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Cups, lingerie and home-made pads: what are the reusable options for managing your period?

With concerns over cost, environmental and health concerns, some women are seeking out solutions beyond pads and tampons. And these products are carving out a market beyond "earth mothers".

Seamless pattern with feminine hygiene products.

Pads and tampons are not the only choices. Source: iStockphoto

The multi-million dollar feminine hygiene market is dominated by two products: pads and tampons. Most women will use one of the two – – for reasons including ease of purchase, convenience, comfort, discrete packaging, disposability and, of course, advertising.

Pads and tampons, however, are not the only choices.

While you can at one end of the spectrum or at the other, in this article I focus on those of us electing to manage the we lose each each month.

Be it because of concerns over , , , or , some menstruators seek solutions outside of the Kotex box. These are those choices.

Absorption approaches

Tampons and pads work by absorbing blood. These products are generally single usage and afterwards are discarded and replaced with a new product.

“Rags” hasn’t always been a crude euphemism for menstruation; it references a time when cloth was used, bled on, and then washed and used again.

Wealth in the West, and the clout of the feminine hygiene industry however, has meant that today most of us won’t consider reusable options. But such products are readily available and seek to overcome many of the problems created by disposables.

In Australia, companies such as , and sell cloth pads that can be reused. Less like the rags of old, reusable pads resemble the winged and form-fitting supermarket versions – often boasting press studs to secure them to your underwear crotch – and are designed to be washed and reworn.

Such pads are marketed to eco-conscious consumers who like not having to buy new products every month from big companies, who prefer non-bleached materials, who appreciate the comfort of natural fabrics and who are, perhaps, drawn to the whimsy: if you’ve ever yearned to bleed on , rest assured you now can. And Etsy will also be more than glad to offer you a range of festive designs featuring , , and pretty much anything else you’ve ever craved to drip, clot and smear over.

Equally, if you’re keen to break out the sewing machine, . Ditto those who want to .

For those seeking non-pad absorption methods, welcome to the world of menstrual lingerie. Brands like and sell absorbent underwear that can be worn without any additional protection: Thinx, for example, claims that some of their knickers can hold up to two tampons’ worth of blood.

Reviews caution that you don’t want to be a heavy bleeder in such garments, but then if you are, they can serve as a backup if you’re prone to bleeding through your other protection.

If internal products are your preference, perhaps resuable tampons should be on your radar. Less common than washable pads, nonetheless, flannel ones – and crocheted ones for those who don’t harbour the same . For the crafty you too can .
Sea sponges are also a product in this category. When Elaine on TV sitcom Seinfeld debated a man’s she was talking about a , but their use for blood absorption is emerging as a niche, albeit not (think concerns about grit and disintegration inside the vagina).

While there are price and planet reasons for considering resuables, there are also some notable downsides.

To reuse any kind of feminine hygiene product you have to wash it. If you’ve ever stained your sheets, clothes, or the carpet, you’ll be well aware that the scarlet stuff is a bastard to remove. If you’re bleeding away from your laundry, you’ll also need to think about transporting your blood-soaked pads or tampons back to your bucket, before soaking, washing and drying them.

Advertising’s heavy-handed messages about hygiene and discretion help explain our disproportionate reliance on brand-name pads and tampons, but convenience is just as potent a factor.

Collection choices

Menstrual cups – an option increasingly available in bricks and mortar stores and also one – are a menstruation management premised on the collection of blood.

Brands like , , and offer cups made from silicone, rubber or latex which get inserted into the vagina using fingers and your . Once inside, they unfurl to collect blood and then later get removed, emptied and then washed (or, at least wiped) and reinserted.

While there’s no soaking or pegging products out on the washing line, menstrual cups have some of the same cons as tampons: some users report difficultly inserting them; others are reluctant to have so much contact with their own bleeding vaginas.

Equally, while you may not have to soak your cup, you’re certainly going to have to sterilise it at the end of each cycle. (For those wanting to skip this step, and offer disposable versions).

And if you’re choosing cups because of the real but fears of toxic shock syndrome, you’ll want to make sure that your hands are pristine before fiddling about with insertion.

Some menstruators will spend 30-ish years using the same products they were introduced to at menarche; commonly whatever their mother, sister or friend handed them at that moment of crotch calamity.

We’re also, apparently, a lot, sticking with the names we’re familiar with. The leakage and odour fears have meant that we commonly need a very good reason to deviate from the methods we’ve successfully used to stem the crimson tide.
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That said, for some women, economics, the environment and the eschewing of might prove such a reason.

This article was originally published on . Read the .


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6 min read
Published 14 November 2017 11:57am
Updated 14 November 2017 2:17pm
By Lauren Rosewarne
Source: The Conversation


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