DIRECTORY of all topics (See also the SEARCH ENGINE, bottom of page.) LINKS to this site BELOW Leer la versión en español de los siguientes temas: Anticoncepción y religión, Breve reseña - Olor - Religión y menstruación - Seguridad de productos para la menstruación.Comic strip: A conservative American family visits the (future) Museum of Menstruation CONTRIBUTE to Humor, Words and expressions about menstruation
and Would you stop menstruating if you could?
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A writer from the University of California at Berkeley writes that fictional medicine preceded the real thing:
"I hate my period":
And from the same e-mail address a day later:
"I don't have to anymore."
"If I could stop menstruating . . . "
"No periods in this southern heat," writes the contributor:
"No periods? That's great!"
I'd stop "in a heartbeat" if . . .
An American writes about "respecting ourselves":
"[T]ired of having to plan life around 'that time of the month'":
A Scandinavian likes stopping menstruation:
"I am 26, and I feel my period is a natural part of who I am":
One sister after another starts her period, which "suck":
From a male:
"I guess I can dream about not having a period . . . ."
"Menstruation was the power to have children," but . . .
"I'm very pleased not having to menstruate."
"I would not give it up."
A 15-year-old Canadian writes,
A Canadian writes, "Periods are great!"
DEFINITELY YES! And for her daughter, too.
A 21-year-old Australian writes, "I'm lost without it."
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HELL YEAH!! I would do anything to make them stop!
I have been sterilised since I was 29 so after that decision there was no need for my period, but I still get my period every month. Now in the early stages of menopause they are still as regular as ever. I do wish they would stop forever or that I could do something to make them stop as there is no point to me having them!
January 2001
Yes, I would stop and then when I wanted a child I would start again.
January 2001
I am 27 now and started menstruating at 13. It was never extremely painful or heavy, but I dislike any kind of discomfort or annoyance. I had Depo Provera shots [read many more comments about Depo in the items below] for three years and loved never having a period. About two years ago I started taking the Pill instead because I knew I would be having children in the near future and wanted to do it on my own timing rather than wait indefinitely for my body to cycle again.
I would stop having periods if I knew there were no side effects - but this world has never been that easy. Both Depo and the Pill resulted in extra hair growth after the first two years. I already had more body hair than most women I came into contact with, so I was not pleased! I cycle between that feeling and being annoyed at myself for shaving my legs and underarms because that is an ungodly hassle and is definitely unnatural!
Somewhere along the way we have to decide which of society's silly rules we will go along with to fit in and which are not worth compromising ourselves for. And I am still deciding. ;) So bring on the research! I will read it and maybe try it - and laser eye surgery.
January 2001
First off I'd like to comment on how much I enjoy this site. [Thanks!]
In response to your question: YES. Menstruation is just another way to stigmatize and hold women down. It's not magical or cleansing, just another bodily function, on the same level as defecation or urination.
I have known since early adolescence that children are not in my future and have no need for a period. I wish a doctor would take pity on me and release me from this expensive inconvenience. I do not associate periods with femininity. Sometimes I think I'd be happier as a man. [Men sure have far fewer male-only things that are both normal and often sources of trouble, comparable to women's pregnancy, childbirth and menstruation.] Menstruation turns my body against itself; I have not felt "at home" in my body since menarche at the age of 12.
Girls who menstruate early are at a higher risk for breast cancer due to elevated estrogen levels. If periods are so "healthy," I'd like someone to explain that. Period/pregnancy-cult people are really the ones stigmatizing women. If a woman doesn't want to menstruate, she should make that decision without the guilt. Sometimes it seems like other women are our biggest enemies.
January 2001
When there's a pill that will stop menstruation without risks, I will swallow it immediately. Always the same problems with menstruation. It starts when you forgot to put new tampax in your bag. It falls in the days that it is almost impossible to reach a toilet.
All those practical problems. And then I did not even mention the physical problems. Like the irritation caused by the sanitary napkins [a problem mentioned in a report in 1945, the Dickinson Report].
January 2001
I had very heavy periods, and NEVER regular, since I was 12. Sometimes I would miss weeks; sometimes I would flow for weeks.
In my 30s I finally got FED up with ALL of it, since trying to have sex with my spouse was beginning to look like an "ax murder" at the end of each session and my flow had been going on for about three years by then (with no stops!).
All the HMOs [health maintenance organizations] I tried could only recommend pills (for the hormone "problems" I was having - too much estrogen, not enough progesterone) or the inevitable, WHOLE hysterectomy option.
I was scared to death of having them yank all my guts out from hearing horror stories before. And I certainly did NOT want to live on DepoProvera (Progesterone) [read discussions of this in entries below] the rest of my life due to the gut-wrenching side affects I always encountered (feeling like I was constantly pregnant!).
SO, only when I relocated to another area, did I find my HMO wasn't covered in the Zip code [the American postal code] I lived in, which forced me to have to find a PPO, or in my case Blue Cross [a health insurance organization] (no plug).
Suddenly a whole new WORLD of different options opened up for me.
For the first time I had HOPE of some sort of relief.
Since I never had any sort of endometriosis [a painful disease caused by pieces of the lining of the uterus - the endometrium - somehow located in the wall of the rectum, bladder, etc.] I was a VERY good candidate for a very new procedure called endometrial oblation, where I didn't have to lose ONE single part or egg. I could even keep my beloved cervix (that added a great sexual enhancement to both me and my spouse during lovemaking).
This procedure was considered "outpatient surgery," though you needed a driver to take you home, due to the drugs they put you under.
But all it consisted of was, in common terms, a "permanent scraping," or a permanent D&C [dilation and curettage] of the uterus lining. Nothing more. (The doc would compare it to coring out an apple down to like a quarter of an inch while leaving the skin in tact.)
It took all of one hour, I could go back to work in two days, and I haven't bled since. It's been nearly 10 years. And I still find many people have still never heard of this procedure.
I did have to go to an obstetrical-gynecological surgeon who specialized in this procedure. But the BEST part is:
I still ovulate; I still have what I call are "my periods," you know, the tiny mood swings, the incredible orgasms, an occasional sore breast, but absolutely NO cramps, no BLOOD, and being able to KEEP every thing I had. The only difference is that I had to decide that I wouldn't be able to conceive again. But I had my grown child by then and I was tired of bleeding!
This procedure SAVED MY LIFE.
I was going through literally TWO tampons with a night time PAD every 2-3 hours. I had to be on iron pills and I thought, "WHAT the HECK do women want to BLEED for if they are DONE having kids???"
To the lady that LOVES to bleed: I respect her thoughts, though I think she needs some educating, but SHE can have MINE and a few million others, I'm sure!
Oh, yes: I will NEVER go back to an HMO!
Thanks for letting me share!
[Later she added this:]
I should tell you that this procedure was one done
vaginally, with a tiny microscopic tube that had a small blades he scraped each layer with and then went back with a hot roller cauterizing the area he had just done.
The tube (also) had a camera in there somewhere, so I was able to get the video of the operation. In fact it's what they hand everyone who goes through this.
I believe it's done with a lot of water in there, like some sort of flusher and vacuum to clean away the scrapings.
It was amazing to watch.
Though the entire tube (with the camera) was probably no bigger than my little finger, the "movie" gave it a "monster shot" appearance, so it was quite shocking at first.
Thanks for reading.
Aloha
[Read about ThermaChoice, an alternative to the writer's ablation, although with similar results.]
January 2001
I'm not sure; I've only had them for about a month, but my friends tell me that they're sooo horrible, so maybe!!
January 2001
I started a month before I turned 16, and I would've gladly waited even longer because it was terrible right from the start. I had horrible cramps every month for years, and tried every drug available with varying success.
In my early 30s the cramps lessened, but I still dreaded it every month. But I'm an artist, and I look at everything as potential art material (or at least as inspiration), and one day I took a close look at a used napkin. I discovered I liked the variety of patterns on all the napkins I'd used that day. I started saving them - dozens of them over many months. To my surprise, they didn't smell at all once they dried. I cut them into 2" squares, peeled them apart to remove the sawdust-like stuff inside, and stitched the squares to a piece of fabric. I called the little quilt-like thing "O.T.R." (for "on the rag"). After that, I figured I'd done all I could do with blood, but one day I was trying to find a particular shade and quality of red, and I couldn't find a paint that was just right. So I took a sheet of paper and wiped it between my legs. The blood was perfect for my artwork! Since then I've made several pieces using photocopies of antique books (including Dr. Pierce's medical guide) stained with blood. I varnish the paper and stitch it to fabric, or just stitch scraps of paper together. I like the way the blood oxidizes, and the way it randomly clumps over some areas of text and barely covers other areas.
I'm 39 now and I dread menopause. Even if I don't have a particular art project in mind, every month I have a supply of photocopies ready to be stained for future use. I don't consider my work "feminist." The blood symbolizes many things to me: fear, mystery, self-recognition, self-assurance, and life itself. I've exhibited my work in galleries, even inviting my coworkers to view it. They've been surprisingly open and interested in it - even the guys, which REALLY surprised me. What I really enjoy is when viewers try to decipher the text, not aware they're looking through blood. I'm forcing them to look at something that's considered taboo, and the experience doesn't bother them because they're unaware of it.
So to sum up this long story, NO, I don't want my periods to stop. I need that blood - it's my favorite art material! [See more menstruation-associated artwork.]
January 2001
My friend's father has hemochromatosis. This is a disease which, I believe, causes too much iron to build up in the liver. He has to donate blood once a month to rid himself of the excess iron. I am not sure of the mechanics of this, but that is what he tells me. He said that women don't get this disease too often because they have their monthly periods, which naturally rids the body of excess iron. He said he would "die for a period." =)
[And excess iron has been linked with heart and artery disease.]
January 2001
I'm a 23-year-old woman from Long Island, New York, and I have had my period since I was 12. And each and every month since that first time I have been faced with cramps, muscle aches, mood swings, migraines, and also an irritable bowel that left me running for the bathroom either to release my intestinal pain or to change my pad.
Stained clothes? I have made quite the collection over the years along with sheets, and towels. No matter how many times I changed my pad or tampon, it's just a plain mess. And your period isn't just those 5-7 days where the flow is actually there; it's at least 5-6 days before that and lasts another 3-4 afterwards. The feeling of being dirty and smelly - as you know your period is on the way - you don't feel like being intimate (although I must admit that I am as horny as ever right before my period) and then afterwards. Sometimes it may just come back after you think it's over, ever so slightly to mess with you: LOVELY!!! So where does that leave me? A little less than two weeks a month for me not to have to worry about the whole mess? WHY?
And to think some women believe this whole menstruating thing to be "feminine" and somehow a way to show our womanhood. I can be all the woman I want to be even more if I didn't have to constantly deal with and hide from others my "monthly friend." [Read more words used for menstruation in many languages.] Believe me, if any of my friends made me feel this horrible every month why would I want them to keep coming around??
So to reiterate would I want to stop getting my period? YES YES YES
PLEASE sign me up!!!
January 2001
No, I don't think that I would get rid of my period if I could. For me, cramps are minor and isolated to the first few days of menstruation. I enjoy the cramps I get the same way I enjoy the muscle pain after a really good beneficial work out.
I don't know why, but I feel sexy when I'm menstruating. I realized at some point in college that that was when I was most likely to get dolled up and go to parties. I think I met several boyfriends while menstruating. From ovulation through menstruation I am most interested in sex, most emotional, and also most able to achieve sexual climax. I think all of that is certainly worth a mess. I know that I'm lucky, and that many women have a very painful, sometimes physically and emotionally draining period every month, and there needs to be a better solution for them than the current pill, but for me, I enjoy my period right now. I highly recommend "Instead" [menstrual cup; compare Instead with the The Keeper cup and read a history of cups], cloth pads, and a good sexual partner [you have to make your own link].
OH, HELL, YES!
If I could, I would have stopped it permanently the first day I had it, when I was nine years old. I'm 41, and it's been nothing but a living hell for me since Day One. I have to take prescription medicine to keep the pain from disabling me, which it did every month for years.
In addition to the immense physical pain, I've also had the "pleasure" of going through changes in mood each month, ranging from depression to rage.
To make matters worse, I've never wanted children, so having a period has been one big fucking waste of time and an unneeded and unwanted 32-year torture session.
I laugh at people who equate having a period with femininity. Not having a period doesn't make you less of a woman, just as infertility doesn't make someone less of a woman.
And don't think that I'm not planning to have a serious word or two with God about this abomination and insult to womanhood He's cursed me with. ;)
Do you think I sound angry and bitter? Maybe it's because I'm having my period right now.
January 2001
My mom told me about the argument that menstruation is obsolete, and I was immediately disturbed. How much can science make us unnatural before we take responsibility for our actions instead of curbing our natural processes with modern "medicine"? There have to be some major changes in the body in such a drastic thing such as taking menstruation away for a period of months.
January 2001
My period is a source of power. It cycles with the moon, which is a symbol of the power of women. I am in rhythm with the earth and other women in the world when I cycle. I find it amazing to feel my body ovulate, and then wait for the bleeding. I am a complex being because of the cycle and am thus capable of bringing forth life. I would NEVER choose to stop menstruating as it is a ritual that I value deeply.
I think the recent articles about the obsoleteness of menstruation are just another form of period shame that the media is trying to instill in women so that they can become the consumers of yet another unhealthy hazardous product that someone without a uterus invented. I feel empowered to be a woman on this earth, and I will menstruate to the cycle of the moon until I reach menopause.
At that point, I will rejoice in reaching true maturity.
January 2001
Yes. At age 40 and two kids, I'm tired of it. I have very little cramping, no mood swings, so I'm lucky in that respect.
My period never bothered me until after I became pregnant and nursed. After not having had a period for about 15 months, I was annoyed when it came back. Then a few months later I became pregnant again and had another no-period cycle.
So now I just look upon it as a messy bother and I think I will be happy when I reach menopause.
January 2001
I would definitely give up my cycle. I am 24 years old and have had one since I was 11. They have been nothing but pain and torture for me. My cycles were never 5 to 7 days, more like they were gone for 5 to 7 days. They were always very heavy and I had the worst cramps.
When I got married and decided to have children, I tried for five-and-a-half years to get pregnant, always hoping each month, and always finding out "not this time."
I don't feel that having a period makes me a woman, or that it is a natural experience. There is nothing normal about bleeding for a week straight every month. Anything else that did that would be dead. :)
Sign me up for the Pill. PLEASE!!!!
January 2001
Honestly, I don't know. I'd like to, but I have no crystal ball to tell me what the after-effects might do to my body. I sure wish I could stop, though.
I've always prided myself on my intellect and independence. I am firmly committed to childless-by-choice/overpopulation issues (but I am not one of those mean-spirited, hateful alt.support.child-free folk; don't associate me with them). Ergo, I really don't have any need for a reproductive system at all, let alone one that menstruates. Also, I have to disagree with the camp within feminism that calls it "moontime" and argues its sacredness. I don't hate my body or my womanhood just because I'd rather not hemorrhage from the genitals, thanks. I also hate feeling out-of-control, going from rational and level-headed to gobbling Snickers and Doritos by the pound while weeping along to Tori Amos CDs. Why is it that I have to love that painful, unhealthy, uncomfortable state in order to love myself and my body? That's crazy. If being weepy and crampy and breeding babies is what being a woman is all about, then make me an androgyne!
December 2000
I'm quite undecided. I am a seventeen year old woman from Chicago. I had my first period at 10. I had ALWAYS hated getting my period. It always came in a bad time and I was always in severe pain. I now feel that getting my period means I am healthy and not pregnant. Then again, I would MOST DEFINITELY SHORTEN the duration of my monthly friend. The money aspect: tampons cost HOW MUCH ??!!, the inconvenience, and the pain would be significantly changed for the better!
Thanks a lot!
December 2000
As I approach the age 26, I know thoughts and perceptions change, as do those of anyone who gets older.
First of all, I want to thank you for your site, especially these pages. [You're welcome!]
Recently, I switched health insurance companies, and I had to decide whether to pay for Depo out of my own pocket, or go with the pills that my insurance pays for and hopefully find one that is right and healthy for me.
For the meantime, I chose to continue with Depo. My decision wasn't based as much upon dealing with a period again as much as it was upon knowing what is safe for me. My husband wants to have a child now, but we both have health issues that we have to deal with. Mine right now is two abnormal pap smears in the last year. As informative as your site has become, can you provide some links to that issue, if you don't/can't cover it yourself? That would be really appreciated. [I'll try. Can anyone suggest some?]
Anyway, I enjoyed visiting your site again and reading the most recent responses to your "Would you stop menstruating?" question. Thought-provoking as they are, they have elicited some responses from me:
The first is in regards to the 16-year-old Brazilian who almost became anorectic. She observed that an irregular period is a sign of bad health.
Good for her! I guess that in most cases it is, but what about us that have never had a regular period? I can honestly tell you that stress or excessive weight gain/loss have not been the reasons for mine.
A Belgian and another lady mentioned the lack of libido (sex-drive) due to the pill. That does not surprise me. Depo, for me, is the same way.
In my case, it is probably good. Actually, I have a husband or significant other that I care very much about, and he does a good job of rectifying this situation.
Polycystic ovarian syndrome. Do you have more information? [Only this site.]
A 19-year-old claims birth control is not good for a young age? Is having children when you're not ready for them good for a young age?
The other comment that I noticed was that menstruation causes cancer.
Doesn't everything else cause cancer as well? Smoking. Drinking. Eating the right foods. Eating the wrong foods. Even birth control supposedly causes cancer.
I admire the woman that looks at menstruation as a wonderful, beautiful thing. Not only teenagers, but also women who have experienced it for decades. It is a totally natural process.
But for those of us who can't/won't do it, that doesn't make us unfeminine. We have valid reasons for not wanting to menstruate right now. My husband has health problems that he wants to make sure aren't hereditary, and I have health problems that make me wonder if I can even have more kids.
Keep us in your thoughts and prayers.
And thank you again for this site.
January 2001
Every time I have my period I hate everybody. I can't stand them! I feel sick and I can't stand to be touched!
If I was to no longer have my periods I would be 100 times better!
I find the whole "event" disgusting and it could even take me up to five hours to be able to insert a tampon. I tried towels once but just the thought of collecting blood in my knickers makes me want to chuck!
December 2000
Most definitely, I hate periods. I am a lesbian, with no intentions of ever having children. Periods make my life a misery and have for the past 20 years.
[She later added this:]
I am Australian and I worked for many years in an all-male maximum security prison. One day I was pulling a handkerchief out of my pocket and a tampon fell out and rolled across the floor. There were several male officers present, but no one had seen what had happened. So I very discreetly walked over to the tampon and very quickly bobbed down and picked it up. Congratulating myself on my discretion that my fellow officers had not seen the offending article, I turned around to see about 20 prisoners watching me intently with huge grins on their faces which turned to peals of laughter as my face turned bright red. [This reminds me of an ad for the obsolete Pursettes tampons.]
December 2000
Having to have a hysterectony at the age of 45 was one of the best things to happen in my life. I wish it would have happened when I was 20.
I was a mental mess for two weeks out of each month because of those darn hormones. I also had very heavy periods, causing that "Oh, no! Could I be leaking?" syndrome. I am very glad it's gone for good.
I am now 54 and have gone through menopause without any symptoms or problems.
December 2000
I am an 18-year-old woman, and I would give up my monthly hell in a second.
When I do eventually go on the Pill, I will most definitely take the opportunity to skip my periods. Why? Menstruating is an unnecessary thing in today's society. We all do our utmost to disguise and hide the fact that we're menstruating, why not stop it altogether? It has done nothing for me but cause me pain and irritation. I detest the fact that one week out of every month is dominated by the fact that I'm bleeding and in pain. I hate that it comes at unwelcome times and limits my activities. Menstruating does not make me feel feminine, and anyone who thinks it does must have some serious insecurities regarding their femininity.
My periods are only slightly regular; I only ever have a vague idea of when it might come. I usually know the week it will come, but the exact day remains a mystery, regardless of how much counting I do. The result is a week wasted checking for my period obsessively, and the additional waste of pads used in anticipation of the flow. If I could eliminate that stress, I would be the happiest woman in the world.
I guess this is really a personal decision, but I honestly can't imagine how anyone could enjoy menstruating. My only guess is that they really have no idea of what it is to have a truly heavy, painful period (even if they say they have them themselves, I can't BELIEVE anyone would happily go through what I do every month; that's pure masochism). In my opinion, preventing a period is no worse than preventing a pregnancy...so sign me up!
December 2000
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