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خرید vpn خرید وی پی ان کریو خرید kerio خرید pptp خرید فیلترشکن cisco خرید ikev2
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almost forgot! here are two articles worth a read:
http://www.civilwarmed.org/menstruating/
http://susannaives.com/wordpress/2015/09/tidbits-on-mid-victorian-era-menstrual-hygiene/
also there was one interview with Therese ONeill who wrote "Unmentionable", but I can't seem to find it!
As far as Taboo goes it still was until the 1960's really. My mother told me how most of the time you had to ask the pharmacist for sanitary pads and even then they used to put brown paper wrap on the packages so no one would see what it was you bought.
http://www.mum.org/museum.htm
for all it's worth a tidbit of information on clothing history: every peasant woman had several shirts and underskirts, at least one of them dyed red, black or striped red-black for their periods. no mentioning of belts or pads, for same reason – it just was not talked about. girls were told what it is by their mothers when it happened. so, as mentioned, if the flow was not heavy, they just let it flow. but just careful to not stain their best white underwear. for everyday wear off-white mostly – natural flax colour. and some archeology findings hint that rags were used, supposedly with strings – in same form as those ladies' belts. also i have heard about peat moss used as stuffing for those rags or even quasi-tampons – not stupid idea at all, it has desinfectant effect.
My mom NEVER discussed that "time of the month" when I first got it in 1960 at age 10. I freaked out because I thought I cut myself climbing over a fence. When she found me crying all bloody in the bathroom, she simply said, "this is what u have to do from now on" without explaining what was happening to me. First , you take an old t-shirt or an old towel and you cut it into strips, then you fold them over insert the safety pin to the front of your panty and pin the back to the back of your panty. When it gets bloody and you have to change, you put on another strip. After that you first rinse the used rag in cold water in order to remove most of the blood then in hot water and you wash the rag and hang it and dry it and put it away until you need to use it again. She also told me to keep a separate drawer of Rags just for this time of the month. I had no clue as to what was going on only that she said I will be doing this for the rest of my life. So fast forward to 1969 and I am now 18 and in my first year college. My roommates were playing cards when I discovered that I had no more rags in my drawer. So I asked one of my friends to lend me something for that time. And she said sure it's in the bathroom. When I went to the bathroom I saw a purple box and it had the word Kotex on it and inside were these pads really nice and soft. After examining it I realized I can put this on my panty and I was amazed. I looked at the box and there were 12 of them and they were only about a dollar fifty at the time. When I came out of the bathroom my three roommates we're still playing cards and I said to her very excitedly thank you so much for the pad. Then I went on to ask where did you get that box? And she said in the store. And I said really? They come in a box in the store? To which she said yes you can buy them in the store. And I said what a great invention that Mr Kotex must be very very rich. all of a sudden all three roommates looked at me as if I was crazy. And they asked what the hell have you been putting up there all these years. When I told them about the rags and especially washing them they went into fits of laughter. Apparently I had an older mom and her mom was raised in the 1800's she was very elderly. And this is how she said it was taken care of in her day. I am now 69 and that is such a vivid story with me that I made it a point to explain this to my daughters and my granddaughters so that they do not walk around wondering what to do or what is happening.
I have heard a story about my distant ancestor close to that time that used rags. That’s what women used back then and it has been used for many years. Even without underwear or undergarments, you could use rags to create your own panties and pin it. Also, tampons were around back in the day as well. It would’ve been wool that was wrapped and placed in your vagina to soak up the blood. Tampons were around since before the birth of Christ. Same with rags. You can find historical records of women using tampons or rags for their period cycles in history. Though, how those were made were different. It wasn’t until the 20th century that rags became pads and periods were more knowledgeable among men.
So my grandmother was born in the 50s and was a poor Hispanic woman who worked in the fields. I don't know what she did when she first got her period but she had a heavy flow and my mother told me that she remembers my grandmother using a whole tshirt as a sorta pad and that it would still get soaked through.
When you said ancestors you meant descendants.
Not me! LOL l
I believe they dealt with periods just the way with babies feces since there were no pampers. So I guess the just used cloth and washed it every time. Since people back then weren’t addicted to various facilities that make our lives tremendously easier it was no big deal as it seems to us. And they often had at least one maid and the pesants liked being employed. Like really I read 18-19th century books about villagers and they admired hard work and even modern country folk do.
Instant sub. Really got into menstruation research a while ago! And this vid is so great!!!
Cherochee hair duh, that and calling it the curse.
My mom was 1 of 14 kids and when she started her period it scared her to death. She said she thought she was dying if cancer. Her mom had mental problems and when she found out she said some verbally abusive things to her and gave her some squares of denim cut out of worn out overalls to soak up the blood. She had to sneak around when all the boys were gone and wash them in the creek. She had 2 younger sisters and made sure they knew all about periods when they started. My mom was older and working when her sisters started their periods so she would buy them pads. I was 10 when I started and my Mom had told me all about it si I was prepared and had a supply of pads. When I was having my period, I had to keep a brown paper bag in my closet and take my used pads out of the bathroom with me and put them in the bag so my brothers wouldnt know. One time I forgot to flush the toilet after peeing and my younger brother saw it and asked my mom what it was. I got a long lecture about being more careful, that my brothers should never know I was bleeding.
Ooof. Period talk gives me bad flashbacks of when I was a kid. Most of the time my grandma would refuse to buy me pads because she said I used too many so I'd use pieces of old shirts instead. I didn't know back then that polyester sucks at soaking up anything & I had a lot of accidents. A lot of ladies in history probably dealt with similar or worse stuff lmao
Then pay with your blood!
On the hole male thing it was my grandfather's that helped me with my period my granda on my father's side introduced me to pads and on my mother's side he introduced my to tampons. As a girl I couldn't figure out why the women in my family wouldn't talk to me about it.
My grandmother who was born around 1910 said, “don’t bathe or swim that week because that will make you cramp more intensely!”
For some woman they could stop their periods or make them lighter by continuing to keep making milk after child birth. The fainting couches were used by women who were anemic from period blood loss or miscarriage. Miscarriage was common due to bone laced up corsets. Those corsets were used to prevent the fetus from growing and cause miscarriage. All this caused confusion as to what was going on.
They just used rags which were washed through and reused…it's not rocket science! 😖🙄
The thing about women being told to not do anything on their periods 100% sounds like a man just thinking "Bleeding for a week sounds really bad and I wouldn't want to do anything, so I guess women probably shouldn't".
"You have to put pressure on the wound inside or it will never stop!"
Very interesting! Please can you make a video about "romantic friends"? Such an interesting topic. It was about girls falling in love with each other and as far as I know it was not frowned upon at all.
Our grandmother made her girls use felt to soak up the blood and by the 40's and 50's they used Hydrogen Peroxide to lift the blood out of the material for easy cleaning. Girl's gotta do, what a girl's gotta do!!
On Vanuatu they used to send the girls and women away to a different camp during theirs
Come from Franko, just wanna say that the commercial sales of toilet paper only started from 1920s
How in the hell did I get here?
What of the "red petticoat"? Sea sponges?
I could see the whole being indisposed thing, basically go to your room if a man knew you had your period because they didn't know what to do about it!
Journals of women settlers of the western US sometimes had mention of symptoms. There was a code, depending on their background or ethnicity.
Ugh, I remember using a pad with a belt even in 1979. No fun.
Almost like what soviet women had to do up until early 80-s. There were no women pads or tampons in stores at all.