New this week: the Art of Menstruation: Argentinian artist Melina Szapiro - Brazilian gynecologist Dr. Nelson Soucasaux: Psychosomatic Gynecology - Nunap and fax tampons: sisters under the gauze? (early-to-mid 1930s, U.S.A.)

Would you stop menstruating if you could? (New contributions)
Words and expressions for menstruation (Canada: It feels as if your transmission is going to drop out; Flemish [Belgium]: Marie is op bezoek, Marie komt; India: [The] Red snow; U.S.A.: Bullets, I've been shot, Kitty food, My kitty ran away, N/A, Out of commission)
What did European and American women use for menstruation in the past?
Humor

PREVIOUS NEWS
first page | LIST OF ALL TOPICS | MUM address | e-mail the museum | privacy on this site | art of menstruation | artists (non-menstrual) | asbestos | belts | bidets | founder bio | Bly, Nellie | MUM board | books (and reviews) | cats | company booklets directory | contraception and religion | costumes | cups | cup usage | dispensers | douches, pain, sprays | essay directory | extraction | famous people | FAQ | humor | huts | links | media | miscellaneous | museum future | Norwegian menstruation exhibit | odor | pad directory | patent medicine | poetry directory | products, current | religion | menstrual products safety | science | shame | sponges | synchrony | tampon directory | early tampons | teen ads directory | tour (video) | underpants directory | videos, films directory | What did women do about menstruation in the past? | washable pads


Letters to your MUM

Not menstruating while nursing a baby: how did people explain that in the past?

A friend of mine is looking for cultural (not medical) information in regards to the return of menstruation after childbirth and/or during breast feeding. We all know the stats on when it returns and why is returns (why it is absent for months after birth, etc.) but can find nothing about how this occasion has been viewed and celebrated around the world throughout the ages including present day. Would you have any information on this? [During medieval and Renaissance times in Europe, a common belief, which both Leonardo da Vinci and the great anatomist Vesalius indicated in their drawings, was that mother's milk was menstrual blood that had been diverted from the uterus, preventing the woman from menstruating. Mail her and me for other theories. This is discussed in Lana Thompson's book The Wandering Womb: A Cultural History of Outrageous Beliefs About Women (Prometheus Books, 1999)]

Thanks again!

~May your God, Goddess, Gods or total lack thereof bless, curse or ignore you in accordance with your wishes and beliefs.

She needs your help with prints

Hello,

I have found your site at a perfect time. I am a sculpture grad at ****** University. I have started a project titled Blood Prints. I am trying to find a way to find 28 women who would be willing to bleed on sheets I would prepare and send them and then return them to me to be dealt with as prints. Is there a way I could place an ad with your site or would you personally know women who would be willing to become a part of this art piece?

[Write her if you can help.]

Thank you


See a film about Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome, in New York City

Hi,

Please join me on Tuesday night for a screening of my documentary "Scrambled: A Journey Through Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome" at a great independent women's bookstore on the Lower East Side called Bluestockings.

I hope you are finding some peace and comfort during these sad and confusing times. I look forward to seeing you.

- Randi

The Details:

Scrambled: A Journey Through Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome

Tuesday, October 23, 7 pm at Bluestockings bookstore (172 Allen St. on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in New York City)

Admission: ($3)

Closest subway trains:

F train to 2nd Ave.

J train to Delancey/Essex St.

Bluestockings Phone: 212-777-6028

Bluestockings invites you to an evening with New York's strongest women's filmmakers organization, Women Make Movies, featuring Randi Cecchine, screening "Scrambled, A Journey Through Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome." This 41-minute video documents the story of the filmmaker's own experiences living with polycystic ovarian syndrome, and incorporates the stories of 11 other women also living with this complex medical condition. [See the item at the bottom of this page. The filmmaker will be present for feedback and Q&A session following the screening. Films by Women Make Movies screen every third Tuesday of the month. ($3)

For more information about Scrambled http://www.scrambledthewebsite.com

Bluestockings Mission Statement

Bluestockings, an independent women's bookstore and cafe of New York City's Lower East Side, promotes the empowerment of women through words, art and activism. We work to be an intersection of dialogue and information exchange, providing women-focused books, events, workshops, and a meeting and gathering place. Recognizing the links between oppressions, our goal is to be trans-inclusive, multi-lingual, open to all sexualities and spiritualities, intergenerational and to challenge racism, classism, ablism, sexism, ageism and sizism. We have adopted a collective structure, and we strive to be an organizing site in the struggle for social, economic, and environmental justice.

For more information about Bluestockings: http://www.bluestockings.com/

Women's Health Online

Dear Harry,

You have a great site, and I enjoyed my visit. I wanted to suggest that we create reciprocal links. I am the editor of Women's Health Online and felt that our topics are mutually compatible.

I hope to hear from you soon.

Sincerely,

Sheri Waldrop

Editor, Women's Health Online


Natural health food store

To Whom It May Concern,

We are an all natural health food store and receive thousands of hits weekly. We were recently featured in the July/August issue of Nutraceuticals World Magazine.

Name: Aim This Way for Natural health

Description: Distributors of the highest quality all natural herbal products on the market today. See our "Special Offer" !!!

Web address: http://www.aimthisway.com

Email: info@aimthisway.com

Subject: Alternative health/Herbal products

Thank you for your consideration in advance,

Larry Brogan


Did your mother slap you when you had your first period?

If so, Lana Thompson wants to hear from you.

The future MUM museum

Dear Mr. Finley,

Thank you for your fantastic Web site. I found it by accident looking for information on The Keeper.

I agree with you [I talk about the future museum here.] Your museum should not be at a medical school or facility of any kind. I do not object to you running the museum as a director. I think we should forget technicalities.

It needs to be in a place as you say where everyone can enjoy it - especially those from around the world. If you do set up a new facility I would love to visit, although I am from Ontario, Canada. I think you should appeal to anyone who can afford to offer an "in kind" donation of a building on a long term basis. Have you considered appealing to a local business owner who has such a facility? [It would take a really special business person - most likely a woman - to donate space. Not, for example, a hamburger joint or a church. But it's a good idea.]

Yours,

I'm decreasing the frequency of the updates to make time for figuring out how to earn an income

I can retire from my graphics job in July 2002, and I really want to. But I can't live on the retirement income, so I must find a way to earn enough to support myself. I'm working on some ideas now, and I need the only spare time I have, the time I do these updates on weekends. So, starting June 2001, I will update this site every other week rather than weekly.

I have "independently-wealthy" envy, probably like most people in the world. But I would not fritter it away on fast cars and fast women - Oh, no! - but devote the little time I have remaining instead to your and my MUM - this Web site and museum.

Book about menstruation published in Spain
 

The Spanish journalist who contributed some words for menstruation to this site last year and wrote about this museum (MUM) in the Madrid newspaper "El País" just co-authored with her daughter a book about menstruation (cover at left).

She writes, in part,

Dear Harry Finley,

As I told you, my daughter (Clara de Cominges) and I have written a book (called "El tabú") about menstruation, which is the first one to be published in Spain about that subject. The book - it talks about the MUM - is coming out at the end of March and I just said to the publisher, Editorial Planeta, to contact you and send you some pages from it and the cover as well. I'm sure that it will be interesting to you to have some information about the book that I hope has enough sense of humour to be understood anywhere. Thank you for your interest and help.

If you need anything else, please let me know.

Best wishes,

Margarita Rivière

Belen Lopez, the editor of nonfiction at Planeta, adds that "Margarita, more than 50 years old, and Clara, 20, expose their own experiences about menstruation with a sensational sense of humour." (Later this month more information will appear on the publisher's site, in Spanish.)

My guess is that Spaniards will regard the cover as risqué, as many Americans would. And the book, too. But, let's celebrate!

Two weeks ago I mentioned that Procter & Gamble was trying to change attitudes in the Spanish-speaking Americas to get more women to use tampons, specifically Tampax - a hard sell.

Compare this cover with the box cover for the Canadian television video about menstruation, Under Wraps, and the second The Curse.

An American network is now developing a program about menstruation for a popular cable channel; some folks from the network visited me recently to borrow material.

And this museum lent historical tampons and ads for a television program in Spain last year.

Now, if I could only read Spanish! (I'm a former German teacher.)



Do you want to show items from this museum?

Please contact me if, on behalf of an organization, you want to borrow and show items from this museum and are willing to pay the shipping expenses, or if you have a good idea about where the museum can set up permanently.

All this depends on availability of items.

Items from the museum have appeared in television programs in Spain, Canada and Germany and in displays in the United States, as well as in magazines around the world (see media).

If you're able to pay my shipping expenses, and if I can skip work, you can also listen to me, live, talk endlessly about this endlessly interesting subject!

Money and this site

I, Harry Finley, creator of the museum and site and the "I" of the narrative here, receive no money for any products or services on this site. Sometimes people donate items to the museum.

All expenses for the site come out of my pocket, where my salary from my job as a graphic designer is deposited.


Privacy

What happens when you visit this site?

For now, a search engine service will tell me who visits this site, although I don't know in what detail yet. I am not taking names - it's something that comes with the service, which I'm testing to see if it makes it easier for you to locate information on this large site.

In any case, I'm not giving away or selling names of visitors and you won't receive anything from me; you won't get a "cookie." I feel the same way most of you do when you visit a site: I want to be anonymous! Leave me alone!


Help Wanted: This Museum Needs a Public Official For Its Board of Directors

Your MUM is doing the paper work necessary to become eligible to receive support from foundations as a 501(c)3 nonprofit corporation. To achieve this status, it helps to have a American public official - an elected or appointed official of the government, federal, state or local - on its board of directors.

What public official out there will support a museum for the worldwide culture of women's health and menstruation?

Read about my ideas for the museum. What are yours?

Eventually I would also like to entice people experienced in the law, finances and fund raising to the board.

Any suggestions?


Do You Have Irregular Menses?

If so, you may have polycystic ovary syndrome [and here's a support association for it].

Jane Newman, Clinical Research Coordinator at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University School of Medicine, asked me to tell you that

Irregular menses identify women at high risk for polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), which exists in 6-10% of women of reproductive age. PCOS is a major cause of infertility and is linked to diabetes.

Learn more about current research on PCOS at Brigham and Women's Hospital, the University of Pennsylvania and Pennsylvania State University - or contact Jane Newman.

If you have fewer than six periods a year, you may be eligible to participate in the study!

See more medical and scientific information about menstruation.


New this week: the Art of Menstruation: Argentinian artist Melina Szapiro - Brazilian gynecologist Dr. Nelson Soucasaux: Psychosomatic Gynecology - Nunap and fax tampons: sisters under the gauze? (early-to-mid 1930s, U.S.A.)

Would you stop menstruating if you could? (New contributions)
Words and expressions for menstruation (Canada: It feels as if your transmission is going to drop out; Flemish [Belgium]: Marie is op bezoek, Marie komt; India: [The] Red snow; U.S.A.: Bullets, I've been shot, Kitty food, My kitty ran away, N/A, Out of commission)
What did European and American women use for menstruation in the past?
Humor

PREVIOUS NEWS
first page | LIST OF ALL TOPICS | MUM address | e-mail the museum | privacy on this site | art of menstruation | artists (non-menstrual) | asbestos | belts | bidets | founder bio | Bly, Nellie | MUM board | books (and reviews) | cats | company booklets directory | contraception and religion | costumes | cups | cup usage | dispensers | douches, pain, sprays | essay directory | extraction | famous people | FAQ | humor | huts | links | media | miscellaneous | museum future | Norwegian menstruation exhibit | odor | pad directory | patent medicine | poetry directory | products, current | religion | menstrual products safety | science | shame | sponges | synchrony | tampon directory | early tampons | teen ads directory | tour (video) | underpants directory | videos, films directory | What did women do about menstruation in the past? | washable pads

privacy on this site

© 2001 Harry Finley. It is illegal to reproduce or distribute work on this Web site in any manner or medium without written permission of the author. Please report suspected violations to hfinley@mum.org