
of a challenge for me because I work at home
and I could sit in a chair all day if I
wanted to. Over the last four or five years
I was moving to different houses and
changing jobs like dirty laundry, and my
periods became more and more painful, to the
point where I'd be writhing around on the
bathroom floor at 3 am, screaming for my
mom. When I met my boyfriend, who I'm living
with now, my cycle became perfectly regular
for the first time in my
life. It's still painful, but for much less
time than before. I guess if I've learned
anything from all of this it's how
complicated your body is, and how much it's
affected by your environment, your daily
routine, the people around you, illness,
even the weather (humidity=big bloating)
Two months ago I stopped drinking coffee
and alcohol and decided to make a lot of
changes in my diet, so hopefully that will
help even more. These experiments are kind
of interesting, to see how quickly or
gradually I respond to a change, but I never
wanted to think about my period so much. I
still wish I was a guy sometimes.
---Age 27, USA
"I managed to find a Dr. who finally rid
me of my uterus & one ovary at my age
of 32.....he said I had blood clots 'from
nipples to knees'! I praise God every day
for that man!"
I started my period a few months shy of my
13th birthday. Every single month, I would
be felled by cramps, nausea, hot & cold
flashes, and constant diarrhea. At 15, my
Dr. wanted to put me on birth control pills-
this was the early 1960s!
I married in 1965 & was on the pill for
4 yrs. until we started our
family.....stopped nursing at 6 weeks so I
could get back on The Pill...($2.50/month at
the time!) Anyway....we had another child 30
months later; my husband had a vasectomy, so
I was back to my 'normal cycle'. Same old
symptoms.....only worse!
I had to Dr.-shop to find someone who would
perform a hysterectomy....I would bleed thru
two tampons, two pads, and a beach towel
between my legs on the first two days of my
period, post-childbirth. I managed to find a
Dr. who finally rid me of my uterus &
one ovary at my age of 32.....he said I had
blood clots 'from nipples to knees'! I
praise God every day for that man!
Anyway.....about 50, with one active ovary,
I went on Premarin for hot flashes &
insomnia....did that for about 10 yrs., then
gave it up. I am now symptom-free, travel
light (no pads, tampons, or anything else!),
and am very happy grandmother of 4 lovely
grandbabies! My sympathies with those who've
experienced what I have....and I have total
respect for those who are not going thru
what I have.
All the best-
August 2010
Yes. "I have the best of both worlds - I
still get the energy and sexiness that
comes with a woman's natural hormonal
cycle, but with none of the swelling and
pain and shedding that is due to the build
up and release of the lining."
Heck yes I would stop and I finally found a
way that wasn't unnatural!
Since getting a Mirena IUD for birth
control, I have stopped menstruating at the
age of 38, and I am thrilled. I used to have
awful cramps, vomiting, diarrhea, and mood
swings. Now I feel good all the time - no
pain, no depression, no weird distractions
of cramps and clots. It is wonderful, and
with none of the emotional side effects of
the Pill which were very extreme.
The Mirena doesn't interfere with my
natural cycle, or pump hormones all through
my body, it just releases a tiny amount of
hormone right into the uturus, and this
thins the lining so it is almost gone. So I
have the best of both worlds - I still get
the energy and sexiness that comes with a
woman's natural hormonal cycle, but with
none of the swelling and pain and shedding
that is due to the build up and release of
the lining. I feel so powerful and LUCKY
that I discovered this early enough to enjoy
it! I recommend it to anyone. On the
commercials they say that only women who
have had a child should consider it, but I
have never been pregnant at all and it fit
just fine.
August 2010
Yes. "I will not be using my uterus
again and see no reason to keep it."
Yes, at this point most definitely. I am 37
and a mother of 4. I started at 11.
Through out most of my life, it hasn't
really been an issue. Just a normal
biological function that happened on a
monthly basis. After an emergency c-section
with child # 4, my periods have become
painful & heavier. Also, in the past
couple of years I've begun experiencing
severe depression lasting around 10 days
that coincides with it. So - if given the
option I would love to have a hysterectomy
and simply get it over with. I will not be
using my uterus again and see no reason to
keep it. Not that uterus removal would be
likely to take care of the hormone issues
that are causing the depression, but hell,
at least life would be less messy. Just to
be clear though, it's not about shame. I
don't despise being female or having a
vagina. I'm not angry about it. It's served
it purpose, acquired some damage the last
time around and should be properly put to
rest.
****, Maine
July 2010
"Never Ever Ever!"
In answer to that question: Never Ever
Ever!
I get one or two days during my period that
completely disable me, but I still love it.
People think I'm crazy, but women in
industrialized countries are taught to hate
our periods, to hide them, to feel ashamed,
which is why people respond so negatively to
anyone who respects menstruation. Sexism is
part of the motivation for the negative
views, as in, "men don't have this 'nasty'
'horrible' 'smelly problem' every
month".think about it! What's so shameful
about a body indicating fertility? There are
so many products that are aimed at hiding
menstruation-but this is unnecessary-a tool
for feminine hygiene companies to make more
money. Try reusable cloth pads or cups or
sponges-these aren't bad for you or the
environment. I get it-it's really really
hard to see where I'm coming from if you
answered "no" to the question, and for you
sisters who have periods that are so painful
they merit medical attention, I understand
your situation is different. For everybody
else, all you have to do is try, try
thinking positive after all the pain about
what it all means-it will change your entire
outlook!
I'm ****, I'm 20 and I'm from Wisconsin,
and I love this site!
July 2010
"NO"
I haven't had menstrual problems like very,
very strong pains or fainting, but it hasn't
been easy for me too. But, although I don't
love the fact that I have the bleeding, it
doesn't only remind me of the fact that I'm
a female (and that's a fact that I DO like),
but it's also very natural. If God has
created us like this, why should we try to
stop it? I know how it is to feel sick or
how it is when you've been caught having
menstruations at SCHOOL. But I still
wouldn't give this up. I must sound crazy,
but I've learned to live in peace with my
body (and I understand that that's not
actually a very easy goal when you're in
great pain). The fact that you have
menstruations can mean (most of the cases,
anyway) that you're only healthy and
everythings alright with you.
So, my answer, in one word - NO.
And thank you for this website.
July 2010
"I already have. . . . I think I would
rather die a thousand agonizing deaths
than to have to have those periods again."
Your site is so interesting! Here's a story
for your "Would you stop menstruation if you
could?" page. :) Sorry if it's too long.
Feel free to summarize or take out excerpts
if you still want it.
I already have.
I started my period when I was 12 and, from
the beginning, I had very heavy periods.
They were so bad that I refused to go to
school on my heaviest days; I would stay
home in bed and cry. After I got a little
older, my mom got me an appointment with a
gynecologist to see if I could get some
help. The first visit he just prescribed me
some Naproxen for cramps. I went back later
and tried to more fully explain what the
deal was: it was the cramps, it was the
bleeding. So this time, he put me on
Seasonique birth control.
The idea of only having a period every
three months made so happy I almost cried. I
was delighted. Unfortunately, after being on
Seasonique for a while, I started having
very heavy breakthrough. I was afraid it
would be something I would have to deal with
forever. It interfered with my life so much
that I became depressed for a while and was
prescribed Prozac. I remember coming home
from school one day, having dealt with the
heavy bleeding all day, and sitting in the
bathroom and just screaming my head off. At
that point I was beyond crying.
It had gotten to the point where it was
like I was having a period, every day. After
a few weeks of that I went back to the
doctor and he put me on a different birth
control, and told me to skip the placebos
and take the active pills continually to
supress my period. I liked that idea, but
after a while it stopped working, and so the
doctor schedule a laparoscopy to see what
was wrong with me.
I was terrified at first, but the
experience wasn't too unpleasant. The doctor
did the laparoscopy as well as a DNC, and he
burned off the excess endometrial tissue he
found. He also removed a few small polyps.
My appendix had endometriosis on it, so he
just removed the whole thing.
I woke up from the surgery feeling pretty
good. I had almost no pain post-surgery. The
worst part was, when I went to the bathroom
at the hospital, finding out the doctor had
put a tampon in me. Having never worn
tampons I didn't realize what the cord
hanging out of me was until the nurse looked
at it. I nearly had a panic attack; I think
I thought my intestines were falling out or
something. I've always hated tampons.
Anyway, after the surgery I did very well
for a while. My doctor never fully explained
that I had a condition called endometriosis.
He just told me that he burned off the
tissue; I didn't know it was a disease. My
mom explained to me what it was. Eventually
the heavy breakthrough came back, and I got
put on a different birth control, and
another. I had to try a few before I found
one that worked for me.
Now I'm on Ovcon 50. It's a very high
dosage, very few pharmacies carry it, and
there's no generic for the 50mg dosage, so
it's very expensive. However, it works, and
that makes me extremely happy. I skip the
placebos, so I no longer have a period. My
friends tell me how I lucky I am that I
don't have to have a period. I don't think
they fully understand what I went through,
but I know that I am lucky for endometriosis
to be the only health problem I have. It
could have been a lot worse.
At the time I wished I could have just had
a hysterectomy, but I was too young and it
was too extreme a solution for my problem.
Right now I'm glad to just have birth
control and no more period. I think I would
rather die a thousand agonizing deaths than
to have to have those periods again.
July 2010
"I believe the close affinity with the
moon it is not a mere coincidence."
No, I would not stop menstruation
artificially. To me, menstruation means an
opportunity to remember periodically that I
am a fertile woman and that my body is
available and gives me the opportunity to
receive a new life.
The inconveniences of menstruation
(discomfort, unpleasant feelings, uterus
pain) are an invitation to slow my pace of
activity and work, to pay attention to the
changes in my body, to take some extra time
for myself. Bleeding periodically can be a
natural gentle regeneration at biological
and energetic level. I think menstruation is
also surrounded by magic. I believe the
close affinity with the moon it is not a
mere coincidence. I usually have my period
in crescent moon and I found out that I was
born and that my children were born or
conceived with a crescent moon. The
physiology of ovulation is part of the
mystery. Girls are born with hundreds of
thousands of ovules. Many of them will
disappear, about four hundred will wake up
15, 30, even 50 years later to produce
ovulation and just a few of them will
generate a new life. It is also amazing that
the signal to ovulate comes from the
hypothalamus, which is also the central unit
of emotions. When a woman has anomalous
periods, she may have emotional or
psychological aspects which require
attention.
In addition, for some cultures, like the
indigenous people from Australia, menstrual
blood is used in medecine.
My name is ***, I am 40, and I am from
Spain.
She later added:
There is a recent documentary dealing with
menstruation that probably you already know:
"The moon inside you,"
from Diana Favianova. It can be viewed on
line here.
www.cultureunplugged.com/play/2369
June 2010
"The blood loss is so great that I have
to have blood transfusions continuously.
So, HELL YEAH. I would stop it without a
doubt."
I am 16 years old and begun my periods on
my 12th birthday. The most painful day in my
life without a doubt. I have the worst
period pains known to mankind (well maybe
not the MAN-kind) as well as the fact that I
have anaemia and faint at least 4 times in
the 5 days that I have my period. The blood
loss is so great that I have to have blood
transfusions continuously. So, HELL YEAH. I
would stop it without a doubt. No second
thoughts, nothing. I don't care about the
fact that I can't have children, although I
am young to be saying this, I already have
knows for years that I would rather adopt in
the future.
June 2010
"No" from Chile
Would you stop menstruating if you could?
(¿Dejarías de menstruar si pudieras? No,
aunque muchas mujeres piensen lo contrario.
Me agrada el misterio que hay en la
menstruación, porque es la esencia de la
femeneidad, representa totalmente el hecho
de ser mujer, porque no le ocurre de ninguna
manera al hombre.
Además es una indicadora del funcionamiento
de mi cuerpo. Tengo resistencia a la
insulina, una enfermedad crónica similar a
la diabetes tipo 2 aunque menos grave, y uno
de sus síntomas es precisamente tener ciclos
irregulares.
Mis ciclos nunca han sido regulares. Esperé
los dos años después de mi primera
menstruación (que fue a los 12 años y 7
meses), sin embargo seguía tan irregular
como en los primeros ciclos. A los 17 años
fui por primera vez a un ginecólogo debido a
mi irregularidad. Mis ovarios no poseen
quistes, según reveló la ecografía. Lo que
me hace irregular es el alto nivel de azúcar
en la sangre que tenía antes de comenzar mi
tratamiento.
Felizmente ahora me he vuelto más regular.
Es un proceso lento. Antes mis ciclos
variaban en su duración de 25 a 48 días;
ahora duran entre 31 y 38, lo cual es un
gran avance, en los tres años que llevo como
insulinoresistente diagnosticada.
Sí, tengo algunas molestias cuando
menstrúo, pero se solucionan con paracetamol
para mujeres. Nada grave. Sólo es
desagradable la sensación de estar manchada,
aunque nunca he visto la temida mancha roja
en mi ropa. Por cierto, gracias al sitio
Mum.org que me atreví a probar los tampones.
Son cómodos y bastante seguros, aunque al
principio es difícil acostumbrarse, ya que
al ser virgen como yo el tamaño de la vagina
es diferente.
Una vez mi mamá los probó y según ella fue
un desastre, se manchó entera y nunca más
quiso usarlos. Incluso guardó un tampón (era
Tampax), sin embargo, lamentablemente lo
botó a la basura hace algunos años. Si
hubiera sabido de la existencia de este
sitio lo habría conservado y enviado.
Aquí en Chile no todas las mujeres usan
tampones. Le expliqué de esto a una amiga, y
me dijo que ella jamás los usaría. Creo que
es por la gran cantidad de católicos que hay
aquí (yo no soy católica), y son bastantes
conservadores en este aspecto. La
menstruación generalmente es un tema tabú,
al igual que el sexo.
Muchas gracias por el espacio de expresión,
*****, 20 años, Chile
June 2010
"I'd surprisingly have to say no!"
I'd surprisingly have to say no! I've only
had my period for about two and a half
years, I'm currently 15 and I got it at 12.
I used to HATE it SO much, but now I feel
better once I get it if you know what I
mean. Like, before my period I feel all
bloaty and gross when I'm pmsing, but it
feels great to finally be done with that. I
think the main reason's because I used to
get very heavy periods when I was 12 and 13,
and some of the time when I was 14, but now
their not so bad, if anything on the lighter
side.
Plus, my cramps have also gotten much
better since my first. Womanhood's not so
horrible after all!
P.S. I love your website Harry, keep it up!
I actually found it when I was looking for
first period stories, since I love reading
them.
June 2010
"I know is a contradiction, but I am a
contradiction, and that's why I can not
make up my mind regarding this."
By one hand it would be a relief as my
period is not allowing me to keep going with
the normal course of my life. By the other
hand I think there is a kind of sacred thing
in our blood. It is also well-known that we,
women, get a really good cleanse while we
have our periods and that I feel well when
the period is over. So, if I don't have my
period anymore how I am going to enjoy that
moment of being free of pain? I know is a
contradiction, but I am a contradiction, and
that's why I can not make up my mind
regarding this.
****, 35, Belgium
April 1020
"Maybe, if I took the right attitude
about it, my periods would put me in touch
more with my feminine side, but I'm one of
those girls who really should have been
born a guy."
I'm 17 and have very irregular periods,
sometimes bleeding for a month straight, but
sometimes going for three or four months
without a drop of blood showing. The
unpredictability makes my life, uh,
interesting, but at least the flow is light
and I don't have severe cramps or noticeable
mood swings. So, while periods are an
inconvenience, they're nothing I can't put
up with.
Maybe, if I took the right attitude about
it, my periods would put me in touch more
with my feminine side, but I'm one of those
girls who really should have been born a
guy. Not to say I'm lesbian or anything,
just missed out on the Y chromosome.
April 2010
"I have a few family members and friends
that have had hysterectomies and oh how I
envy them so."
Do we even need to ask this question????Ý I
would stop it in a minute, given that there
are no ill effects as has been stated by
others.Ý I have fibroid tumors and the
extreme pain and excessive bleeding wreak
havoc for me.Ý I usually plan my life around
that "week".Ý
I started menstruatingÝ at age 13 and it
was the worst experience ever.Ý I remember
thinking after the first two times it
occurred, "Whew, I survived and I'm glad
it's over", then my mother reminded me that
this event will happen every 28 days for the
next 30-40 years of my life.Ý I was
devastated!Ý It took me over a year to get
used to the changes, but it's still not my
friend!Ý I have a few family members and
friends that have had hysterectomies and oh
how I envy them so.
Chicago
37 years old
April 2010
"hmm... not sure I'd stop it all
together"
I know periods are definitely a pain, but
I'm not sure I'd stop them all together. I'd
have to question what effect it would have
on my overall biological functioning. If
there were no negative side effects
associated with it, I think I might consider
it, but still, not sure I'd do it.
I'm almost 23 years old, and have been
having periods since age 12. On the one
hand, periods are painful. When I was on
birth control (which I started using at 19
years old), it wasn't so bad, but now that
I'm not on birth control anymore they're so
much more painful. My whole lower back hurts
pretty bad, and I'll randomly get dizzy or
hot. I don't want kids (literally, ever), so
do I really have a need for a monthly
period? On the other hand though, I do like
the monthly assurance that I'm not pregnant.
I know I could easily get a pregnancy test,
but having a period is free. I'm a student,
money is tight sometimes.
I don't think having a period is beautiful
and it definitely doesn't make me feel more
connected to other women or nature, but I
don't hate my uterus either (or my periods,
for me they're just not that serious). I
wouldn't say having a period is symbolic of
womanhood as post-menopausal women are still
women.
I'm on the fence about what I'd do in this
situation. My biggest concern is what effect
removing a process from my body all
together. I'd wonder what effect it would
have on my immune system (which works in
sync with the menstrual cycle) and other
processes in my body. If it was safe to do,
I just don't know if I'd actually do it.
~ Undecided student
April 2010
"YES i want to stop my period!!!
"I'm 18 years old and i started my period
at the age of 10. i was diagnosed with
endometriosis at 17 and was told that i need
a hysterectomy. after years of suffering and
STILL suffering im ready for it to stop. i
hate being on hormones it only does my body
more harm than good. i have horrible
cramps,heavy bleeding,lower back pain and
swelling, painful urination and diarrhea. my
endo is and will only get worse with every
period and bleeding i have. im in college
and i want to have fun. i cant have fun when
im literally being frozen(cant move one inch
without being in pain) while on my period.
absoubly no pain killers,birth control
pills,iud,shots,etc work. im fed up with
periods. why cant men have them? lol
April 2010
"Messy and inconvenient, but not so
much as to take measures such as
medications or devices that may topple
my decent hormonal balance."
Yes-----hesitantly.
My last child almost killed me (through the
birth process), and I had a necessary tubal
ligation in my mid 30s to prevent further
pregnancies. At 43 years old, my periods
have always been irregular, so it is always
a surprise when Aunt Fannie comes to visit
again, usually after 25-45 days.
Messy and inconvenient, but not so much as
to take measures such as medications or
devices that may topple my decent hormonal
balance.
And I suppose when the big M begins, it
will be the stigma of becoming an old lady.
So, I will put up with a bit of mess, and be
thankful I have modern hygiene products and
facilities at hand.
"You can not do all the good the world
needs, but the world needs all the good you
can do." -Anon.
-- registered nurse from Oregon, U.S.A.
April 2010
"I guess if there were no side
effects and it wasn't from something
hormonal, cause that can fuck your body
up if you're unlucky, I would choose
*not* to bleed every month."
Hi Harry
Very interesting comments here!
Not too sure where to start. I guess every
woman's interaction and reflection of her
period and all that goes with it is a very
personal account based on her individual
situation, heaviness, methods of handling
the blood that drips/flows/pours out of her
vagina as often as it does.
So for me, I don't have painful periods,
not too long, usually fairly regular and I
have always plugged them up (with
non-applicator tampons), I really hate pads
for the dripping/leaking and plastic-y/nappy
wearing feeling - and have just used a diva
cup that my sister gave me a while back, but
I put off using. It was ok as I was able to
forget about it for longer (it holds more
than a tampon), and I didn't need to
remember to carry more tampons (as I often
get my period first thing in the morning,
while still half asleep and I forget about
it until later when it's time to change
it...) but - it isn't as easy to use - I'm
really worried I'll drop it in the toilet or
drop blood all over the floor getting it
out!
Interesting to see how much blood comes
out, I've thought about next time collecting
it into a cup hahThe consistency of the
fluid is interesting.
I don't really care about the mess any
more. I have had a lot of really healthy
relationships - mostly with women, but also
with men that don't mind the bleeding blood.
Specially when dating lesbians, if you want
to have sex and you're cycles aren't synced
you're going to end up painting the town red
more than once. Can be quite fun if you're
arty! (and comfortable!)
Anyway....
I guess if there were no side effects and
it wasn't from something hormonal, cause
that can fuck your body up if you're
unlucky, I would choose *not* to bleed every
month.
Like the other contributor who made the
comment about if we didn't get periods, and
then someone asked you if you wanted to
bleed every month, have some cramps, have
hormonal changes, perhaps headaches, food
cravings and feel generally shitty - we'd
probably turn down the offer, right?!
BUT I do *not* hate my period - it can be a
good time to bond with other vaginas, and
all get a bit more TLC than normally.
I'm more worried about the "hot flushes"
that my mum and grandma have been talking
about more recently. Eikk!
http://www.mum.org/pastgerm.htm#anchor1442058
The retired teacher that wrote about her
family herstory is amazing! Such an asset, I
hope that she has been put in touch with
other historians to pick her collective
memories for these stories of 150 plus years
ago! Wow.
Cheers,
***** - from Australia, living in China
(late 20s)
April 2010
"I don't need to bleed once a month
(or in my case, at this point in my
life, every two weeks) to prove or feel
like a true woman."
I'm a 44 year old Canadian who has been
peri-menopausal now for nine years. My body
has recently "kicked it up a notch" and,
gathering from what my mother and
grandmother have told me, I'm now going
through the last stages and likely will stop
altogether and reach menopause before I hit
50.
All I can say is, thank God for that!
If I could have ended my period long ago I
would have. I don't need to bleed once a
month (or in my case, at this point in my
life, every two weeks) to prove or feel like
a true woman. I already know I am. I have
the womanly bits to prove it and there's no
question about it genetically either! (Let's
just say that I have more than my share of
womanly gifts in other areas, because
genetics is awesome that way, and leave it
at that.)
I started getting my period when I was
exactly twelve and a half years old. When I
got it, and I did before most of my friends,
they were all jealous and I got a lot of
congratulations, which was fine. I was never
"taught" to hate my period or hate this
aspect of my femininity, but I have lived in
a private hell when it came to my monthly
cycle right from the get-go. My mother
didn't understand. Her periods were regular,
PMS-free, pain free and did its thing and
ended. No problem. For me about a week or so
before my period would start, I would feel
cranky and short tempered, would get severe
lower back aches, headaches and, while
extremely regular (I could tell you what day
and what time of day I would start), it came
with 10 days of cramps so bad I saw stars,
migraines, vomiting, excessive flow and
sometimes fainting. I'd miss at least three
days of school each month because of the
pain and sickness, and eventually I would be
on painkillers so strong, I was too stoned
to make any sense of anything. After three
days life became more tolerable, but I still
had bad cramps, still was pale as the
walking undead and tired from the whole
ordeal.
I have had tests upon tests done on my
reproductive system since my doctors, male
and female, were concerned I had some sort
of problem that caused such a nasty
experience and execessive flow, but even
today, all my tests have come up normal. I
eventually had to accept the fact that I'm
one of those lucky women (and I mean that
with every ounce of sarcasm I can muster -
and that's a considerable amount, trust me)
who have what I lovingly call "the periods
from hell".
And to make it just that much more a stab
in the heart (which I would have much
preferred), I found out in my mid-20's I was
unable to carry a child to full term and
often would miscarry just before or around
the first trimester (one manged to make it
to nearly four months - the first one I
lost). As I said it once, "The little guys
take, but when they get to the size of a
pea, the little sailors jump ship and that's
an experience I would never wish on anyone!"
I long accepted that I was unable to have
children and didn't feel it necessary or
desireable after a certain point to have any
of my own. So, I didn't consider fertility
treatments. Anyway, my problem wasn't that I
couldn't concieve...that I could do easily
enough. My problem was, I was unable to
carry a child to full term...and no one knew
why or even how they could effectively fix
the problem without driving me insane. Or
causing me further trauma or pain.
Once I accepted that, I firmly wanted my
periods to stop. Nothing at the time was
available to me that I could use to make
them stop (that didn't involve surgery or
removing bits of my anatomy - which no
doctor will do even now when I emphatically
tell them I want it done because the whole
aparatus is not ever going to be used for
the purpose it was developed). Because of
other health problems unrelated to
reproduction, most of those methods are
still unavailable to me (or don't work to
stop my periods, just make them a teensy bit
lighter - but eventually these would even
stop working).
Then I started peri-menopause. That just
made everything worse. Now I never know when
my period is going to start, how long it
will be, or even how heavy and bad it will
be. It's gotten so disgusting to clean up
the nasty messes. I have to wear double or
triple the amount of pads (three pads at the
same time have me now referring to the whole
get up as my "lady diaper") and right now
have a cupboard stuffed with them to get me
through the next few months (hopefully) and
always go nuts picking up boxes of pads when
they go on sale (tampons turned out to be
unuseable for me - they actually make my
cramps worse and I'd still have to wear a
pad anyway).
So yeah, I'd love to make it stop, right
now. No more expense, no more mess, no more
pain, no more mood swings, no more any of
it. The good news is, by the time I finally
stop, most of my friends my age will just be
getting started.
For those women who love getting their
period and think it makes them more
feminine, connects them to other women,
reminds them of their fertility (which was
totally ironic for me), etc. well, I'm glad
they can feel that way and pat them on the
back for it, but those of us who hate having
our periods and would stop it in its tracks
if we could shouldn't be considered less of
a woman, or be judged has hating our bodies
and hating ourselves or women in general. As
other's have said, this is my body and I
should have the right to deal with this
particular function of it as I wish. Since
the chamber is decidedly empty, will never
have anyone move into it, why should I keep
it open for tenancy? Or have reminders that
while it may have a temporary resident, it
won't make it to the end of the lease. For a
long time that was more heartbreaking than
the hellish period itself.
Now, my period is just a nasty annoyance. I
can't wait for menopause to hit...and
according to just about every woman I know
who has gone through it, that's worth
celebrating more than starting getting a
period it in the first place.
It can't come soon erough!
April 2010
No. "I see my period as a
reminder of my fertility, which I
haven't yet tested by trying to get
pregnant, but I hope it will possible for
me and my husband."
I wanted to contribute because I seem to be
one of the few who would probably not stop
my periods if I could. I want to have
children someday and therefore need to have
periods for that purpose, and currently it
is helpful to know every month whether I'm
pregnant or not. However, that's unlikely
because I've been on the pill for about 8-9
years. From what I hear from friends, not
everyone is as lucky with the pill as I have
been - I did not gain weight and my cramps
and bleeding didn't get worse, but reduced
significantly.
I am now 27 and interestingly, for the last
few years my period became VERY light and
only lasted about a day and a half.
Recently, my period stopped entirely for
about four months. I was a little concerned
and saw a doctor about it, I chose to switch
to a very low-dose pill to see if it would
return. I'm hoping it does. I may have this
attitude because my sister went through a
rare premature menopause during her late
teens and I am happy to be reminded that I
did not have to go through such
difficulties. I see my period as a reminder
of my fertility, which I haven't yet tested
by trying to get pregnant, but I hope it
will possible for me and my husband. [Women
in an English cotton mill menstruated
without any absorbing material to show
eligible men they were fertile - scroll
about halfway down the page to "When
studying the Suffragist movement . . . ."
for the interesting story.]
I can understand why some wouldn't want to
have periods, and before I started the pill,
I may have agreed as I had terrible cramps
that would keep me out of school every
month. The silver lining of this is that I
found out I could be comfortable talking to
my dad about periods (he often picked me up
from school when I had cramps) and this
added to my respect for him.
Thanks for letting me contribute my
opinions and experiences. Please do not use
my name - though I personally wouldn't mind,
I'd like to respect my family's anonymity
since I mentioned them. You were interested
in nationality and region, I am in the
U.S.A. and grew up in central Illinois.
March 2010
"OMG YES"
I started my period when between the ages
of 11 and 13. My perioiods are sometimes so
bad that i cant even go to school. I get
very dizzy and even faint. i fell asleep in
the shower once because of it. Almost every
single period i get i throw up and my cramps
are sometimes so bad that i would compare it
to having contractions during childbirth. I
am 18 years old now and i still get horrible
cramps. My thighs hurt, my lower back hurts,
itfeels like my insides are be wrung out. It
feels like i have to go poo reeaallly bad
but i cant and i know its not that because i
can pass gas normalyy and the pain is still
presisitant. More than once while at school
i have passes out in class due to my period.
Ive thrown up at school many a times thinks
to Aunt Flow. The past year or so my periods
are only about 4 days long. they used to be
about 7. the thing about histerectamys and
birth conrtol is that i hear they are bad
for your body and your hormones.
February 2010
"Good Lord, Yes!"
At the age of 50, after 41 years of
menstruating - 492 periods, to be exact, I
had the bright idea to ask my doctor, "Do I
really have to do this?"
He said no, put me on YAZ, and I lived
happily ever after.
The bloating, the IBS symptoms, the weird
food cravings, the weight gain, the
inability to fir into my clothes, the muscle
ache, the migraine headaches (complete with
hallucinations and vomiting), the sudden
flashbacks to every unpleasant experience I
ever had with anyone over anything - gone.
All gone. Best of all, the filth is gone. As
Tennessee Williams said, "Nothing human is
foreign to me," and it is especially true
for those of us who have taken care of
infants, and the elderly. But one day the
whole business seemed so repulsive to me.
Why was it necessary? Why did I have to put
up with this every month? What was the
point? I'd hated every period I'd ever had,
and enough was enough.
The best thing was this: Traveling without
a menstrual period. When I menstruated, no
matter what the reason, business or
pleasure, I always ended up on an airplane
or an isolated stretch of Southwest highway,
damn near bleeding to death.
Everyone I suggest YAZ to says, "Oh, no, I
can't use a contraceptive because..." It
reminds me of when I was younger, and women
said that they couldn't use a contraceptive
"because." They were always "discovering"
they were pregnant - as though it were
completely out of their control.
I say, have or have not the babies you
want, and have or have not your periods.
Take control.
February 2010
No. "It's the only way I can be
excused for being cranky."
Why would I want to stop my
menstruation? It's the only way I can be
excused for being cranky. I feel close to
the nature, the idea of the cycle and the
whole concept behind it makes me feel
special. I am proud to be a woman and
menstruation is part of my life...
February 2010
"Yes."
Yes. I'm 17 and would do anything to
stop periods.
It's the one thing that has ever made me
want to die.
February 2010
"I cant think of anything more putrid
than having to wash the huge amount of
menstrual blood I produce away by hand."
Im nearly 38 and I say.. yes..
I had 11 yrs of infertility. Month after
Month of humiliation, disappointment and
mess. I had months of pain, months of having
to throw my knickers out every day.. Finally
after having a 20cm tumor, ovary and tube
removed and 9 months of fertility treatment
I fell pregnant and those 9 months were
awesome period free months.
I then Bled none stop for 14wks just to
teach me a lesson Im sure.. 14mths later got
pregnant again and had a second child and
ever since my periods have been so heavy and
horrendous that even Maxi absorbing
incontinence pads leak! Not to mention mid
cycle debilitating pain (Mittelschmerz
doesnt describe enough the pain)
I have had my kids.. why keep the factory
open if its not going to produce anything.
If I could have an hysterectomy I would.. I
only have one functioning ovary and it would
be kept to help my hormones regulated.. but
why bleed?
As for moon cups and washables.. NO
THANKS.. I cant think of anything more
putrid than having to wash the huge amount
of menstrual blood I produce away by hand..
YUCK.. some days I wish I could just stand
in the shower all day to save the
embarrassment of leaks and failed
protection..
Its no one else's place to comment on my
personal choices for MY Body.. if you love
it.. good on ya but i don't need periods to
define my femininity nor to have babies any
more...
February 2010
"And to those spouting hateful comments
about women who choose suppression -
Sorry, but living in horrific pain is not
a requirement for being a woman. My body
is mine, and I'll do what I need to to
live comfortably in it."
Came across this page and thought I'd add
a comment.
I don't know that I'd feel 100%
comfortable with completely ending my
period, though the idea is very tempting.
But I am currently regulating it, and have
been since I was 16. I'm now 23. It was one
of the best things I've ever done for
myself. I use regular birth control pills to
suppress it for four months, then at the end
of that fourth month I let myself have a
withdrawal bleeding. It's uncomfortable, but
fairly light and tolerable. A far cry from
how it used to be.
For years my period caused me nothing but
pain. It did not make me feel connected to
other women or my womanhood. It didn't make
me feel sexy or feminine. I didn't hate it
because of societal brainwashing. I hated it
because the pain was excrutiating. I hated
it because I was bedridden for a week,
because I was in too much pain to stand and
take a shower for days, because I had to
schedule my life around it. I hated nights
trapped in the bathroom, crying and vomiting
from the pain. Every diet and exercise
change I made to my life had little to no
impact on it. And my PMS was insane, causing
me enough physical pain that I'd just wish
my period would show up already and get this
over with. Not to mention the emotional
turmoil. Even after taking birth control
pills in the traditional fashion, it made
only a small dent in the problem. I felt
trapped and tortured by my own body. I
couldn't understand how this kind of pain
was normal. I couldn't even go to school, so
how could I ever hold a job? How could this
supposedly normal female bodily function be
so destructive to my life?
My mother just happened to catch a special
on TV about period suppression, and my life
was changed from that moment. I talked to my
doctor, started a routine and never looked
back. My quality of life has skyrocketed.
When I do have the withdrawal bleeding, it's
light enough for me to still function like a
normal human being. And my body seems to
have adjusted itself to the schedule. When
that fourth month comes up, I start feeling
kind of sore and a little PMSy, just a bit,
like it's saying "Okay, it's almost time."
My body and I work together now. I feel more
connected to it than I ever did on my
"natural" cycle.
And to those spouting hateful comments
about women who choose suppression - Sorry,
but living in horrific pain is not a
requirement for being a woman. My body is
mine, and I'll do what I need to to live
comfortably in it.
February 2010
Yes. "Dr. *** was there in the surgical
suite when I came in with his Jimmy Buffet
playing. He held my hand while they put me
under, all the while telling me what a
great person I am, how well I was going to
do and that surgery would be fine. It was
truly amazing!"
I'm a 46 year old female who had an
endometrial ablation a few years ago. As
soon as the discharge from the procedure
stopped, I have been without a cycle. PRAISE
THE LORD! I couldn't be happier! No more
pain, no more bleeding all over the sheets
at night now matter what type of sanitary
product I used... none of it!
My gynecologist was wonderful about
performing the ablation. A friend of mine at
work had it done and raved about it. She
mentioned it to me when she saw how I was
suffering greatly from cramps, nausea,
exhaustion and anemia. (When my period came,
it was no secret. All anyone had to do was
look at me. My skin tone changed from a nice
medium-to-light tone to stark white. Even
the guys could tell just by looking at me!)
Since I was definitely done having children,
when I approached Dr. *** about it he
listened carefully, gave me an extensive
list of pros and cons and said "Think about
it." I went home, told my husband about it
he said "What are you waiting for? Call him
back!" I guess he really had noticed all the
suffering I endured!
The surgery was done at the outpatient
clinic at our local medical center. Prep
involved not having any food or liquids
after midnight. That was it. Dr. *** was
there in the surgical suite when I came in
with his Jimmy Buffet playing. He held my
hand while they put me under, all the while
telling me what a great person I am, how
well I was going to do and that surgery
would be fine. It was truly amazing! I woke
up feeling very groggy, but after I drank
some liquids and the staff was confident I
wasn't going to vomit, they sent me home
with my husband to recover. For the next few
days I had some pretty significant cramping
and some bloody discharge, but all I needed
to handle the pain was some mild pain meds
Dr. *** prescribed. I had the procedure on a
Friday and had planned to go to work on
Monday, but gave myself an extra day to
recover. Ever since then I've been happy as
a clam!
Almost one year to the day my neighbor
across the street had her ablation done by
Dr. *** and raves about him and how she
feels now also! (I was the guinea pig, I
guess.) Now, ironically, my sister-in-law in
another state had it done and had a terrible
outcome. Her periods got worse as did her
cramping. She ultimately wound up with a
hysterectomy. If I had known she'd have that
outcome, I would have insisted she come here
to have Dr. *** do it!
I do NOT miss my period and feel for my
poor 17 year old daughter. Since the age of
13 she's been suffering from severe cramping
and bleeding AND Dr. *** thinks she already
may have endometriosis. She's on the
Depo-Provera shot for now which has stopped
her cycle all together, but we worry about
the future and her ability to have children.
February 2010
"[Menstruation] doesn't put me in
touch with the earth or my femininity
any more than my snot or shit does."
I am 38 year old New Zealander with two
children. During pregnancy and
breastfeeding I had a marvelous four years
off (apart from one light period between
weaning and falling pregnant again). I
can't see the point of menstruating any
longer. It doesn't put me in touch with
the earth or my femininity any more than
my snot or shit does.
I use a cup and washable pads because
its cheaper and doesn't generate rubbish,
not because I enjoy handling bodily fluids
- I used cloth nappies for my sons but I
don't have a particular affinity with baby
shit either.
If worshipping the moon makes women
accept their periods more, then more power
to them; but I think menstruation, like
painful and life-threatening childbirth,
is an artifact of evolution that we can
moderate, but are unfortunately stuck
with.
January 2010
"I love menstruating."
I am 24 years old. I love menstruating.
My cycle is a beautiful reminder to
remember what it means to be Woman. I feel
more empowered than ever now that I am
learning more about my cycle and
fertility. I used to get angry about being
in a female body and thought periods were
a pain. Even if it still hurts a little,
now I am giving my cycles attention and
I'm feeling even more in tune with my
body, the Earth, the Moon, and really the
essence of being Human. As a Woman I am
grateful for this gift, it is so healing
to give my body Love, and accepting this
into my life is one of the most wonderful
things I've ever done for myself.
December 2009
"Please try to accept that some
people really do have lighter, shorter,
painless menstruation and some people
really do have terrible pain and heavy
bleeding."
I'm kind of surprised by the number of
people who are viciously vocal on this
page in either direction. Personally, I
think there are better options for dealing
with menstruation that make it far less
annoying or painful. When I was using an
internal silicon cup I hardly even knew I
was having my period and I only had to
clean it in the comfort of my home twice a
day. Lately I've been using reusable cloth
pads, which I find way more comfortable
than commercial ones. I used to have
terrible yeast infections and really bad
cramps and sensitivity. I still have nasty
mid-cycle pains from PCOS that blow
menstrual cramps out of the water.
I know that some people have a worse (or
better) time than I do, but our voices are
equally valid. You don't need to hate
yourself or others because your
experiences differ. Please try to accept
that some people really do have lighter,
shorter, painless menstruation and some
people really do have terrible pain and
heavy bleeding. For goodness sake, don't
ridicule people because they're different.
Everyone has different genes, different
reactions to different products, and
different lifestyles.
I do think that people who are suffering
might want to try making changes to their
lives to improve the conditions they're
facing, but I don't see any need to be
self-righteous. Nothing works the same for
everyone. I hope people will research and
try other options before chemically or
surgically stopping their menstruation,
but it's their right to chose what they
want to do with their bodies. They're
"real" women regardless of their choice
and regardless of their fertility. It's
silly to suggest that someone isn't a
woman just because her view of womanhood
differs from yours.
I am saddened by how much people's body
image and their image of their femininity
appears to be tied to negative views of
menstruation and their genitalia. No, you
may not have been meant to menstruate as
often as modern women do, but it is still
a natural process and not something you
need to be ashamed of. It doesn't make you
filthy or unclean or disgusting any more
than sweating does. I'm not saying it's
loads of joyous fun, I don't love sweating
either, but needing to clean yourself
doesn't mean that there is something wrong
with _you_.
December 2009
"Hell yes!"
I was diagnosed with a rare bleeding
disorder in 2007, and ever since then I
have been burdened with horrendous
periods. Not only is the flow profuse, but
the clots that come out are sickening, and
the abdominal pain that follows is
disabling. I would not wish this monthly
curse on my worst enemy.
It's bad enough, I frequently miss work
because of it.
I have recently met with my doctor, and
am in the process of scheduling
endometrial ablation to help with this
problem.
So, when you ask me if I would stop
menstruation if I could, my answer is
Hell Yes!
xxxx
November 2009
"I teach anthropology, and we talk a
lot about the difference between sex
(which is biological) and gender (which
is cultural). I think it's perfectly
possible to be female in both the sexual
and gender senses WITHOUT the pain and
mess of having a period."
Yes. At present, its sole function is
reassuring me that I am not pregnant. I
would happily trade the cost of buying
pads and tampons (and, unfortunately, I
need both) every month for the cost of
buying a pregnancy test once a month. I
would love to have the money back I've
spent on diagnostic work for the sometimes
paralyzing pain I have every month (not to
mention the fainting!) only to be told
"Well, this just happens to some women."
I teach anthropology, and we talk a lot
about the difference between sex (which is
biological) and gender (which is
cultural). I think it's perfectly possible
to be female in both the sexual and gender
senses WITHOUT the pain and mess of having
a period.
On another note, my mother reached
menopause at 51. She rates it up there
with getting her first job and marrying my
dad as "the best thing that ever happened
to her."
cheers,
xxxx
November 2009
"To sum it all up I'm never stopping
my period again."
I stopped my period for 2 years and let
me tell you, it was the worst thing i
could have ever done to my body. I I was
so depressed, crying all the time,
irritable. The effects on my body were
awful as well. I had headaches, My libido
was gone, I had vaginal dryness, heart
palpitations, acne and weight gain all
month long. As least when I had my period
all of my discomfort was temporary.
So I finally got fed up and had the
Mirena removed a few months ago and I'm
almost back to normal. Sure my periods are
bad but I'm grateful to have it back after
what I went through when it was gone. To
sum it all up I'm never stopping my period
again. It just did not agree with me. I
messed with nature and my body pushed
back. I'm never stopping my period again.
November 2009
"As a sewage treatment plant operator
I know first hand the consequence of all
the female products that get flushed
into the receiving streams."
I have no time for those of you who
write in with your "I hardly notice it"
and "eat organic" comments. If fertility
could remain intact there is no way any
sane person would choose to go through
this ordeal once a month. It is a poor set
up. End of story.
Let us assume for a moment there was no
such thing as menstruation and the body
somehow dissolved the uterine lining or it
would be absorbed by the body. Then let us
say that we were told that once a month
for 3 (give me a break you don't fool me)
to 10 days you will bleed uncontrollably
out of your vagina. We would be mortified.
It would seem RIDICULOUS to us!
Having a period is horrible. It is
limiting, expensive, painful, inconvenient
and hard on the environment. As a sewage
treatment plant operator I know first hand
the consequence of all the female products
that get flushed into the receiving
streams. Our bar screens are littered with
"shoots" as the boys call the tampon
applicators, not to mention pads and
wrappers that get flushed. These products
break our equipment, clog pumps and dull
the teeth of the grinders. Maintenance
costs would be reduced by 36% (yes I
figured it out) if these things were out
of environment. As everyone knows, the
products also make their way into the
oceans and waterways, harming aquatic
wildlife. I am 37 and have a uterus full
of fibroids and have opted for a
hysterectomy. People say I am crazy that I
forfeit my right to have children. Well, I
never thought I would grow up and be the
person who didn't have kids, but I am
certainly not going to define my life or
my womanhood based on wether or not I
brought a kid into this world. There are
many ways to express motherhood and I am
not going to go through my life regretting
that I didn't push a child out of my
vagina. It is so ridiculous some of the
ideas society throws at us.
So, I am firing my uterus and never
having a period again. I am an athlete and
love to hike and camp-I can not wait. No
more period for the rest of my life. Oh
yeah-diva cups, luna cups and instead all
leak too. Some people have better luck
than others but to say they are fool proof
is wrong. And NO I DO NOT put it in wrong.
If after 2 years you still get leaks then
there is something wrong with the product,
not me.
October 2009
"I know I'm female and I don't need a
monthly messy, painful inconvenience to
remind me of the fact"
I've already commented but I feel I had
to again after reading the entry from the
woman who claimed women who wanted to stop
their period "sickened" her and advised
them to go get a sex change because they
weren't "real women". If she likes getting
her period then good for her, but she
shouldn't be so harsh on those who don't.
I know I'm female and I don't need a
monthly messy, painful inconvenience to
remind me of the fact, I can see that for
myself when ever I get changed or go the
bathroom!
September 2009
"I truly despise my uterus and would
be more than happy to have it removed
sooner rather than later, so that I
waste less of my life having to deal
with this inconvenience."
I would happily give up my period at the
drop of a hat if I could find a way to do
it that didn't have other risks for my
body. I think it's ludicrious for me to
deal with this mess when I'm not ever
going to have children. I am 23 years old,
and I got my period a few months before I
turned 13. I have fairly easy periods
(first day pain only, fairly light
bleeding after the first two days) but all
in all I consider it a waste of time and
money, considering I have no use for it. I
truly despise my uterus and would be more
than happy to have it removed sooner
rather than later, so that I waste less of
my life having to deal with this
inconvenience.
September 2009
"yes . . . but only naturally!"
yes i would like stop or lessen my period
but only naturally!
I usually have 7 days. I am 31 and have
been slowly changing my bad lifestyle habits
that have been making me sick. (food, sleep,
stress). I feel better when i am taking care
of myself. I have learned to check things
out before taking advice and not let anyone
tell meÝhow wrong i am, that someone else
knows me better.
I like the natural pad thing and would like
to give that a try.
peace, love, starts from within.Ý
Texas
September 2009
"I would definitely stop my periods
if I could."
And, look at this, turns out I actually
can!
I'm 21 years old now and live in Belgium, I
started menstruating when I was around 13.
To be honest I've never had really bad
periods, but I did suffer quite a bit from
PMS. The week before my period started
(usually very regularly by the way, 28 days
exactly unless I was stressed) I had a lot
of trouble with my lower back and especially
my breasts! God, my breasts. Constantly felt
like they were going to explode, not very
useful in a country where virtually
everything is done by bike... Sex was
actually really difficult because every time
my breasts 'got in the way' I almost had to
cry because they were so tender.
Ok, these things weren't that much fun, but
nothing really serious.
I've used the pill for years but was always
rubbish at taking it at the right times,
besides that I forgot it every now and then.
After that I switched to a vaginal ring,
which worked quite well but got a bit
troublesome after a while. Neither really
affected my periods, with or without it,
they always came at the same time.
Last year however, I started using Implanon
as a contraceptive. One of the side affects
is a change in your menstrual cycle, but in
around 20% of women their periods stop
completely. I'm so happy I'm included in
that 20%. I cannot believe how much EASIER
my life is now! To be honest the first few
months were really strange, I still had PMS
symptoms but never started menstruating. I
really felt like 'less of a woman', like I
was handicapped in some way. But after a
while I got used to it, and I dread the day
that I'll have to deal with them monthly
again... No more waking up in blood-soaked
sheets, no more having to wear mostly black
skirts in case you 'leak' when you're away,
no more running to the bathroom every hour
to check if everything is still ok down
there, no more spending money on tampons and
pads each month. And then I haven't even
talked about the occasional smell, the
constant paranoia that you're leaking or
that everyone can somehow see it on you,
having to cancel fun plans like an impromptu
trip, camping, swimming etc. because 'it's
that time of the month again'. What is there
to miss? Of course, it's there for a reason,
and giving birth is no doubt a wonderful
thing, but why keep it if it's not
necessary? If we can control it? Of course,
I got lucky, but if the possibility existed
for everyone, I really can't fathom why
somebody would look forward to that grueling
experience every month.
After my three-year Implanon cycle is over
I'm definitely getting a new one, besides
the fact that it's super safe as you can't
make any mistakes using it, the side effect
of ending my periods has honestly been
heavenly.
Take care,
****
September 2009
"Would you stop menstruating if you
could? Yes, immediately."
I absolutely ABHOR this feeling of
'incontinence.'
Not to mention the monthly pain and the
costs.
YUCK
from Germany, 49 years old
September 2009
Yes. "I started at the age of 8."
I'm 36 years old and want to stop my
menstruation. I don't know why I need it.
Women younger then me can by taking shots or
pills and they haven't had it as long as I
have. I started at the age of 8. I've had my
two children and they are about to move out.
I had my tubes cut and burned over 16 years
ago. I'm tired of bleeding for 14-21 days
every month and passing blood clots going
threw a pad and tampon every 20 to 30
minutes. So if I can find away to quit
having my period I would.
****
September 2009
Yes. "Men don't have to have some
horrible, painful routine in order to
feel like men."
Hello,
I'd like to add my comments to your
survey. I would definitely stop
menstruation if I could. In fact, I found
your website when I was doing a search on
what options there are to do that.
I began the horrible thing when I was
barely 11 years old, after starting to
mature when I was barely 9. I feel as
though I've missed out on my childhood
because of having had a woman's body at
such an absurdly young age. When I was a
child, I used to pray to God every night
to make it go away. When I was around the
other kids at school, I always felt very
awkward and out of place because of my
over-developed body. One of the major
reasons why I decided not to have any
children was because I was afraid that a
female child would inherit it. With the
age of puberty getting younger, the child
might have started puberty at an even
younger age. I'm 38 now.
In response to some of the other
comments, I noticed that one respondent
eats only organic foods. That's really
good, and I also eat organic as much as I
can afford to, as organic food is normally
more expensive. I've also noticed that a
healthier diet reduces the severity of the
thing.
Some of the respondents say they
wouldn't get rid of it because it gives
them the sense of being connected to the
other women around the world. Why should
suffering be part of being either sex? Men
don't have to have some horrible, painful
routine in order to feel like men. If
menstruation is what makes one a woman, is
being a woman really a gift, as some
people say that it is?
Although there are ways of stopping
menstruation, they're often very hard to
access. Many doctors won't perform a
hysterectomy on a woman who doesn't have
children under the presumption that the
woman will later change her mind and have
a nervous breakdown because she can no
longer get pregnant. This reasoning
strikes me as absurd. On the one hand, the
doctors find the woman too feeble-minded
to make the long-term decision as to
whether or not to have children. At the
same time, the doctors think that this
same feeble-minded woman would have the
sanity to raise a child. It's interesting
that doctors don't question a woman's
ability to decide whether to have an
abortion, and even teenage girls are
trusted with the ability to decide this,
although there are women who've regretted
that decision.
There are also a number of medications
which can delay early puberty by
suppressing the hormones until the child
becomes older. Despite the rising rate of
early puberty, few people know about the
existence of this treatment, and it's
rarely used. Even when it is, it's
generally only used if the child starts
puberty before the age of seven. Is seven
a reasonable age to start becoming an
adult? If it is, should a seven-year-old
get pregnant?
Some people use birth control pills to
stop menstruation, but at the same time,
there are risks with it, such as an
increased risk of cancer. Also it's a
prescription medication, and getting the
prescription can be expensive for the many
people who don't have health insurance.
Also, health insurance doesn't cover
hysterectomies that are performed solely
to stop menstruation. It would be good if
there was some way of stopping this which
didn't involve a doctor's appointment,
such as herbs, or if the existing
medications against it were available
over-the-counter.
You can print my name if you publish
this on the website. [The general policy
is I never print names in this section for
many reasons.] I live in Germany, am
originally from England, and lived in the
US for some years. Thanks for letting me
have my say.
Sincerely,
****
September 2009
"[T]he whole thing's nothing but a
nuisance and an expense, with no
redeeming features whatsoever."
I would happily have gone my entire life
without any periods. I started when I was
16 and am now 48, and if my mother's
history is anything to go by I still have
another five or more years to go before
menopause.
I've never had any kind of problems,
pain, pre-menstrual tension, or anything
like that. I don't have any kind of blood
or period phobia. But the whole thing's
nothing but a nuisance and an expense,
with no redeeming features whatsoever. I
have to buy pads (and they don't come
cheap), carry a supply if travelling,
dispose of them (not always easy away from
home), and go without a bath for a week.
How much money I've been obliged to spend
on pads over the years I hate to think,
and it's basically cash poured down the
drain.
I can't understand anyone enjoying or
welcoming anything about periods. My
long-standing fantasy was always to have a
hysterectomy and be rid of them once and
for all.
You can show my name if you like.
****
(Grew up in USA, now living in UK)
September 2009
"I thank God that he gave women so
many gifts"
I would never stop my menstrual. It sets
us apart from men in a big empowering way.
I thank God that he gave women so many
gifts like being able to birth and hold
children and then being able to feed them
with milk when they arrive in the world
and menstrualing helps this all transpire.
(15-year-old from Montclair, New
Jersey, who also contributed Nosebleed pillow and
The comma
to Words and
expressions
about menstruation and who
"wanted [her brothers] to die thinking I
never had a period, which was
ridiculous.")
August 2009
"Absolutely NOT."
Absolutely NOT. I am 23 years old and
with a 4 year old son. Every since I had
him my periods have been irregular. At
first it was because of the depo shot
after I had him, but I stopped after the
second dose. I switched to the patch, then
finally back to the pill. However, after I
left my exhusband I stopped taking the
pill when I was 21. Condoms became my main
choice of birth control, oh and I barely
even have had sex in the last 2 years. My
period comes whenever it pleases.
Sometimes I only get 4 to 6 a year. I get
pains in my back that are so unbarable, I
get angry, and I get bloated. However, I
do not mind what comes with it. All
because it might mean I can bare children
again one day. Endometriosis is very
common in the women in my family and one
day when I decide to get remarried and
have a stable relationship with the right
person, then maybe I can have one more
child.
People who say they would get rid of
their periods sicken me. If you want so
bad to get rid of them, go have a sex
change, because you're NOT a real woman at
all!
Regards,
****
Virginia [U.S.A.]
August 2009
"I HATED it!!!"
Oh yes.... I would have LOVED to have
stopped it! It came when it felt like
it... from 27 to 56 days...... I bled
heavily for 9 days each time.... flooded
through clothing, hot flushes... cramps so
bad I wanted to die.... faintness in the
street and anywhere else. There were times
when I could hardly think straight due to
pain and faintness. I HATED it!!! Then...
I had firbroids... and it got worse! I
eventually had a total hysterctomy ..
which plunged me into a slightly early
menopause so have to use hrt patches..
successfully ... but I feel so much
better! Without the 9 day periods, and the
two weeks prior to that swollen to the
point of AGONY breasts that went with it!
****, UK
July 2009
"My answer is YES!"
I'm 24 years old from United Kingdom. I
got my first period when I was 11 (I was
at school at the time as well... urgh!).
They've never been particularly heavy but
I've always had painful periods. When I
was younger every month on the first day
I'd be so sore that I could barely move
and I would feel feverish so would have to
stay off school, luckily I grew out of
that when I was 16, although I still get
bad cramps. I've never had any desire to
have children, so it annoys me when I get
it every month as I'm going through all
that discomfort for nothing. I can't take
the pill due to high blood pressure (I
inquired about it a few years ago for
contraceptive purposes) so I can't even
stop it that way. I can't wait until
menopause, my mum went through hers at 47
so hopefully only another 23 years to go!
July 2009
"It seems like societal brainwashing
to me that women should bleed."
Yes I have chosen to stop by
continuously taking the pill and not the
placebo week. I did this before the new
pills came out that allow you to do it. I
can't understand why anyone would choose
to suffer if they don't have to. It seems
like societal brainwashing to me that
women should bleed. If you are on the pill
anyway, the bleeding is not a real
menstrual cycle. It is hormone withdrawal
bleeding. The developers of the original
pill built the placebo week into the pill
packets so that it would mimic women's
natural cycles and it would be more easily
accepted. It is an illusion so doctors
don't have to explain how it works. Some
doctors today still don't understand how
the pill works.
June 2009
"The short answer to the question
'Would you stop menstruating if you
could?' would have to be a resounding
'no' for me."
My periods have always been irregular,
the first occurring when I was twelve, the
next when I was fifteen. Even though my
first period ruined a ski trip with my
father, and the second my hopes of joining
the wrestling team, I still wouldn't trade
them. My family has a history of a large
variety of horrible problems with their
reproductive systems, and even though I
have no desire for children of my own,
it's a comfort to know that I might one
day be able to carry a child.
I'm not even one of those women who has
easy breezy periods: I get migraines, I
bleed for at least a week, I get paranoid
and snap at everyone. Even so, I do feel a
connection to women across the world, and
it's one of the rare times that I feel
most like a woman. That in and of itself
is amusing, because I don't always
identify as female - not having periods at
all would make it much easier to be fully
androgynous, and yet I still wouldn't
trade them in.
May 2009
"But when I look down and see the
strawberry stain in my panties every
month, a little of the euphoria from the
first time still gets me."
At fourteen, I've only experienced 18
periods so far, but I can honestly say I do
appreciate them. It makes me so happy to
think of the connection I have with
virtually every woman in the world. I will
admit, they can be such a pain; and the
breakouts, moodiness, bloating, and cramps
associated with menstruation are very
irritating at times. But when I look down
and see the strawberry stain in my panties
every month, a little of the euphoria from
the first time still gets me. I can't help
but marvel at my body and the wonderful
things it can do. I view my period as a
beautiful thing, it's a monthly reminder of
my propulsion into womanhood and maturity.
May 2009
"From the bottom of my heart: I HATE
MENSTRUATION!"
Since my traumatic first time until now, i
have felt that menstruation is the evilst
curse in Earth. I can't wish anybody the
pain, the nasty odor and all the other
"inconvenients" better called punishments
associated with this filthy thing. I wonder
why? why? Why?
April 2009
"I HAVE WONDERFUL PERIODS NOW! No
pain, 4 days: one moderate, 1 light, 2
drainage. My periods actually make me
feel happier."
What do YOU think? Would you stop
menstruating indefinitely - for years,
maybe?
Of course not! I love my period & I
look forward to it every month.
I used to have horrible painful periods. I
had my first menses when I was 10 or 11
years old. I hated my breasts, cramps, and
awkward teenage appearance. I ate terrible
fast food and RBGH milk at the time. I know
the chemicals and hormones in food and
environment caused the majority of my
problems.
I have since changed my diet to all natural
organic. I only buy milk from cows NOT
treated with RBGH and stopped eating cheap
beef and genetically engineered food.
Let me tell you what.. I HAVE WONDERFUL
PERIODS NOW! No pain, 4 days: one moderate,
1 light, 2 drainage. My periods actually
make me feel happier. I get increased blood
flow to my nether regions (hehe) which at
least put me in a good mood when I'm just
sitting there. I also get excited right
before it starts. I also get "spiritual"
around my period. My sense of smell doubles
and I gain an incredible sense for what
people around me are feeling. Trust me, I
had 10 years of period hatin' before I am
now proud of everything woman.
Stop buying those horrible dioxin laced
disposables! I bought a bunch of homemade
cloth pads from women. They are thinner,
discreet, block odor, store & wash
easily, PLUS they are super comfy. The
fleece is warm in the winter and cotton is
breathable in the summer. The best thing is
that there is no smell like with the
disposables because the cloth absorbs it
all. They seem to wick the blood right off.
I have leaked through TONS of disposables,
but I have been using cloth pads for a year
WITHOUT ONE LEAK!!! Ebay has a bunch of
these for a great price and you can ask the
sellers to custom make them for you. Most of
them fold up into cute envelope shapes and
snap closed- for transportation (so you can
easily stash them in your purse before &
after using without a mess).
Cloth pads are also really easy to clean.
Just toss them in a small hamper after using
(don't soak/ don't prewash). They can sit
like this for a few days. The morning before
you do laundry toss them in the washer with
water and oxo-brite (or any oxygen cleaner)
and let them sit. After work (or several
hours later) throw the rest of your clothes
in and do laundry as usual. By this time,
the oxygen cleaner will have eaten away the
blood and it will NOT get on your other
clothing. Wash and dry as usual. There is
usually a tiny bit of staining on the pads,
but they come out completely clean and
surprisingly bright, ready to use again.
I went from being a period hater to a
period lover! It is hard to be an all
natural woman, but after the sacrifice my
life is so much more fulfilling. The
difference in my mind and body is almost
unbelievable since I stopped eating foods
made with pesticides, toxins, and hormones.
My period has also become much more
enjoyable since switching to cloth.
April 2009
Yes! to the question. "God, the
Creator, the Great Spirit, who for me is
revealed in Jesus Christ through the
power of the Holy Spirit, does not want
me to suffer and certainly is not the
cause of my bodily imbalances, any more
than God desires anyone to suffer at
all."
After 37 1/2 years of periods since the age
of 12, three children, a tubal ligation and
longer periods after my 3d child at age 35
my answer is "Yes!" I've had problems with
flooding for the last several years and
passing large clots for the last year. Time
off from work, ruined sheets, can't go
anywhere for more than an hour for two-three
days unless double padded with a tampon or
two super tampons with one pad, fatigued and
anemic. I am finally doing something about
it-endometrial ablation scheduled three
weeks from now. This is scheduled for 6
weeks before my 50th birthday. I have
completed childbearing, with two teenagers
and one 21 year old adult child and I do not
need this. My God, I know I am a woman for
heaven's sake with or without it. I've been
praying and meditating at home during my
periods contemplating my womanhood long
enough to feel at a deep spiritual level
that God is perfectly fine with my decision
if I choose not to suffer with this any
longer. Whether or not I suffer through this
any longer is my choice. God, the Creator,
the Great Spirit, who for me is revealed in
Jesus Christ through the power of the Holy
Spirit, does not want me to suffer and
certainly is not the cause of my bodily
imbalances, any more than God desires anyone
to suffer at all.
It is natural for a woman's period to end
and mine are certainly clinically abnormal
enough to end a few years early. So, that's
my decision for me.
April 2009
"I wish I could fire it [her
uterus]!!!"
Hell yes!!! I am 45 with 4 kids.....had
my tubes tied and have absolutely no use
for the monthly mess any further.
I really don't understand how anyone
call call it beautiful....every month I
spend six days feeling bloated, getting
blood on my fingers, feeling tied to the
bathroom, can't go quadding in the bush
etc....just because it's a pain, and an
interference in my otherwise great life.
My uterus has served it's purpose....it
is now wasting it's time getting prepared
for a baby....I will never have
another....I am done....I wish I could
fire it!!!
Can't wait for menopause.
March 2009
"Definitely Stop My Period"
The main reason for this is, I HAVE HAD
ENOUGH.
I'm a lesbian, and there is no reason
for me to keep having mensuration just to
maintain my fertility.
As a native Chinese, period/mensuration
is something we
would not talk about openly, and my
tragedy is that I had my first period
when I was 8, and ever since, I have
been living with this monthly torture.
I used to be quite active, but ever since
my first period, I can't go to swim
whenever I was like my brother, I can't do
anything active in school.
I remember one time, when I was still
around 8-9 years old, I was home with my
grandma, and I have to change my
mensuration pads, I was to young to
maneuver the thing in my hands that I drop
it into the toilet. And end up having to
ask my grandma to help........
My period bring me so much bad
memories.......and recently, I found out
that I'm having disorder relating to my
period. My period just became heavier, and
the cramps became more painful....
I just don't what it anymore, if I can
stop it now, I would definitely stop it
with no regret.
March 2009
"tokophobia"
Hi Harry,
I have a message to the girl who added
the latest comment [next
page] to your opinion page.
Honey, you're not alone with this! Just
google the word 'tokophobia'
and you'll see.
(I'm not sure if tokophobia is discussed
on MUM but I think it's an important new
aspect of women's health).
Thanks and all the best,
February 2009
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