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Feminism: Sex & gender discussions

This article on Freebleeding is really interesting

156 replies

Mignonette · 28/01/2014 13:05

Freebleeding - why is this taboo when images of violence, sex and repression are not?

Or should we see menstruation as nothing more than a process of excretion and attach no special significance to it?

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Custardo · 28/01/2014 13:07

I see it as just a bodily function

but I wouldn't not wear any sanitary products in the same way as I wouldn't walk around with shit on my skirt or piss down my leg

the whole thing is ridiculous.

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NigellasDealer · 28/01/2014 13:10

gross - plus what custardo said

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WildThong · 28/01/2014 13:12

Oh boak - personal standards!

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greenhill · 28/01/2014 13:17

There used to be articles about this in Spare Rib, 20 odd years ago, trying to do away with the taboo of bleeding; it's interesting to see it being talked of again.

The only person I knew personally that deliberately practiced it had a drug problem and untreated MH issues.

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sleepyhead · 28/01/2014 13:23

I don't think if someone accidentally leaks during their period and has visible blood on their skirt (for example) that it should be any more taboo or shameful than if they cut their finger and get blood on their clothes that way, and most definitely it is shameful and taboo.

However... menstrual blood, like all blood, stains clothing. I don't want to get it on my clothes because I have to wash them. I don't want to sit in it because it would feel soggy and unpleasant. I think it's antisocial to get blood (any blood) on furniture that other people have to sit on, or things that other people have to touch, for both staining and infection reasons. So, that's a no to freebleeding from me.

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Salbertina · 28/01/2014 13:25

Definitely should be totally normalised and not shameful, hidden etc. however, i am v grateful to be able to afford the comfort & convenience of sanpro! In my country 25% of teenage girls skip 1 week of a school EACH month due to the shameful (in every way) lack of affordable pads, tampons etc. As a result, many many more girls fail to pass high school and end up working as a maid for life. It really can be that important! Angry

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LoveAndDeath · 28/01/2014 13:31

Agree with custy. It's not taboo. If I get a cut, I put a plaster on. If you menstruate you put something in place to catch the blood. Blood is messy and it stains. I personally couldn't afford to replace all my knickers, skirts and trousers if they got stained.

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paulapantsdown · 28/01/2014 13:33

Well it might all be very well for the groovy teenage hipster skateboarding feminists quoted in the article, but not so practical for the menopausal mother of two.

I can't imagine strolling around tesco dropping great clots in the dairy aisle.

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Salbertina · 28/01/2014 13:34

By which i mean this concept strikes me as a Western indulgence to want to let it all flow out (as it were).

Far more useful would be to campaign for cheaper sanpro everywhere esp in the developing world bet also in the UK where, shockingly, it's a "luxury item" and therefore got VAT.

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Mignonette · 28/01/2014 13:37

I agree with Sleepys point that menstrual leakage should be no more shameful than bleeding from anywhere else but fear we are a long way from being personally comfortable with it. I would be mortified and why? I don't know.

It is good to see a new generation discussing this too. Maybe we haven't changed much in this respect or moved on but the discussion may not be new to us but it is to younger men and women.

There was a fantastic article written about how the access to sanitary protection is directly linked to school attendance on developing countries. Does anyone have a link? I think the author wrote a recent book on travel on a huge container ship recently published.

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Mignonette · 28/01/2014 13:39

And yes yes to 'Western indulgence' although the underlying values aren't so indulgent.

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MissMilbanke · 28/01/2014 13:39

Not for me either !

I watched a programme a couple of years ago about women from the UK (?) who went to live with tribes in different remote parts of the world.

I remember one woman commenting (in Africa it might have been ) about how normal it was to 'free bleed' and how shocked she was to see women getting up from their seat and not batting an eyelid about leaving some blood behind, and the next person just sitting in it.

Like I said, not for me, but if thats the culture you grow up in, so be it...

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Salbertina · 28/01/2014 13:48

But Miss- that same culture, certainly in S Africa is NOT tolerant of this in school girls, at school, on the bus etc. seen with my own eyes! Might have worked a generation or 2 ago but severe disadvantage to be menstruating in those circs if you want am education.

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stickysausages · 28/01/2014 13:55

Yuck. Seriously, why? We are lucky to not have to do this, unlike women in south africa etc, who find it degrading & humiliating.

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MissMilbanke · 28/01/2014 13:59

I hold my hands up, i can't remember exactly where it was in Africa, but it was certainly not South Africa.

More of a very primitive, remote tribe.

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Mishmashfamily · 28/01/2014 14:00

Why is it still 'embarrassing' to a lot of women ? Me included! I still feel conscious of the fact I'm clutching tampons when I'm in a line full of men at the till. Blush

Why has it been ingrained that your monthlys should be kept secretive , I remember my sm mouthing the word to my neighbour when I was a teenager. Angry

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BertieBottsJustGotMarried · 28/01/2014 14:08

I don't think it is the same as other bleeding, though. If you are bleeding due to a cut or injury it generally can't be predicted in advance and of course you try to stop the blood because it would be dangerous to lose too much of it. People don't generally get angry about someone getting blood on their clothes, furniture etc because it's understood that they haven't hurt themselves on purpose! However, they might privately be annoyed or upset because it is difficult to get blood stains out of most soft fabrics and furnishings.

With menstruation you can definitely predict it in advance and hence take steps to prevent it staining fabrics etc. It isn't important to keep it in like with blood from an injury, it is a waste product. That part, the prevention etc, shouldn't be a taboo and I don't think it is for most of the younger generation, although things may start to go backwards when we have ridiculous ads showing how "discreet" their san pro is or how well it's disguised as a sweet Confused or how it's scented to mask the terrible odour - that's damaging IMO and it should be no big deal.

Personally I am a big fan of the mooncup, to me, it's like having a bladder for your womb. I can empty it when it is convenient to me. Why didn't we evolve with one?? Proof God was a man Grin

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stickysausages · 28/01/2014 14:08

Surely it's a hygiene risk though? Not to mention ruining clothing, bedding, furniture... fine if we dressed in rags & slept on hay.....

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stickysausages · 28/01/2014 14:12

I had horrendous heavy periods, with 'flooding' ... No predictability at all

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Alibabaandthe40nappies · 28/01/2014 14:12

I know someone who did/does this - she has terrible MH problems that she refuses to accept treatment for.

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BuffytheReasonableFeminist · 28/01/2014 14:12

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

stickysausages · 28/01/2014 14:15

I would probably presume mental health issues were at play too Ali

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stickysausages · 28/01/2014 14:16

And I disagree that sanpro shouldn't be 'discreet' etc, as above... it allows us to carry on worth our lives, in comfort. Gone are the days of sending us away so we didn't sour the milk..

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TheFabulousIdiot · 28/01/2014 14:18

I deep down believe I have a right to walk about bleeding on the floor, given that the alternative is to spend money to spare other people the discomfort of seeing me. However, I wouldn't actually put this into practice.

It's something I used to think about doing when I was a teen to fight the injustice of having to plug or pad it at my own expense.

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TheWanderingUterus · 28/01/2014 14:20

Free bleeding is mentioned in a book about the !Kung Tribe ( the exclamation mark should be there) about a woman called Nisa. They also have to go out and birth alone in silence in the wilderness. It's a very interesting book but forgive me for preferring to keep myself and my clothes clean and my babies delivered with support and yelling.

However I do agree that the menstrual taboos are ridiculous and a throwback to archaic patriarchal ideas. There is no reason why menstrual blood should be treated as any different from other bodily fluids.

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