How Did Victorian Women Deal With Their Periods?

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • who's watching this while on their period 🙋
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    Gymnopedie No. 1 Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
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Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  •  4 года назад +2635

    almost forgot! here are two articles worth a read:
    www.civilwarmed.org/menstruating/
    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!

    • @TheNinjaInConverse
      @TheNinjaInConverse 4 года назад +6

      Definitely read this *Civil Warmed*

    • @kaitycameleonshea8067
      @kaitycameleonshea8067 4 года назад +43

      I asked yy grandmother ; who was born in 1930 , what she did for her periods , and she actually did use a belt that had clips where she would clip on thick strips of cloth . She would also change it a couple of time through out the day. And then later on I'm the 50s and 60s she started using pads when they came out

    • @mommyheart9628
      @mommyheart9628 4 года назад +27

      My grandmother also did this. When I started my periods she asked my aunt if had bought me a sanitary belt lol. My aunt told her pads stuck to you underwear now.

    • @imadogwoof9628
      @imadogwoof9628 4 года назад +48

      Yeah this is pretty accurate I got my period for the first time while staying with my great grandma who was like in her 90s /born in 1917 when telling her I got my first period she took me to a store and wandered around flagging down staff asking for starter belts who all looked at this strange little old women like she was insane an she then elaborated that when she was a child that’s what she was told to use an given her mother had used one etc

    • @isabelleblanchet3694
      @isabelleblanchet3694 4 года назад +19

      This menstrual apron is "interesting" www.mum.org/InsideMUM4.htm

  • @jeannetterosa5852
    @jeannetterosa5852 4 года назад +21010

    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.

    • @momcompickmeupimscared8635
      @momcompickmeupimscared8635 4 года назад +1248

      So until u were 19 u never saw the pads in a store ?

    • @jenniferh.k.7123
      @jenniferh.k.7123 4 года назад +1669

      What an interesting story! I am glad that I live today and can open talk about these topics to my children.

    • @brandielee7971
      @brandielee7971 4 года назад +494

      What an awesome story!

    • @fancydeer
      @fancydeer 4 года назад +2945

      @@momcompickmeupimscared8635 if she did it probably never clicked what it was for since she hadn't heard the word "menstrual" or "period" or had any education about what was happening. It's not like pads/tampons say "This is for your BLOODY VAGAINA!" on the package or have an obvious indication what they're for if you don't already KNOW. And ads for them always use that stupid blue liquid to demonstrate how absorbent they are and talk about flow and stuff, they don't just discuss periods and make it obvious.

    • @ManiacalViolet
      @ManiacalViolet 4 года назад +1642

      My mother was born in 1945 and got her period in 1962 at 17. She said that there was zero preparation for this in any way and she was so naive she sat in the school bathroom stall crying for a long time, decided she was dying, and went to her school nurse saying that she thought she was dying.

  • @tinkerbellys
    @tinkerbellys 3 года назад +2581

    My grandma grew up in an orphanage in the 30s, and she said when she got her period she was so scared, because she had no idea what was happening. Most of the nuns were very mean as she told me.. so when it was brought to a nun’s attention, she said “this is going to happen to you every month for a week, here is your cloth you use, you must wash it and take care of it”. So my grandma went to all her siblings, boys *and* girls, and said “you guys are going to bleed between your legs like me every month!!” And freaked them all out 🤣 she really had the best stories!

    • @ReinaElizondo
      @ReinaElizondo 3 года назад +41

      😂

    • @cocola4373
      @cocola4373 3 года назад +43

      Gosh-Lol 😂😂

    • @RedRoseSeptember22
      @RedRoseSeptember22 3 года назад +95

      My mom thought she was dying when she got her first period lol XD

    • @ikeepscreamingbutgodwontan3132
      @ikeepscreamingbutgodwontan3132 3 года назад +52

      I heard when people of old times had periods the usually had a feeling they were gonna die

    • @sonofhibbs4425
      @sonofhibbs4425 3 года назад +31

      Your comment is why I feel so thankful for internet comments sections. 😄😊

  • @n.j.9282
    @n.j.9282 4 года назад +16079

    ‘Twelve months. Also known as . . . A year.’
    me when i need to increase my word count on an essay

    • @thcu
      @thcu 4 года назад +78

      lol same

    • @realdeal7074
      @realdeal7074 4 года назад +27

      Haha

    • @particles_6765
      @particles_6765 4 года назад +51

      But twelve months and a year both have two words... So technically I doesn't increase de number of words. But if you're talking about letters than you'd be right

    • @munzarinkhan804
      @munzarinkhan804 4 года назад +32

      In my case it's often the opposite. I write too much.😂😂😂😂

    • @richmcgee434
      @richmcgee434 4 года назад +220

      Ah, you're not even trying. "Twelve months. Also known as...a year. One almost-complete revolution of the world around its sun. Three hundred and sixty five (and some change) days whirling by. Four seasons marching to the past. A lifetime of anticipation to a child, a half-forgotten eyeblink to an old man. This...this is what makes a year!" Milking it like a dairy farmer, folks.

  • @tinycrimester
    @tinycrimester 4 года назад +6959

    victorian doctor: women on their period should just lay on a sofa and wait for it to be over.
    working class woman: what's a sofa tho?

    • @pricklypear7516
      @pricklypear7516 4 года назад +63

      The "status" implied by having an "invalid" female in one's household (indicating that the family was rich enough to afford a non-productive woman) has been grossly exaggerated. I generally enjoy the historical accuracy of Karolina's videos, but she just really missed the boat here. To say that "Victorian doctors didn't know what was going on" is just absurd.

    • @atiajanssens5654
      @atiajanssens5654 3 года назад +191

      @@pricklypear7516 i think she doesn't mean that they were surprised by it but more that they didn't know the internal process and how everything is connected to each other. So for example that an irregular period might indicate problems with fertility. They knew where the blood was coming from and had a vague sense of all the processes being connected to each other, but didn't understand why exactly.

    • @inkylace7045
      @inkylace7045 3 года назад +7

      yeah

    • @debbieharriman9146
      @debbieharriman9146 3 года назад +6

      Yeah so there's nothing wrong with not working the husband cared for them. And there's nothing wrong with laying in bed till it was over .

    • @kellyalves756
      @kellyalves756 3 года назад +52

      @@debbieharriman9146 You’re not getting it.
      “Dear Mister Box Factory Foreman, I have my period. I cannot work today as my doctor has advised me to lay on a... sofa? for three days.”
      “Great. You’re fired just for asking. Bruce! Grab another job seeker from the stoop!”

  • @MirnaXavierG
    @MirnaXavierG 4 года назад +6792

    I cant believe she passed the opportunity of calling this video PERIOD DRAMA PERIOD DRAMA

  • @betsysmith9023
    @betsysmith9023 4 года назад +4765

    I’m 70. My mom told me she used homemade pads, made of strips of cloth, thick for heavy days and thinner for light days, which women washed and reused. She stored the soiled pads in a wooden box until the period was over then wash them in the creek when the men were gone. If the period was heavy, the women put thin strips of wood bark in the middle of the pad to soak the flow. On heavy days, they sometimes used the phrase, “ under the weather” and kept to their room. Men never questioned them, just accepted their word as gentlemen should. Beats spending the time in a menstruation hut.

    • @auradragonfly
      @auradragonfly 4 года назад +218

      Haha don't understand why you had to hide it from a man but then again it was long time ago. My hubby actually buys me pads.

    • @realdeal7074
      @realdeal7074 4 года назад +155

      😯😯 would that not smell keeping the used ones like that??

    • @marissalorion1244
      @marissalorion1244 4 года назад +42

      So interesting, thank you for sharing!

    • @TexasPelican
      @TexasPelican 4 года назад +240

      Another common euphemism was "she has a headache and needs to lie down" which everybody knew what that meant.

    • @staceykersting705
      @staceykersting705 4 года назад +46

      @@auradragonfly Well,ya...of course he does. That said, I'm 'old fashioned' enough not to go into details of that or any bump, blister or boil at the dinner table, or in front of guests. There's a time n place for everything, and thank god bathrooms have doors!

  • @arnamckee6366
    @arnamckee6366 4 года назад +9450

    My grandma passed when my mom was 7 years old. One of her older brother stepped up and showed her how to cut a sheet. Fold it and pin it to her underwear.. God Bless his soul..Were talking 1930s

    • @titanic157
      @titanic157 4 года назад +703

      That's stepping up! Awesome!

    • @serpentgoat6875
      @serpentgoat6875 4 года назад +1806

      That's the manlyest thing a male could ever do.

    • @arnamckee6366
      @arnamckee6366 4 года назад +916

      @@nobodyasked2000 His name was Clifford.. Grew up to be a brilliant man.. Patented several pieces of equipment to help the men in the coal mines...

    • @arnamckee6366
      @arnamckee6366 4 года назад +102

      @@nobodyasked2000 TY

    • @antoniamills3000
      @antoniamills3000 4 года назад +112

      Lovely brother 💖

  • @chrisf1361
    @chrisf1361 4 года назад +2652

    I love how the comment section feels like transcriptions of oral history. It makes me wish I was able to talk to my grandparents about their lives.

    • @user-qq2ck9zk3r
      @user-qq2ck9zk3r 4 года назад +4

      +++++

    • @kyliepechler
      @kyliepechler 3 года назад +34

      Yes! It is so fascinating to discover the magnitude of the many different experiences other people/families have had and then passed down verbally.

    • @Martina-Kosicanka
      @Martina-Kosicanka 3 года назад +7

      Lovely comment

    • @acajudi100
      @acajudi100 3 года назад +1

      The school nurse had pads, and our schools had showers.

    • @ResaChiic
      @ResaChiic 2 года назад

      I wonder if there's a way to archive it or if there is already an archive of similar stories.

  • @chizzieshark
    @chizzieshark 4 года назад +4566

    One might say, women back then lived through real period dramas.
    You're welcome.

  • @irinakl441
    @irinakl441 4 года назад +2811

    Ok, here is my humble contribution to the subject. My mother in law told me once, that when she got her first period, her grandma (who was born in 1880s') was the one to guide her through. She told her, that when she got her period growing up in the mediterranian area, they used sea sponges wrapped in old cloth as young girls and sea sponges without wrapping as tampons after they got married. She said that the sponges were easy to clean and very absorbing. And if you had dripping blood, you just had to rely on the long dark skirt to cover it up. You could also get the sponges yourself, if you were a good swimmer and you were allowed to wonder around by yourself.

    • @Elietaisfairy
      @Elietaisfairy 4 года назад +189

      Sponges are still used. Really environmentally nice + some people really enjoy it. I personally prefer using a menstrual cup

    • @hannahdivic28
      @hannahdivic28 4 года назад +61

      Wow I’ve never heard of that how resourceful!

    • @basketofavocados926
      @basketofavocados926 4 года назад +65

      In Middle Ages women used moss🌛

    • @luaraujo3416
      @luaraujo3416 4 года назад +61

      I remember reading this as a kid, on a "witchcraft" book (that was mostly a book about popular medicine and other useful tips).

    • @crismonmoon332
      @crismonmoon332 4 года назад +8

      L Araújo what book was it ?

  • @bakachan6541
    @bakachan6541 4 года назад +1969

    I'm Italian. In Italy, it is really a big deal. When I first had my period, my mom called all the female relatives she knew as if it was a big event. Some of them even gave me pocket money lol.

    • @user-th2xz7gy3y
      @user-th2xz7gy3y 4 года назад +88

      Same here. My mom told the female relatives that I because a lady

    • @karentucker2161
      @karentucker2161 4 года назад +40

      That sounds like my mom, but she's not Italian.

    • @saritaw4739
      @saritaw4739 4 года назад +152

      Jewish moms do the same! I got more of Han 20 phone calls ( grandmas, aunts, neighbors, friends of friends etc) congratulating me for becoming a lady, and the speech about the responsibility of it, pregnancy etc! Oy!

    • @realdeal7074
      @realdeal7074 4 года назад +2

      Haha

    • @nathaliaquagliato5789
      @nathaliaquagliato5789 4 года назад +249

      I'm a Italian descendent in Brazil. Maybe it explains the flowers and cards and kisses and hugs I got from pretty much all my female relatives on my first period. Some of them told me "to be careful, because I could get pregnant now" and all I could think was "bitch, I'm 10 years old, all I want is to go buy my InuYasha manga, you think I'm fucking around or what to say something like that?"

  • @hopelessromantic8682
    @hopelessromantic8682 3 года назад +1139

    I asked my 91 year old client whom I was caring for how she dealt with her period she said “Honey I was pregnant from the time I was 16 to the time I went through menopause so I don’t even remember.” 😂

  • @galaxymew5138
    @galaxymew5138 4 года назад +4843

    Women: * has period *
    Some guy in the 18th/19th century: *_THIS IS A DISCOVERY_*

    • @cloudsofsunset7323
      @cloudsofsunset7323 4 года назад +115

      Galaxy Mew THE NEW AMERICA IN MY WIFE’S CAVE

    • @catherineofaragon6296
      @catherineofaragon6296 4 года назад +69

      My ex: *THIS ISNT A SON*

    • @mariareynolds6622
      @mariareynolds6622 4 года назад +13

      More like 1200 b.c.

    • @zxb995511
      @zxb995511 4 года назад +36

      Its not much of a discovery, if you read the Bible, in Leviticus (written maybe 3000 years ago?) it mentions some hygiene measures women should take when its that time of the month....so its knowledge that has been known for a long time....people back in the 19th century just didn't read much I suppose.

    • @ChildOfAshes1
      @ChildOfAshes1 4 года назад +77

      @@zxb995511 Pretty sure you missed the sarcasm firstly lol and The whole point is that this has been around since there were female humans walking the earth, yet men to this day even in 2020 are painfully uneducated about it. And back the when they started to figure out more information about women's health they have "discovered" oh this ISN'T a disease or something of the sort after all. Well yeah, no shit...Primordial women have known this for millennia, but they weren't listening.

  • @noxlumen2711
    @noxlumen2711 4 года назад +3016

    I'm SOOOO glad this wasn't one more historian telling me "We cant document menstruation therefor women were all too radically malnourished to menstruate yet magically nourished enough to birth and nurse 9 babies because science!"

    • @spy6205
      @spy6205 4 года назад +272

      Gwendolyn Desa ugh, that particular bit of bad history always aggravates me!! clothes were so expensive, why would you ever risk staining it with blood by just bleeding all over? not to mention, if they aren’t bathing everyday, are they just running around with bloody legs and bloody stockings? no one sensible would put up with that, come on.

    • @kassistwisted
      @kassistwisted 4 года назад +90

      Well, what is documentable is that before the 19th century, people did go through a period of fasting imposed by the scarcity of available nutritious food during the winter months. Everyone, rich and poor, was malnourished to a greater or lesser degree from January until March. When women lose body fat, their periods stop. Also, you don't menstruate when you're pregnant or nursing. And nursing usually goes on for about two years. And it is a well-documented fact that married women tended to give birth every two or three years. So if you string all those times together, yes, women in the past didn't have nearly as many periods as women today.

    • @kassistwisted
      @kassistwisted 4 года назад +28

      @@nobodyqwertyu You clearly think every period is the same. I never had a period so heavy that there would be blood on the floor. A spot or two on my underwear and then nothing.

    • @noxlumen2711
      @noxlumen2711 4 года назад +37

      @@kassistwisted if by fasting you mean lent....take a closer look at what people actually recorded as lent recipe variants according to papal decree. Then stack on the drastic reduction of physical activity for both genders when house bound for most of the day in winter. Were soldiers eating preserved fish rations during lent actually more malnourished than in spring? And what of the famous story of the nettle soup fast that a clever cook slipped cream into when his devout employer became too thing from a misunderstanding of peasant foods? Also review just how much catholic decadence the reformulation raged against, including the number of saint feasts that got a lent fast exemption that permitted the wealthy to basically ignore their lent food sacrifice through the whole of the cold months. In short, those who COULD afford to eat well...did eat well. Perhaps look closer at St. Hildegard's writings on healing through nourishment taught at her convent for a more details perspective on historic understanding of nourishment. Then remember that nuns were women of wealth who's families paid a great deal of money for them to abstain from child bearing.

    • @kassistwisted
      @kassistwisted 4 года назад +17

      @@noxlumen2711 No, I don't mean Lent. I mean that it is well documented that people did not eat as well-rounded and nutritious meals in winter as in spring/summer/autumn precisely because of the scarcity of vegetables and fruits during the cold months. It has been argued by scholars that the Lenten fast was "invented" by the Church to make sure common people had the resources to make it through winter without dying from starvation. To ignore the fact that, before refrigeration and other forms of long-term food preservation and world trade in perishable items that people ate as well in the winter as in the summer is folly.

  • @himansigupta18
    @himansigupta18 4 года назад +3154

    My mom would tell me some stories about how badly women were treated during their periods in India, they would be put in a separate room where they would be kept away from people and basically be treated like monsters for those few days. It’s so sad to learn about the mistreatment of women just because of males dominating the information given to them.

    • @dreamer9375
      @dreamer9375 4 года назад +343

      Yes, I've heard of this one too. In small villages, women would be sent away from the village to go live in a hut made for menstruating women. Pathetic, isn't it? 😬

    • @asphyxia7784
      @asphyxia7784 4 года назад +314

      My mother also told me that they had to wash themselves in ice cold water and sleep outside at night without any blankets during winters when they had their period. They were not allowed to enter the house or kitchen and had to eat leftovers and not freshly cooked food. It was really bad. My mom was weak and she used to get quite sick during those days.

    • @himansigupta18
      @himansigupta18 4 года назад +189

      Ataraxia oh yes I’ve heard of that too, even to this day women don’t cook during their periods. Wish our culture would adapt to things that are natural

    • @komalashar9287
      @komalashar9287 4 года назад +248

      I am from India and I can confirm that although many things have changed, women still aren't allowed to cook and go inside a room that has an idol or temples ( basically holy places). And you aren't allowed to touch the woman. Of course, in many houses such things are not practiced.

    • @himansigupta18
      @himansigupta18 4 года назад +107

      Komal Ashar I’m always conflicted about these things too because on one hand it’s tradition and we do these things out of respect but it’s also so old fashion and seems to discriminate against something natural about women

  • @quiteindeed6809
    @quiteindeed6809 4 года назад +2505

    Historians probably said: "I don't trust anything that bleeds for 5 days and doesn't die."

    • @FunSizeSpamberguesa
      @FunSizeSpamberguesa 3 года назад +26

      I see what you did there.

    • @becauseimafan
      @becauseimafan 3 года назад +13

      LOL! I love it! I was just a kid when I saw _South Park: Bigger Longer and Uncut_ in theatres with the other women of my family, and we all laughed so freaking hard when they said that joke, oh my god 😂 A fantastic memory, and a joke we repeated often 😁 Thanks for reminding me of it!!

    • @echo2893
      @echo2893 3 года назад +52

      And pointed and yelled "Witch!! Witch!!" 🧙‍♀️

    • @zhabo3963
      @zhabo3963 3 года назад +11

      Woody allen said that shit. Idk why you american males think that could be a funny joke. You laugh at crap. Litterally. American sense of humour is well known for its dullness.

    • @zhabo3963
      @zhabo3963 3 года назад +10

      World average is 4.5 years. In the us is around 2 years. Therefore, it is not that much. Moreover, the reason why men die sooner it is because they drink and smoke way more alcohol. Additionally, some reaserchers are focusing on the benefits of household chores and time spent for babycare/family (+ parenting permits from work). It seems that women stay more active even after retirement, regularly cleaning the house etc. while men sit on the sofa, cut the grass twice a year and drink beer.

  • @londolanindou9836
    @londolanindou9836 4 года назад +3503

    I'm in South Africa, my Great grandmother once told me that in the 1920s they would dry up slabs of cow dung and wrap it in fabric and place it on the traditional loincloth (a string around the waste and a strip of fabric running from the pubis to end of the bum). Dried cow dung has no smell and it is super absorbent so they were dry and didn't smell throughout the day. Cows were everywhere so there was plenty of dung, and they just threw the soiled dung away where no one could find it and washed the cloth. Pretty cool

    • @kimberlethlippington3711
      @kimberlethlippington3711 4 года назад +206

      You can get so many infections from that though

    • @malinasworld
      @malinasworld 4 года назад +563

      Kimberleth Lippington cow dung actually has antibiotic properties. I mean, I’m not about to use the stuff to clean up my house (two Latvian women are actually marketing it as a household cleaner) or as a pad, but it appears it was relatively low risk enough that these South African women didn’t bother using just rags and other absorbents for a while.

    • @SweetOsoka
      @SweetOsoka 4 года назад +193

      I saw a paper that was made of elephant dung. They eat and shit told of fiber. So in japan they decided to recycle it that way. I use a sea sponge for period stuff so i dont find it too odd.

    • @Loreman72
      @Loreman72 4 года назад +227

      Cow dung turns into dry grass over the course if a day or two, it's not a bit like the cowpats you see in wetter climates.
      Cow dung had other uses in African settler times, too, they mixed it with mud to make floors. Those floors could be polished to quite a shine. You can see them in some museum houses.

    • @malinasworld
      @malinasworld 4 года назад +163

      Loreman72 oh yeah, I totally forgot some people might not know cow dung in a dry form. We used to use it for flooring here as well. Keeps the place cool.

  • @humanperson3733
    @humanperson3733 3 года назад +680

    Random fun fact: periods were actually one of the most commonly used arguments against giving women the vote (at least in the uk) as they “made women physically and mentally incapable for at least a week every month” yep.

    • @RobertsAdra
      @RobertsAdra 3 года назад +86

      That argument was only used once ... until a bunch of women on their period got a hold of that politician ... and proved to him that they were at least physically capable of beating the fleas out of his hide. ;)

    • @samalamamarriott4784
      @samalamamarriott4784 3 года назад +24

      @@RobertsAdra can I get the name of said politician, this sounds funny :)

    • @humanperson3733
      @humanperson3733 3 года назад +4

      @Charlotte Surrey ye

    • @minty_may349
      @minty_may349 3 года назад +10

      My periods only last a day or 2 and they don’t make me emotional-

    • @hannahbanana9901
      @hannahbanana9901 3 года назад +10

      @@minty_may349 wow I don't have mine yet but you're very lucky

  • @eleigar1
    @eleigar1 4 года назад +427

    My grandma was born 1931 and as she was working class she couldn't take days off. She told me that she worked in a factory and there was some hot room and all the girls who had their periods invented excuses to get there. They would rest their back to the oven (or whatever the hot thing was) to ease the pain. The old man working in that room knew why the girls came into the room and didn't drive them away to harshly.

    • @misst.e.a.187
      @misst.e.a.187 7 месяцев назад +1

      That was a kind and empathetic man

  • @lyndaolney1475
    @lyndaolney1475 4 года назад +812

    "women on their periods can't work, they should just lie on the couch till it's done"... I wish they'd say that now... I'd be like .. YUP..

    • @nalanihamby3710
      @nalanihamby3710 4 года назад +55

      😂😂 yup. Let me nap and forget about the dishes.

    • @Harpeia
      @Harpeia 4 года назад +70

      We joke but imagine four days of paid leave monthly in these capitalist times!

    • @lenar6381
      @lenar6381 3 года назад +5

      It wouldnt be good though because then our rights will go away again

    • @ville666sora
      @ville666sora 3 года назад +16

      I work from home, so I do sit around for the first couple days of my period lol. Mine have always been horrendous compared to other women I knew. My friends would go out and have fun, exercise, do yard work, even go swimming on theirs and I'd be hunched over in pain and feel miserable for the first couple days of mine. I was always so jealous lol.

    • @crassiewassie8354
      @crassiewassie8354 3 года назад +5

      @@Harpeia oh nooo the multi millionaires will only have 1.1 billion instead of 1.2 billion

  • @zocansew
    @zocansew 4 года назад +4914

    women: has had periods for millennia
    men: look what we discovered!!! =D

    • @bugra6798
      @bugra6798 4 года назад

      @@sadamiamani no?

    • @matthewwilliams1212
      @matthewwilliams1212 4 года назад +84

      Hey, all men stopped women from even having their periods, well, only for 9months then we were born... 😆

    • @JereeAnderson
      @JereeAnderson 4 года назад +4

      😂😂😂😂

    • @g.a.6978
      @g.a.6978 4 года назад +11

      I know. Dont you just love it when some of us start crying when an opinion is said?

    • @veronicabasile1464
      @veronicabasile1464 4 года назад +59

      how could they think it was a disease? there’s even a passage on the bible that talks “her rules were late”. So if you’re late and you’re pregnant, you’re healthy?!

  • @sarahg1583
    @sarahg1583 4 года назад +1215

    In 1974, my mother never talked about "such things" so I was shocked when this happened. I still vividly recall her cooking dinner when I approached her, scared, crying in pain & bleeding. Her response: "go get a napkin & belt in my room”. Having no clue, I went to her room but came back empty handed. She then got angry; when I came back a 2nd time still questioning the location of the items. Frustrated, she then had me follow her into her room & pointed out a box of napkins hidden in her closet & several menstrual belts hidden in her lingerie drawer. (Like I would've ever found them!) She then left me alone & knowing she was pissed I didn't dare ask another question. I had no idea what I was doing, but after several trials & errors, eventually figured it out.

    • @levierina
      @levierina 4 года назад +181

      Ooof, she was rough. I can empathize with you :(

    • @hypatiakovalevskayasklodow9195
      @hypatiakovalevskayasklodow9195 4 года назад +169

      oh wow I am so sorry, that's terrible. Surprised she was that inconsiderate to you

    • @apseudonym
      @apseudonym 4 года назад +139

      poor kid. not a nice induction to womanhood

    • @politecat4236
      @politecat4236 4 года назад +81

      That's just straight up abuse.

    • @nox9749
      @nox9749 4 года назад +56

      Nguyen the whole process of womanhood is not nice period (pun intended 😂😂😂)

  • @ChildOfAshes1
    @ChildOfAshes1 4 года назад +3414

    Men being clueless about women's health since......all of eternity.

    • @AlaynaMoebius
      @AlaynaMoebius 3 года назад +211

      My husband.. Who has a passion for medical knowledge....didnt actually know that you are supposed to ovulate before menstruating... Our 12 daughter and I looked at him like... "dude!"

    • @CraftQueenJr
      @CraftQueenJr 3 года назад +29

      Carlo actually, that one makes sense. Because 50 was a pretty reasonable if high guess, for if she was on her period the whole time. Then double that in case there are issues, as they do with literally all supplies. Then ask her if it’s reasonable, and adjust from there. Which they did.

    • @aliciavance4228
      @aliciavance4228 3 года назад +35

      Well... How many of us are interested in heretical dysfunction or prostate problems? Let's be serious now!

    • @Widdekuu91
      @Widdekuu91 3 года назад +47

      @@aliciavance4228
      I am! When my ex told me that a ballsack can sortof...twist painfully and things, I kept asking how and why.
      It's just that he didn't explain it properly. He said; 'Sometimes if you sit down wrong or if you run and you 'kick' it with your upper leg.'
      I asked what the pain was like, but he couldn't describe.
      So..well, I did ask. I just still don't know the answer.
      I know about penises that can "break" though, if you move wrong and 'snap' it. I know everything about them that he knew.
      He on the other hand, was convinced that when a woman urinated blood, it was just her period.
      So when I was in tears about a wound inside my bladder, causing me to pee blood, he didn't care to help because 'I should just get some chocolate.'
      And no matter how many times I tried to explain, he preferred to walk around on the gun-exposition and tell me to calm down about it.
      (It's my ex now, I'm alright and the bladder is fine too)

    • @MWood-ry8uu
      @MWood-ry8uu 3 года назад +11

      @@carlo9059 lol. Yes its a funny story, but seriously the issue of sanitation is a real priority. Space flights may cause early, extended or abnormally light periods. Not to mention probably having to change one ever time she poops and pees which is 40 right there.

  • @OlivePapyrus
    @OlivePapyrus 4 года назад +746

    Thank you for this video because it led to this comment section. A community of women, of all ages, chatting about the history of menstruation. So rare yet so necessary. I'm glad I was here.

  • @nofosho3567
    @nofosho3567 4 года назад +5243

    I have my great grandmother's journal and she barely even goes into the birth of her own child (my grandfather). It was the 1930's and shes like "________ (my great grandfather) came over and we sat outside talking. __________ met me at church and gave me a song book." Then out of nowhere she's like "got married last week" and then like 5 months later she wrote "_________ (my grandfather) is a month old today, he is very fat and it's good". I was hoping to find something scandalous, not sure why, but even though it was her private journal she barely wrote about anything not 100% readable by other people. There's more recipes than anything else lol

    • @shelthesea
      @shelthesea 4 года назад +198

      nofosho i love her

    • @vt1527
      @vt1527 4 года назад +882

      well it could be considered a tiny bit scandalous that your grandfather was already a month old even though his parents got married only 4 months before his birth ;)

    • @nofosho3567
      @nofosho3567 4 года назад +646

      Yeah she was a good lady. She died at 101 when I was 12 so I have good memories of her, she was a feisty lady lol. Granted she got pregnant out of wedlock and had a shotgun wedding during the great depression/Dust Bowl period in the midwest US. She literally never mentions any of it in her diary, but she constantly talks about desserts and how much she was a better cook than her mother-in-law. Pretty good book, would be better if she had nicer handwriting tho haha

    • @baxterandcotton
      @baxterandcotton 4 года назад +336

      A lot of old diaries are like that. My 94 year old Swedish grandma's is mainly one line about the whether, one line about if someone visited. The entries where her grandkids were born are just like "it was a rainy day. Daughter in law gave birth finally, thank goodness that's over." Lol. The *one* entry (she has many decades of diaries) that has some emotion to it was her husband's death, and even that was mainly a description of the funeral. It's interesting because of course people have always had emotional lives, but we emphasize that so much more now.

    • @EmissaryofWind
      @EmissaryofWind 4 года назад +344

      @@vt1527 Not really, it was actually much more common than we'd expect. There's a saying that goes "the first child takes however long it needs, all the ones after take nine months." As long as the bride wasn't visibly pregnant when she got married, nobody batted an eye.

  • @leraost
    @leraost 4 года назад +3763

    I was studying this subject at University a little. Russian peasant women from Middle age up to the beginning of XX century were using the so-called under skirt, which was used for wiping up blood. As for women in more northern regions where it was common to wear trousers made of animal leather with fur for all community members, they used some soft reindeer moss or other moss.
    One day I was on camping far away from any civilization and my periods surprisingly started. And who knew that reindeer moss is actually unbelievably comfortable. And eco-friendly 😄

    •  4 года назад +548

      How interesting!

    • @AlexaFaie
      @AlexaFaie 4 года назад +889

      Moss is also antibacterial and antifungal so its actually pretty hygienic too. I love that you actually tried it out.

    • @kahorere
      @kahorere 4 года назад +173

      This is super interesting! Do you have anything for further reading about this topics? (both on periods and those women wearing trousers)

    • @leraost
      @leraost 4 года назад +206

      @@kahorere I can find some articles about it, but in Russian. Regional studies are usually not translated in English in Russian scientific community. Unfortunately :(

    • @sasy1533
      @sasy1533 4 года назад +259

      Lera Ost yes! In post war Spain, not that long ago (like 70 years ago) they just let the blood flow, rubbing their legs so the blood would smear and dry off. If it was heavy, you would use your underskirt to wipe the blood. So they walked with bloody underskirts. People were just so poor.

  • @tanja-k
    @tanja-k 4 года назад +730

    This has to be the most interesting comments section I have ever read on RUclips. When such a barely noted subject within historical/past literature causes so much discussion it makes me wonder how future generations will discuss the time we are living in now.

    • @drorydressage
      @drorydressage 4 года назад +11

      This, and older people relying anecdotes from their own grandmothers... preserving knowledge that would otherwise be entirely lost in a few decades.

    • @MyCrystalSwan
      @MyCrystalSwan 4 года назад +4

      Indeed! This comment section is seriously so wholesome I cried a little.

    • @simranbtsarmy4417
      @simranbtsarmy4417 4 года назад

      Good thought

  • @LindeusTheBaum
    @LindeusTheBaum 4 года назад +1158

    Fun story: my great-aunts period thingies were Just drying in their house. My great-grandma told my grandpa they were used against tootaches. So he put one on his head
    This was 50's Belgium
    Edit: he was 7

    • @ireneultramarine244
      @ireneultramarine244 4 года назад +37

      Wow that's such an interesting story! so cute and funny

    • @spazzyshortgirl23
      @spazzyshortgirl23 4 года назад +32

      All I can think about is Channing Tatum with a tampon up his nose

    • @kyliepechler
      @kyliepechler 3 года назад +16

      But.....wouldn't he have been suspicious that his mother and sisters had lots of toothaches on a monthly basis!? lol

    • @LindeusTheBaum
      @LindeusTheBaum 3 года назад +16

      @@kyliepechler I dont think he knew who used them exactly and when

    • @LindeusTheBaum
      @LindeusTheBaum 3 года назад +7

      @@kyliepechler and he was about 7 years old

  • @joyjones8231
    @joyjones8231 4 года назад +2446

    Probably the same way I do, miserably with lots of swearing.

    • @zoehenwood9706
      @zoehenwood9706 4 года назад +65

      Mine is miserable with lots of sweating.

    • @MsLilly200
      @MsLilly200 4 года назад +25

      Mine is miserable with lots of backpain.

    • @no_onewhatever9514
      @no_onewhatever9514 4 года назад +13

      Mine is miserable with lots of vomit.

    • @toqa6735
      @toqa6735 4 года назад +10

      Mine is miserable with changing the pads every three hours in the first two days , and me forgetting to have my medicines in the first day...... I'm on my period as I'm typing and i forgot to have my pills in the first day so *-fuck-*

    • @toqa6735
      @toqa6735 4 года назад +4

      @@no_onewhatever9514
      My sister vomits and now she's on a kito diet with medicines for her health , hopefully you'll get better 😬

  • @annaelizabeth6
    @annaelizabeth6 4 года назад +15939

    they actually didn't have periods, because that would be work, and victorian women *never* worked

    • @gromit0299
      @gromit0299 4 года назад +340

      This got me good! 😂

    • @jurajjakubec7796
      @jurajjakubec7796 4 года назад +1454

      exactly, as far as I am concerned, vicotrian women were busy laying on their beds in their corsets unable to move.

    • @zeinabhassan9260
      @zeinabhassan9260 4 года назад +14

      😂😂

    • @abijewgay
      @abijewgay 4 года назад +427

      Juraj Jakubec and the corset cut them in half and they would have to be resurrected

    • @tyrant-den884
      @tyrant-den884 4 года назад +41

      I will assume you are being ironic.

  • @annaf.2779
    @annaf.2779 4 года назад +1790

    My great-aunt, who is now 88 years old, told me that when she started her period she was given one of those belts by her mother. She doesn't know whether this was the most common "period product" in her country though, or if it was just what her mother was used to and passed on to her, because she was the only girl in the family and nobody talked about that part of the month anyway...

    • @namewithay
      @namewithay 4 года назад +58

      My mom was a teenager in the early 70s and she wore the belts.

    • @susannaholdren9625
      @susannaholdren9625 4 года назад +101

      @Asha My parents knew a lady who, when she was around 14, (and this must have been in the 1930's I think), she knew about periods and that if your period stops, it's because you're pregnant. Unfortunately her parents never told her how a person actually gets pregnant. Well, one month her period was late or skipped, which is normal, and she told her mom she thought she was pregnant. 😂

    • @nienazwane1
      @nienazwane1 4 года назад +63

      @@susannaholdren9625 my grandma told me story about her aunt. Nobody have told that aunt how to gets pregnant and one time she came to her mom and told her that she was pregnant because she was sitting on a chair after a man 😅

    • @jd-no7rw
      @jd-no7rw 4 года назад +24

      @@nienazwane1 My step-grandmother, on asking what girls talked about talked about when she was growing up promptly said, "Boys! Of course we didn't know if you could pregnant from kissing or washing clothes together."

    • @jd-no7rw
      @jd-no7rw 4 года назад +32

      @@lex6819 I was at school once and got my period, and didn't have anything, so I went to the nurse's office and she gave me a belt. I think just by my look she knew I had no clue what to do with it, lol. This was in the early 80s.

  • @catsensei8322
    @catsensei8322 3 года назад +221

    (Indian) Well, my mom till few months ago, didn't knew why periods happen, she said it was "bad blood" that gets flushed out. I had to teach her (I am 20) about it and in embarrassment she closed her ears and said "i don't wanna talk about it, go" so i explained her in "ultra kid mode" quickly and she was horrified but now she realised the connection between "pregnancy and no periods" too.

    • @Jennawxyz221
      @Jennawxyz221 3 года назад +37

      Its nice you explained it to her but that is also just sad. Its not bad blood. its literally the lining the nourishes life.

  • @sarasolomon4812
    @sarasolomon4812 4 года назад +1503

    This is by far, the most fascinating comments section I have EVER scrolled through. One interesting point, is that a lot of women mention ancestors from not do long ago, in the 20th century, but who lived in small villages, or had less than modern conveniences.
    I think it's important to note that this whole concept isn't only for the history books. There are millions upon millions of women who live in our modern era without safe and sanitary period products.

    • @annas.5894
      @annas.5894 4 года назад +47

      Sara Solomon - yes. That is a very important point. Thanks. We all need to help our sisters everywhere.

    • @thekingsdaughter4233
      @thekingsdaughter4233 4 года назад +54

      While many modern women are grossed out by the idea of cloth pads, there are organisations that provide such pads for girls in underdeveloped countries. This helps them stay in school- sometimes even prevents child marriage.
      A worthy cause to give to. Organizations can be found by a quick internet search.

    • @aud7593
      @aud7593 4 года назад +37

      @@thekingsdaughter4233 oh i love cloth pads! helps with my guilt in using so many one-time use pads as well. AND ALSO people living in poverty in "modern"/"first world" countries often desperately need sanitary products, bc it's hard to prioritize that over food, especially when sanitary prods can be wicked expensive :/ so if y'all are able to: donate pads and tampons to homeless shelters!

    • @PauliEvansBlack617
      @PauliEvansBlack617 4 года назад +27

      Absolutely, just last week a friend who is around 30 years old was telling me that when she was in high school she didn’t have money to buy sanitary products so she would have to use rags.

    • @idonotresidehere.5709
      @idonotresidehere.5709 4 года назад +19

      when my mom wa younger, visiting Prauge with her father and sister, she got her period and was given a mesh bag full of cottonballs, because, that's just what they had.

  • @nodell1567
    @nodell1567 4 года назад +1673

    My great grandma actually did the patent on the sticky part of pads! I thank her every month 😂

    • @blackswan4486
      @blackswan4486 4 года назад +38

      Wow really? Cool. What was her name?

    • @nodell1567
      @nodell1567 4 года назад +125

      @@blackswan4486 Laurel Hendricks!

    • @nodell1567
      @nodell1567 4 года назад +226

      @@blackswan4486 She totally got screwed and didn't get royalties, just a lump sum BUT I mean she bought her first house with the money so 🤷🏼‍♀️

    • @blackswan4486
      @blackswan4486 4 года назад +62

      Nico would be fun to make a movie about her “on the rag”

    • @blackswan4486
      @blackswan4486 4 года назад +53

      Nico would be a great title for a movie. Double entendre since they always accused angry and rejected women of being on the rag.
      A story-ized history of how one woman made life easier for others at a very oppressive and shaming time.

  • @sunnysorrel
    @sunnysorrel 4 года назад +3403

    Our meme mom being an actual mom

    • @moon-cf2vw
      @moon-cf2vw 4 года назад

      Dohwan Woo sorry your link isn’t really working

    • @moon-cf2vw
      @moon-cf2vw 4 года назад

      Dohwan Woo 😶😑

    • @Mike-zh1ew
      @Mike-zh1ew 4 года назад +1

      I don't think that's her bf, since it appears to be yourself, judging by your profile pic...

  • @janice1131
    @janice1131 3 года назад +411

    In 1966 my mom handed me a booklet and said “don’t tell your brothers”. When I finally started at 14 my mom gave me theses giant pads she used with the belt. I could not wear pants while wearing the pads because “ the boys could tell”. I couldn’t go swimming, and could not wear tampons because they were only for “married” women. I tried going in the pool with a pad and it blew up like the Hindenburg !

    • @fredjohn3015
      @fredjohn3015 3 года назад +2

      Hello Janice

    • @rebeccagable9629
      @rebeccagable9629 3 года назад +15

      Was the booklet called "On Becoming a Woman"?

    • @janice1131
      @janice1131 3 года назад +21

      It was advertised on the Kotex box. Then my mom bought me some “Miss Deb” pads at the store where I had a crush on the sack boy 🥵

    • @lisab9541
      @lisab9541 3 года назад +9

      @@rebeccagable9629 was in 1974/75 when I got that booklet. Kept it for years. Wish I still had it now. Lol

    • @rebeccagable9629
      @rebeccagable9629 3 года назад +2

      @@lisab9541 Memories!

  • @yoellen1
    @yoellen1 4 года назад +702

    The body friendly attitude in this comment section is giving me life

  • @grayskindablue
    @grayskindablue 4 года назад +3459

    So I asked my grandmother about this!
    She’ll be 93 in January ‘20, and she was in Germany and Poland as a kid and young teenager before immigrating to the U.S. (and then moved to Peru with my late grandfather.) After Poland was invaded her family hid in the outskirts of Sweden for years, the men in her family didn’t want to fight. This isn’t super important but it’s some background, how stressful is it to get your first period while there’s a massive war and you’re hiding in a cabin in Sweden?! My grandmother said she didn’t know what a period was so she ran to her mother, and her mother helped her make little garter belts that would hold cloths in place she’d rip from old skirts, and she’d have to go get a bucket of water from the well to wash them out and hang them to dry, and in the winter they sometimes would freeze solid and she’d have to rip up other clothes.
    BUT, Victorian Era: her mom told her she was lucky, because she didn’t have to use “sheep’s wool that was itchy and often made the pain worse.” And also “nobody was telling her she was ill,” instead her mother congratulated her and said she was a woman and one day could have healthy children- which I think is a remarkable thing to say in like 1940? Again, hiding in Sweden! So that’s not a LOT, but it confirms the sheep’s wool thing, confirms thinking it was an illness, and I’m sure either of those things couldn’t of made people feel great whatsoever.
    Fun fact: She had 4 kids: 2 girls, 2 boys (one is my dad), and was very honest with them about things like periods and sex, “not proper” for a mom in the ‘50s but she was always as honest as she knew how. (Also very progressive. Women’s rights, she’s always SO proud her mom fought so she could vote, marriage equality, 3 out of the 16 of us grandchildren are LGBTQ and she’s incredible. Went to my cousin’s wedding for him and his husband and stood in place because his mother wouldn’t. Supported my transition and then my step-cousin’s a few years ago.) After having 4 healthy kids as her mom predicted, she raised most of her grandchildren... and now is raising most of her great-grandchildren... and there’s a couple great-great grandchildren toddling around her house now too! She does stuff like hold premature babies at the hospital that need skin-to-skin, knits them tiny, cozy blankets, and minuscule matching socks and beanies. She carpools most of the middle and high school age grandkids and their friends several days a week, every week, even to all their sports and little part-time jobs. She supports all of us, tirelessly. From her kids who’re ages 57-70, to us young adults all on different paths, still figuring out life, to the angsty high schoolers, the middle schoolers just trying to get through their awkward phases as we’ve all done, to the younger kids overflowing with energy 24/7, to the tiny 2-and-unders that tirelessly investigate everything and ask “why?” From divorces to college applications to job interviews to first days at school to sports tournaments to hobbies to babysitting/dog-sitting to moving first loves, first broken hearts, and overall always being there with anyone through their happiest moments and their equally dark moments. She’s there for every single person in the family and friends who’ve become family, (even the “black sheeps”) and is filled with nothing but love.
    I hope to have the kind of impact on my loved ones she does someday. She and Pop were married for 65 years when he passed. She cared for him for almost a decade as dementia slowly took his mind and then his body. But every day she did the same routine. Just her. At home. No real help or equipment available. So she kept him comfortable, figured out how to get nutrition in him, lovingly sat and talked as he babbled incoherently. I can’t even imagine loving someone so long and losing them; having to watch them deteriorate. But even stronger than the grief was relief she felt that he was no longer in pain and locked somewhere really deep in his mind. It just encouraged her to keep her family closer, show more love, spend more time together.
    I sometimes forget she’s elderly. She’s almost 93! She just takes all the hard things and makes lovely things from them. OH yeah, and she’s battled melanoma that off and on spreads to lymph nodes in her neck and breasts for the past 20 years that refuses to 100% go away. I can’t reiterate how strong she is. I’ll absolutely always brag about her.
    Back on this general subject, she went with my cousin recently to support her while she got an IUD placed and said “I wish they’d figured this out when I was 18!” almost the entire time lol. Such a sweet woman, she’s just wonderful. Sorry this got long! But I really hope someone found this interesting.

    • @robertabellman9330
      @robertabellman9330 4 года назад +111

      Skyler Gray , Hi my name is De An I am 57, and I found this very interesting, I like learning about all things ! Thank You for you share, wish there was someplace we could all go and write and share a topic. That would be very cool 😎

    • @vourdalak1
      @vourdalak1 4 года назад +78

      Thank you so much for sharing this!!!

    • @TheWBWoman
      @TheWBWoman 4 года назад +141

      Wow! Thank you for sharing the story of your grandmother. She sounds like quite an inspiring woman!

    • @ilseappel
      @ilseappel 4 года назад +59

      Skyler Gray what an incredible woman!

    • @PrincesslilBB
      @PrincesslilBB 4 года назад +85

      She needs a medal from Congress!!!! Wow...... or maybe she's a B.A.B.E.!! Of course my definition is this BAD ASS BITCH EXTRAORDINAIRE (this is a really tough woman) and my Grandma fit that bill perfectly. We had a special relationship. My grandparents have their stories in a book. Maybe you should right one about her so that when your future ancestors want to here about her life they have something.

  • @endiliel
    @endiliel 4 года назад +452

    My grandmother had 5 girls and 2 boys throughout the 1930s-50s. There were also extended aunts, uncles, and cousins on the farm, coming and going at all times of the year. All the ladies used rags and, for the most part, kept that part of their lives private from the men. They would all come together a few days a month when all the men were guaranteed to be out of the house for hours, and boil their rags in one huge pot on the stove. I'm not sure where they would have hung them to dry. The girls' bedroom? The root cellar?
    When I began menstruating around 1980, my mother was still using a belt. She let me use her belt and pads my first period, and said we'd get my own belt the next time we went to town. I demanded that I get Stayfree and she finally switched to the modern pads with me.
    Now that I am in my 50s, I have developed a sensitivity to the man-made materials which pads are made from. I will suffer the use of pads for my now rare periods, but cannot use panty liners daily. Instead, I have a collection of bandanas for daily use which I fold into the correct rectangular shape. I can't help thinking of my aunts and grandmothers with their rags, and buy the most outrageous bandanas I can find in their honor.

    • @cfrost87
      @cfrost87 4 года назад +18

      There are cloth pads that you can buy online.

    • @Elietaisfairy
      @Elietaisfairy 4 года назад +12

      Try cloth pads or menstrual cup :)

    • @lilyl5492
      @lilyl5492 4 года назад +17

      love the bandana idea. don't know why people assume your solution doesn't work fine for you

    • @loading1345
      @loading1345 4 года назад +5

      I love this!!

    • @bonnys3015
      @bonnys3015 4 года назад +4

      Oh kindred spirit, I salute you!

  • @tmsuter2186
    @tmsuter2186 3 года назад +199

    My daughter was raised in a hiuse with 5 older boys. When she got her period her brother made her a cake and iced it with congratulations. They said rhey wanted to celebrate. They said maybe she would only be a little witch to them for one week a month, instead of all the time like she had been for the previous 6 months. Being the only girl in a house full of teenage boys and their friends ( all under 22) was a challenge.

    • @mr.icecream7880
      @mr.icecream7880 3 года назад +2

      Haha that’s funny

    • @aditisk99
      @aditisk99 3 года назад +5

      What a nice brother!

    • @lord__pasta
      @lord__pasta 3 года назад +2

      Lmao. My brother is stuck with 4 of us girls, and that's it, so he is stuck having all of us complain about cramps and whatnot. Doubt he'd ever want to make us cakes lol

  • @sophroniel
    @sophroniel 4 года назад +2551

    I have been interested in this myself, and some points that may be of interest:
    - In more ancient times, the Red Tent was a thing--go into the tent and free bleed on the straw until you're done
    - dampened sea sponge wrapped in wool, cotton or rags was surprisingly effective, when included internally. It's a trick p*rn stars use, apparently, that sponges/makeup sponges put up there deal with it for a number of hours
    - poor women might just stuff compacted rags up there. If you were to (forgive me for the description) shove it all up there high enough, it is quite effective
    EDIT: someone else mentioned it and i can't believe I completely forgot most women had a red flannel petticoat for this reason. WHAT KIND OF NERD AM I
    - the menstural cup was invented in the early 30's
    As another avenue of thought, also consider the differences in women then. The average age of menarche was about 17 in 1880, so teenage girls were not generally getting their periods when we are now. Additionally, poor women may not have had the body weight necessary to menstruate regularly. It also bears discussing that, for the women who had no birth control, they would not really *have* that many periods. When you breastfeed, unless super fertile, it often stops you menstruating for some time, and it is not uncommon to not get a period after having a child for up to 18 months after birth. If a woman was near constantly pregnant and/or breastfeeding, the issue may not have been as pressing as it is for us today. Many women have irregular cycles too.
    Edit: Wow so many likes!!! I should also add that women are highly individual, and have such wildly different experiences with hormones and menstruation etc that it's almost impossible to generalise even today, when it is more discussed, let alone 100's of years ago when it wasn't necessarily taboo, per se, but where it was more private and maybe almost inconsequential to some women; you don't generally hear about things recorded re this because, unless it was unusual or a medical issue, it was probably just not really important to mention. I think it's likely it was certainly taboo in some families, areas or classes, but just as likely it was openly talked about with sisters or aunts, but just never recorded because men weren't privy to it. There is a huge variation in "normal" and women are totally ingenious with this stuff, so there were probably many successful solutions to their periods that women used and maybe told their sisters or daughters but no one else. The thing I found most interesting in my research with family history (I have delt with.... SO many parish registers all around northern europe and the east coast of USA) was that many women started their periods so late in their teens, and 17, 18, 19 even 20 were not super unusual ages to begin having a period for normal women. Always there has been exceptions, but culturally it more co-incided with when we traditionally think of "womanhood". I could write novels about why the early marriage trope is wrong too but that's another barrel of fish haha. Re menarche age, there have been more modern studies about how things like father-daughter relationships, single parenthood, socio-economic stability/wealth and early sexualisation statistically affect onset of menstruation, which I find totally facinating, as to how social environment can affect what is essentially fundemental body processes (epigenetics maybe??). Correlation =/= causation of course, but as someone who was sheltered from sexualised media until my late teens, who had a stable home life with parents who were happily and healthily married, where my questions about bodies and sex and things like that were not shameful or taboo but my questions answered honestly and accurately, and as someone who had a very close and positive relationship with my dad, I think there might be some truth to these influences. I had my first period at almost 15, and I remember being basically a freak to my friends and classmates at a girls' school, where most of them were 9 - 11 when they first got their period. This stuff is so, so interesting I could go on but i'll shut up now haha

    • @racheldreamslife
      @racheldreamslife 4 года назад +33

      Sophia Neilsson what an interesting insight. Thanks for sharing!

    • @wckd4u
      @wckd4u 4 года назад +107

      @Anna Heebsh The fact alone that people back then were on their feet and more active than we are today, would impact the quality of cramps and volume of flow.

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 4 года назад +89

      Sophia Neilsson
      The sponge thing isn’t that ‚deviant‘ anymore...you can buy packs of individually wrapped little sponges in the pharmacy for that purpose...I‘ve been using them for many years, when I wait to have sex during my period. I‘m just not into the whole ‚red sea‘ scenario 😎
      They work pretty well. Although I wouldn’t give them more than an hour or two with a heavy flow - they’re pretty small. But otherwise, you wouldn’t even know, you’re bleeding.
      Can you imagine just bleeding onto a straw bedding, though? I mean, the stench must have been...awful. Or stuffing random rags into yourself. Hello infection. Yikes.

    • @baxterandcotton
      @baxterandcotton 4 года назад +52

      @Anna Heebsh it almost certainly has gotten heavier, because body weight has a big impact on heaviness of menstrual flow.

    • @elvingearmasterirma7241
      @elvingearmasterirma7241 4 года назад +64

      @@wckd4u Eeeehhh I have painful cramps and I am active and it still hurts. Its lighter, but boy is it still there. I feel so bad for the women who are knocked over by their periods...
      What does help is mental distraction. Its about the only time I like my maths because I need to pour all my concentration into that, and my brain just "forgets" I am currently in a physical hell.

  • @somethingclever8916
    @somethingclever8916 4 года назад +2520

    Victorian and edwardian were too proper to have a period.
    They had commas.

    • @moistsquish
      @moistsquish 4 года назад +27

      SKSKSKS STOP

    • @bho-lj1jk
      @bho-lj1jk 4 года назад +44

      ::::::::::::::0
      I want to make an elaborate visual joke about public use of the colon but it just seems like too much work before breakfast.

    • @annas.5894
      @annas.5894 4 года назад +8

      J'me Despence - now that’s funny!!!

    • @PiscesVirago73
      @PiscesVirago73 4 года назад +11

      This made me snort laugh

    • @miriamhavard7621
      @miriamhavard7621 4 года назад +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂💕

  • @tandemcompound2
    @tandemcompound2 4 года назад +1881

    they let their servants have their menstrual cycle. simple.

    • @richmcgee434
      @richmcgee434 4 года назад +60

      They certainly would have if they could have. The very idea lends itself to an amusing fantasy, though. "Cost me three footmen, my lead gardener, and a butler last year alone. I really *don't* see what their objection is. What? Have my lady's maid attend to it? Don't be absurd, do you know how hard it is to replace a good maid?" Hmmm. How to work that into a Victorian Fantasy setting?

    • @AlextheENTP
      @AlextheENTP 4 года назад +23

      This reminds me of the scene from _The Mick_ , where Alba the housekeeper states during a rant about the family she works for, "I breastfed all three of those kids!"
      But she never even had any kids of her own, so how did they get her to lactate for their kids??? 😂😂
      Edit: As some of you know, I only found out about induced lactation by casually reading an outdated medical book (as in, published before I was born), which stated that induced lactation could take up to a year. After that I never gave the topic any thought again, and when I saw the episode, I just remembered what I'd read and figured that that was what made the joke funny. Nowadays it only takes a few weeks! Yay progress. (Although I still find the joke funny.)

    • @richmcgee434
      @richmcgee434 4 года назад +5

      @@AlextheENTP I hope you're kidding but if you're not, go look up induced lactation. Honestly, what do they teach people in health and biology classes these days?

    • @AlextheENTP
      @AlextheENTP 4 года назад +26

      @@richmcgee434 Hi Rich. Thanks so much for being a snarky prick who judges people for not knowing some random fact, but doesn't actually supply any useful information. That's the spirit, well done!
      For corrections, please see above.

    • @richmcgee434
      @richmcgee434 4 года назад +2

      @@AlextheENTP Oh, I'm sorry, you're too lazy to do a google search of your own as well as too ignorant to know basic facts about human biology. Silly me for assuming you were functioning adult. Here's your link, baby. lllusa.org/induced-lactation-and-relactation/

  • @lisamedla
    @lisamedla 4 года назад +1764

    Haven't see any Kenyan or even African stories. So my country has 42 tribes and for one of the ones I belong to and their immediate neighbours they used a special piece of cloth. Clothes then were made exclusively of leather. The cloth was processed more than the usual clothes. It was fastened I believe to the underpant. As a plus society was largely ran by women. In many homesteads the husband only knew only of the first wife's period, assuming she did not get pregnant on the honeymoon or he was too poor to get another wife.
    With colonialism came the piece of cotton. Not many people could buy cotton to last so they used blankets which functioned much the same as cloth diapers. They were soaked overnight with what I know not and we sun dried. Sun was mandatory. Then came the adhesive pads. Tampons to date are not as popular here and really stuff like menstrual cups and surprise surprise reusable pads too.

    • @regann7227
      @regann7227 4 года назад +16

      Interesting

    • @heatherjones6647
      @heatherjones6647 4 года назад +52

      Menstrual cups are the way to go. Durable, easily washable without using too much water, and can be sanitized. Love Kenya and can't wait to go back after Covid vaccine.

    • @queerulantin6431
      @queerulantin6431 4 года назад +5

      Thank you so much! ❤️🧡💛💚💙💜🌈✨✌️

    • @greenybeeny7139
      @greenybeeny7139 4 года назад +4

      dang that's cool

    • @AN-ou6qu
      @AN-ou6qu 4 года назад +27

      Pretty sure she specializes in Victorian culture but this is a cool insight and I’d love to see a historical channel like karolina’s but for Africa (or likely a particular country or part)

  • @ivygilliam5168
    @ivygilliam5168 4 года назад +289

    "Their opinion didn't mean that women listened to them" I laughed way to hard at that.

  • @christinakav5029
    @christinakav5029 4 года назад +482

    When I was younger I would watch westerns where a girl was captured and I would wonder what did she do about her periods?!!

    • @janetrogers5429
      @janetrogers5429 4 года назад +34

      I did too and also on wagon trains no bathroom and stagecoaches

    • @celesteadeanes4478
      @celesteadeanes4478 4 года назад +6

      rags and pins. Wah and wear.

    • @09penny1
      @09penny1 4 года назад +52

      It would probably be a good way to get herself immediately released by her captors! 😄

    • @Oakleaf700
      @Oakleaf700 4 года назад +23

      @@09penny1 There is a film made by Afghans called ''Osama''........abut life under the Taliban where girls pretend to be boys....
      A girl was given the name 'Osama'......but there is a really tragic part of the story where she gets a period while being tortured by the Taliban ...makes me want to weep.{the film is on YT}

    • @carolyndarley1045
      @carolyndarley1045 4 года назад +37

      @@Oakleaf700 Osama gets into trouble for being too wussy. The Imam decides to beat Osama in order to toughen him up. The teachers and the other boys have noticed that he was too "swishy". Osama is hung over a well and whipped..horribly. The trauma brings the blood of her period running down her legs. The Imam and all of the boys and teachers watch as her real identity is exposed. This is a film about the Taliban restricting the rights of women to go anywhere outside of their homes without a male escort. Since many of the men had left home to fight or had died in the conflict, this left households of women and children only. If you had a son, regardless of age, he could walk you to the store, doctor, etc. If no men in the family, you could go nowhere. There are reports of elderly women who had no families, but would have been capable of going to the store if allowed, die of starvation and illness..alone. Osama is the story of one such family. At a very young age they cut her hair and had her act like a boy so they could leave the house. The charade continues until the above named climax.

  • @blondinevloggt
    @blondinevloggt 4 года назад +856

    my friend's family has a history of extremely painful periods (fun!), her mom and her would literally pass out from the cramps when they didn't take painkillers. when she asked her grandma how she used to deal with it pre hot water bottles and painkillers she said: a sheepskin for warmth and vodka.

    • @online2000.
      @online2000. 4 года назад +54

      Blondine vloggt that’s badass

    •  4 года назад +74

      Quite similar to what my great-grandmother used to give to my mother and my aunt when they had cramps. Simply... gin.

    • @zeineb8870
      @zeineb8870 4 года назад +12

      @ should try that😂

    • @user-mv9tt4st9k
      @user-mv9tt4st9k 4 года назад +13

      Your friend's great grandma is my kind of girl, ha ha.

    • @petlover79
      @petlover79 4 года назад +19

      My mother gave me tequila for the cramps, 👍🤣😂🤣

  • @jennieredd
    @jennieredd 4 года назад +169

    I’m a Gen Xer from the Deep South. Periods were never discussed. I was 11 when I started my period. I told my mom I was bleeding and her response was “I guess you’re a woman now.” That was it, conversation over. I had to figure everything out all on my own. Also, I suffered unbearable cramps that would have me doubled over in tremendous pain and vomiting for hours. A few times I almost passed out from the pain. Not one person in my family suggested I go to the doctor, get on the pill, take something more effective than one aspirin, etc. I suffered alone in my bedroom and missed many days of school for years. The day I turned 18 I got a prescription for birth control and have since vowed to never let my daughter suffer.

    • @ysag.1227
      @ysag.1227 3 года назад

      My parents are gen x and your icon is so on brand :)

    • @cyndiveach4279
      @cyndiveach4279 3 года назад +3

      My daughter is the same way! Getting bad cramps and throwing up was so foreign to me. I had no idea as to what to do for her.

    • @SibylleLeon
      @SibylleLeon 3 года назад +2

      I'm Gen X but I learned about this stuff in school. So thankfully I knew what to do when I got my period. We were also encouraged to talk about it very openly and get checked out by a gynaecologist regularly from at least the age of 16, and the girls all did. My very conservative mother didn't understand and her upbringing probably just didn't allow her to be this open about it, but thankfully I had my own support system, haha!

  • @quittenfee42
    @quittenfee42 4 года назад +386

    My grandmother was born in 1905. She told me about those belts. That she used them as a girl when she first had her period at 12. She thought she was about to die because no one told her about it. (That was in Germany)

    • @oliwiabelica1011
      @oliwiabelica1011 4 года назад +13

      My grandmother thought the same

    • @Vohalika
      @Vohalika 4 года назад +25

      My grandmother has a story about her older sister thinking she was about to die and her looking to check where the blood was coming from and neither of them knew. Germany in the 1950ies, everybody.

    • @eval4495
      @eval4495 4 года назад +9

      I thought I was going to die too 😅 I had no idea what I was going through the first time 😆

    • @Happy_Tails_Toy_Poodles
      @Happy_Tails_Toy_Poodles 4 года назад +7

      My mother in law is 90 and also wasn’t told about her period. She thought she had sat on a tack! Poor woman! She also used a belt.

    • @MissAlyssa108
      @MissAlyssa108 4 года назад +3

      My grandma was born 1924 in a rural ranching town in the western United States and she thought she was dying too and burned her underwear. Once that was straightened out, she had crazy painful cramps in her twenties to the point of passing out walking home one time. She got married a bit late I think and so it was likely into the 50s at that point so.

  • @peggycorbett2679
    @peggycorbett2679 4 года назад +561

    My great grandma told me women would go to the back of the store where they would buy rags which would be put in a paper bag so they could be discreet about it.

    • @aformerhiro7383
      @aformerhiro7383 4 года назад +105

      Heh. Reminds me when I was in a pysch ward and I got my period. The staff was all male and when I asked for a pad the staff member I asked grabbed me a bunch of oads, placed it in a little brown bag, folded said bag twice, patted it down and gave it to me. I'm guessing that's what women would do in his time too, as he was an older fellow. Freely buying menstrual products without hiding them is a very modern concept.

    • @roshalee5839
      @roshalee5839 4 года назад +13

      @@aformerhiro7383 Psych ward. Now you have my attention. Can you tell us about it

    • @kontrapunktalna
      @kontrapunktalna 4 года назад +3

      The packing in a separate paper bag / wrapping it in paper actualy still happens in rural communities here in Serbia, and I've also experienced it in Morocco

    • @aformerhiro7383
      @aformerhiro7383 4 года назад

      @@roshalee5839 I dont see how it relates to this, but sure. What would you like to know?

    • @monkiram
      @monkiram 4 года назад +7

      I still hide them in my sleeve when I need to change in a public bathroom. Not when buying them though, but having everyone around know when I'm about to go to the bathroom to change my sanitary products is a little too personal for me, even in 2019.

  • @shekimarie6280
    @shekimarie6280 4 года назад +1419

    The last time I was this early they still call corsets, stays.

    • @Geeky.rainbow.vampire
      @Geeky.rainbow.vampire 4 года назад +7

      Mood

    • @MissCaraMint
      @MissCaraMint 4 года назад +5

      Oh wow, that is early

    • @Evija3000
      @Evija3000 4 года назад +2

      Why do I feel like one is a french and the other an english name.

    • @MissCaraMint
      @MissCaraMint 4 года назад +3

      Evija3000 Because that’s the case. Though I belive they’re both French in origin if we go off technicalities

    • @Evija3000
      @Evija3000 4 года назад

      @@MissCaraMint Checked wiktionary. There's a whole forest of middle/old english, french, even dutch, swedish, etc. But, yeah, old french is involved.

  • @nadiau
    @nadiau 3 года назад +166

    Here in Russia we dealt with periods in a pretty much Victorian way all the way up to USSR collapse, when finally we got imported tampons and pads that actually worked.. I was so happy the day mom bought me my first box of Tampax in early 90s. It truly changed my life lol.

    • @summersunday8965
      @summersunday8965 Год назад +4

      Yep. My first period was in 2001, and I used rags: washed them, dried, ironed and kept them hidden until in 2003 I was to go to a summer camp, and mom got me a box of pads (apparently to avoid the shame if other girls would see my rags). I still remember my astonishment at the difference

  • @nisey1201
    @nisey1201 4 года назад +348

    I'm 58 years old and when I started my period I used sanitary napkins during my teenage years that had a long strip of (for want of a better word) gauze on each end that would be attached to the belt type garment. Your video brought back the memory of using the belt. I remember when Proctor and Gamble introduced their "Always" brand that had the adhesive strip and subsequently "wings" so the belt was no longer needed. I can't believe I experienced an evolution of sanitary napkin usage.

    • @nisey1201
      @nisey1201 4 года назад +11

      @@Jen-il4lh I agree with you 100%. The infiltration of men in dresses and wigs trying to access female privilege is extremely disturbing and is a threat to our vulnerable spaces and sex based rights. Biological women MUST push back. Biological women have periods. Biological women have babies. Biological women breast feed. I REFUSE to be erased.

    • @aprilwest1883
      @aprilwest1883 4 года назад +2

      Me to . I'm age 61. We used pads and the waist belt. Then the adhesive pad was invented.

    • @chelamcguire
      @chelamcguire 4 года назад +5

      @@nisey1201 Well said, my darling. We must stand up for our gender.

    • @nisey1201
      @nisey1201 4 года назад

      @@chelamcguire Thanks and yes indeed.

    • @genicabre
      @genicabre 4 года назад +17

      @@nisey1201 You are missing the point. If you are born with the body of a woman but feel like a man, you can choose to be distraught the rest of your only life, or you can try to live the best you can. It might involve having to keep part of your original biology. It is not black & white, we are grey. And it happens in other species too, not only human. P&G has great values and embraces diversity.

  • @martamaria6714
    @martamaria6714 4 года назад +696

    I have an idea. In old novels very often a lady is hidden in her room for longer time, because of migraine. Then, maybe heavy migraines were more common than today; but maybe that was convenient excuse for heavy period?

    • @SiobhanJohnson
      @SiobhanJohnson 4 года назад +222

      Given that period-connected migraines are also a thing, it definitely could be a really convenient excuse because some women really do have a migraine at that time

    • @abigaelmacritchie1365
      @abigaelmacritchie1365 4 года назад +185

      I was thinking that too, and all those mentions of a woman "beeing indisposed" and "needing rest" that sort of thing

    • @MissCaraMint
      @MissCaraMint 4 года назад +49

      Interesting theory. It makes a hell of a lot of sense too.

    • @Evija3000
      @Evija3000 4 года назад +42

      @@abigaelmacritchie1365 In the game Witcher 3 being indisposed is equated with period so the game makers agree with you there. 😄

    • @martamaria6714
      @martamaria6714 4 года назад +73

      Evija3000 actually „beeing indisposed” is modern, elegant expression of having period too, at least in polish. We said that at school when we couldnt train because of that.

  • @Uapa500
    @Uapa500 4 года назад +1188

    In Italy, since my grandmother was a girl, a woman starting her period has always been seen as an event to shout out to everyone and celebrate, which was quite embarrassing for me, I must say 🤣
    She and my mum used to pin cotton diapers to their underwear and I imagine that wasn't much different from the Victorian solution you talk about in this video 🙂
    Mum is still grateful for modern pads, far more comfortable than the ones you needed to pin. When I went back to reusable she was puzzled 😅
    We're lucky really, we have so many alternatives today 🙂

    • @bodyofhope
      @bodyofhope 4 года назад +53

      That's actually very cool. Everyone should celebrate when a girl has her first period!!! Here in the states, it's pretty much mortifying lol. Even though popular culture pretends we're all comfortable with it now.

    • @gracie9658
      @gracie9658 4 года назад +94

      @@bodyofhope I don't see why we should celebrate it. Though I agree that it is a natural bodily function, and that women should not be ashamed of them or taught to hide it, it is very much an intimate thing, and I wouldn't want everyone shouting it on the rooftops.

    • @Maja0001
      @Maja0001 4 года назад +85

      @@gracie9658 we should celebrate because we are not pregnant, duh!

    • @lisaheisey6168
      @lisaheisey6168 4 года назад +71

      My mom, who was Italian, called every relative she could when I got my period at age 11, to tell them the "news". Lol I was fine, with getting my period. But, I thought, that my mom calling one female relative after another was kind of overkill. Lol.

    • @evvunja
      @evvunja 4 года назад +21

      @@lisaheisey6168 wooow, that's so different, I barely told my mother and just because I didn't have any tampons or so. She went to the shop and bought a chocolate meaning that I will need it too xd

  • @SmittenKitten.
    @SmittenKitten. 3 года назад +223

    I have two young sons. Like all children, they're super curious and in my business all the time, even when I'm peeing. Well, I was on my period one time, and one of my sons walked into the greater bathroom area, and I realized that I didn't have any pads in the little toilet room. I asked my son if he could go get Daddy, but Daddy was apparently talking to a neighbor, so I had my son get a box of pads for me. He asked what they were for, and I was like, "Do I tell him?" I decided there was nothing wrong with telling him, so after I was done in the bathroom, I told him all about periods in a child-friendly sort of way. At first he was kind of scared when he heard there was bleeding involved (scared for me), but once I explained it was normal, that I didn't need a bandaid, etc., he calmed down. As they've aged a little, I've explained a little more, and it's such a normal and comfortable topic now that they make fun of me when I complain about being on my period... -_-
    My MIL told me it was "improper" of me to talk about periods with little boys, that it's "women's business," etc., but I don't think there's anything wrong with it as long as it's age appropriate.

    • @MeganMay62442
      @MeganMay62442 3 года назад +44

      Good for you! Your sons will be more educated about women's health and this will help them to have better respect for women. I think it's a good thing.

    • @SmittenKitten.
      @SmittenKitten. 3 года назад +17

      @@MeganMay62442 Thank you!! I can't tell you how much I appreciate hearing that!

    • @susanhepburn6040
      @susanhepburn6040 3 года назад +30

      Couldn't agree more! I educated both of my children (one girl, one boy) about periods, condoms, respect and consent etc. Also taught them both to cook, iron, basic sewing and doing the laundry, as soon as it was appropriate, i.e. safe. I'm 69 and they were born in '72 and '74.

    • @lokicooper4690
      @lokicooper4690 3 года назад +14

      Your MIL is a dinosaur! I think it's absolutely necessary to tell them. So many males haven't the slightest clue what is going on with women and periods, it's shocking. They really need to know so they can understand what is going on. It's not like it's something secret, it's basic biology, and there's nothing wrong with males learning it too. I really appreciate when I hear parents who educate their kids, in stead of relying on school to teach them about it.

    • @SmittenKitten.
      @SmittenKitten. 3 года назад +9

      @@lokicooper4690 She really is a dinosaur... That's a great word to describe her ideology. She's a conservative southern Christian, and is pretty Karen-like. I try my hardest to get along with her, but oh my gosh is it difficult! I'm so glad to hear positive affirmation in the way I handle my sons in this regard. No one taught me about periods, and it always felt taboo, so I don't want my sons to feel that way about something so normal and ubiquitous. Thank you for the kind comment!

  • @paulvikkay8940
    @paulvikkay8940 4 года назад +513

    My grandma (born 1919, married 1940) told me that she used rags and how horrible it was. She lived on a farm but had a job as a seamstress for a few years before she was married. In Brisbane, Australia, the summers were hot and humid and they did not bathe every day, only once a week. She said that it was a terrible stink that they just had to put up with, and periods were no excuse for missing out on any work that they had to do.

    • @rbguerreiro2466
      @rbguerreiro2466 4 года назад +12

      Didn't they have bidets/portable buckets to clean the genital area?

    • @grittykitty50
      @grittykitty50 4 года назад +60

      @@rbguerreiro2466 even if they could take time out to cleanse the genital area, they couldn't do it all day and they had to wear a rag that would eventually get soaked. If you lived in an isolated area, you just didn't have an endless supply of rags. Most women had to use old clothes, etc. They couldn't always afford to buy rags.

    • @eighteen18eighteen
      @eighteen18eighteen 4 года назад +34

      I've heard this from an older lady as well. Those poor women

    • @brib7141
      @brib7141 4 года назад +4

      My mom has told me she remember when she was little visiting her grandmother and her young aunts on the farm. They lived off the farm and rarely even went into town. They used rags and had a bucket of water sitting on the back porch and would throw the dirty rags in the bucket to be I guess hand washed.

    • @deanwinchester3356
      @deanwinchester3356 4 года назад

      No excuse? Wow how times have changed with women who have PCOS and endometriosis... sure we still don’t have period sick days at work or school, but to tell people you have hormonal issues that affect your period or even body is more empathic now.

  • @abc11645
    @abc11645 4 года назад +665

    I think I just spent at least three or so hours just reading through comments... very interesting stuff and much information. Nice video!

    • @ellismartiskainen7729
      @ellismartiskainen7729 3 года назад +16

      I know. 9 minute video, 90 minutes of comments. It is cool to learn all this stuff.

    • @kyliepechler
      @kyliepechler 3 года назад +6

      Same here.
      These comments are so full of interesting information from females about this subject - it is so hard to stop reading them!

  • @juliettemarie3255
    @juliettemarie3255 4 года назад +384

    I really love how you always remember the working women. Fashion history tends to only focus on the rich or well-off women

    • @ofpine
      @ofpine 4 года назад +4

      gosh same!

    • @morganmiller5413
      @morganmiller5413 4 года назад +6

      Ikr! Because of this I know very little about the clothing that the middle and lower class wore.

  • @uonigiro
    @uonigiro 4 года назад +317

    My grandma is from a small village in Greece and she would take cotton or little rags and just put them ... where they needed to go. Fast forward when I get my periods now whenever I visit her and I have my pads in a little bag she always scolds me saying this is a secret between women and nobody should know not even my brother. Also when she was young she wouldn’t be allowed to go to church on her period because it was an “unholy” time for her. It’s crazy how I literally am so vocal to my family whenever it’s that time of the month but my grandma had to keep it to herself and not receive any helpful products.

    • @deirdrerdj
      @deirdrerdj 3 года назад +1

      What, are they under Levitical law in Greece??

    • @uonigiro
      @uonigiro 3 года назад +12

      @@deirdrerdj idk what that is but maybe consider the cultural shift from like the 40-50s and nowadays 😂 also I’m only 15 and I got my period like three years ago so there’s a big difference in our outlook of things. I mean my grandma considers herself a feminist because she would lie about her period and go to church anyways like this is they kind of gap we’re talking about.
      Also Greece is very homogeneous and most of the population is Christian so the culture heavily implies Christian beliefs etc. Because of us being reliant on the church many tend to be conservative (since the conservation of our language is thanks to the church but that’s a different story) so yeah the church kinda held us back. Also like I said before there is quite the gap between my grandmas teenage years and mine 😂

    • @26chiapet
      @26chiapet 3 года назад +2

      That’s so odd, because I always thought that only countries like in Southeast Asia wouldn’t allow women in worshiping grounds whiles she’s menstruating.

    • @uonigiro
      @uonigiro 3 года назад

      @@26chiapet Yh I mean Greece back then and especially the church is very conservative. Although now theyre still conservative they allow women to go to church when menstruating

    • @lonelynightlights
      @lonelynightlights 3 года назад +6

      the same "" unholy on your period, don't enter our holy grounds"" notion ..also exists in muslim communties and is still practiced!

  • @tempusfugit7127
    @tempusfugit7127 4 года назад +690

    I am almost 70yrs old and was almost 17 yrs old when my period started , because the subject was a no no unmentionable I asked female friends at school as I had no idea what the heck was going on . Brought up by my grandparents it was a difficult conversation with my grandma who came with me to a shop for what were called towels ( in a whisper to a female shop assistant ) and were wrapped up carefully in a brown paper bag .😨😨😨 . Grandma was a typical Irish woman. .Roman Catholic. ..rosy red cheeks and bright blue eyes , she waited until grandpa was out of the house and told me what happened in her day which was using cut up towels with a belt around the waist. .a hook at the back and at the front to hold the towel in place .These towels were washed twice a day and replaced with clean dry ones . Unmentionable 's still make me laugh. ..nowadays nothing is sacred.

    • @chloekit4861
      @chloekit4861 3 года назад +22

      Tempus Fugit same in my family I come from a strict line of Irish catholic women straight off the boat from Ellis Island no one ever spoke about sex, periods or anything of that nature

    • @kristyansooknanan4409
      @kristyansooknanan4409 3 года назад +20

      Do you want it to still be sacred ?

    • @houndtwo0783
      @houndtwo0783 3 года назад +1

      I grew up with only male friends and dead friends I found out I was a psychic when I was four years old I can see ghosts are unlike the ways you see them in horror movies most of them are friendly but some of them can be rude so far I’m in the process of explaining to a medieval plague doctor that the plague is gone and that doctors dress differently and have different cures I’m also having to teach him modern English we are teaching each other he’s teaching me medieval french and I’m teaching him modern English I call him jay it Just Suits him to well he’s actually quite shy and easily scared he is also extremely friendly towards me.

    • @houndtwo0783
      @houndtwo0783 3 года назад

      @Silvia C it’s that I don’t have anyone to talk to about getting them I don’t trust my parents and I spend most of my time talking to ghosts

    • @LL-tr5et
      @LL-tr5et 3 года назад +13

      @@houndtwo0783 tf?

  • @ilovefonebone
    @ilovefonebone 4 года назад +1474

    In Maori culture, menstrual blood was (and still is to an extent)considered to be extremely powerful and sacred. They believe it carries their ancestors and is a connection between the people and the land, so when a girl got her period it was cause for celebration. They used to use absorbent moss as pads and periods were often discussed frankly among everyone in the family.
    Then colonization came along and kinda fucked that up.

    • @alechiavassa
      @alechiavassa 4 года назад +187

      Such a shame that colonization changed the view on that so drastically (as well as fuck up a lot of other things). It's good to hear a culture seeing menstruation as a positive thing.

    • @grittykitty50
      @grittykitty50 4 года назад +67

      @kshiftkometh Likewise, if you call in sick at the job and your nosy male supervisor asks what's wrong, just start talking about cramps and he will get ghost.

    • @oats4632
      @oats4632 4 года назад +22

      Menstrual blood is different from other blood in the body, it has reproductive tissue, bacteria, and mucus. I wouldn't consider it to be sacred.

    • @Angi3_6
      @Angi3_6 4 года назад +8

      That sounds so cool!

    • @heirofblack4456
      @heirofblack4456 4 года назад +12

      It sucks though when you get your period and aren't allowed in the marae so are excluded from important events.

  • @rawonions8827
    @rawonions8827 4 года назад +1211

    If only women could stay home and rest on their period today- trying to concentrate while your ovaries are trying to rip themselves out of your abdomen is kind of distracting.

    • @paisley293
      @paisley293 4 года назад +113

      It's the blood clots ripping themselves out of the uterine lining, that really got me. But I think the ovaries are just chillin'.

    • @birflurnstun1346
      @birflurnstun1346 4 года назад +10

      @@paisley293 mine r overactive lol

    • @AlexChavez-wz1ok
      @AlexChavez-wz1ok 4 года назад +8

      I am not against it. Sign me up!!!

    • @negautrunks
      @negautrunks 4 года назад +37

      @@paisley293 this. Your ovaries are not involved in menstruation beyond supplying the egg 2 weeks or so before. That is their only involvement. Overactive or not, PCOS, ovarian cancer, whatever, nothing is going to cause your ovaries to become an active participant in your period while you're bleeding. The blood comes from your uterus period, not your ovaries, fallopian tubes, cervix, or vagina! There are lots of great videos on RUclips explaining your period :)

    • @paisley293
      @paisley293 4 года назад +19

      @@negautrunks : thanks for the explanation. I'm sure some others might benefit from it. However, if you looked at my post, I never said that the blood came from the ovaries or the other parts of the female reproductive system that you enumerated in your post. But if you read *my post* again, I *did* mention the uterine lining. I'm a grand mother now, who happened to teach NFP reproductive health in my younger days.

  • @Julia-jc6xu
    @Julia-jc6xu 3 года назад +92

    Periods were such a taboo even in the 70's. My mom once told me she would go to the store, ask for menstrual pads and they would give her a box wrapped in brown paper, no labels, nothing. They would't even display them on the shelves. 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @susanhepburn6040
      @susanhepburn6040 3 года назад +7

      In the early 60s in my part of England, pads and belts were usually 'under the counter' in the local haberdashery store and asked for (by my mother, buying for me) in a kind of coded phrase. Very sad. Also handed to you in brown paper wrapping!

    • @MR-nu2ew
      @MR-nu2ew 2 года назад +3

      My mom told me the same story! She said it was actually embarrassing to pick up the wrapped brown packages because everyone knew exactly what was inside!

    • @ThestuffthatSaralikes
      @ThestuffthatSaralikes 2 месяца назад

      My mom (69) has told me the same. Her Dad owned a drug store and the delivery guy would hide the “lady’s products” wrapped in brown paper behind this bush next to the porch. I guess if people saw that brown paper packaging they just *knew* and LAWD forbid that!!!

  • @sunsetbluff
    @sunsetbluff 4 года назад +323

    I am 67 born in the 1950's. I was the oldest girl in the family. My mom an only child raised by her grandmother never ever mentioned that at some point I was going to have a period. I started when I was 13 and freaked out. I had seen a blue box of Kotex in my moms room but had no idea what it was for. I ran to my mom told her I was hurt and bleeding but was told no you are "sick" and you will be sick every month for years. I was devastated I was very athletic and this was really going to be a mess. She set me up with a sanitary belt and Kotex blue line towards your underwear. She showed me how to change roll in toilet paper and to keep it all private. She also gave me a pamphlet which I wished she had given to me before. Anyways this pad thing was misery after a year I found out about tampons and never went back to pads until the birth of my children. I never had girls but still explained to the boys about periods. Their dad was very informed also before we met. I think because my mom was raised by her grandmother it was very taboo to talk about periods as she was a totally different generation. I was lucky never had cramps and only had threes day periods. I had a hysterectomy at 40 it was the best thing ever. Love reading about everyone's experiences.

    • @ah5721
      @ah5721 4 года назад +19

      I wish I had 3 day bleeds. its always been 7 :(

    • @Tesjhkyayy
      @Tesjhkyayy 3 года назад +4

      My mum showed me also how to change the sanitary towel... rolling it in toilet paper. But I think it's a good thing, in this way it's not disgusting for guests or other people in general.

    • @osiyetteopurupruprupurupru3334
      @osiyetteopurupruprupurupru3334 3 года назад +3

      @@ah5721 lol l wish l had 7 days l have 13 days bleed its so anormal but idk

    • @ellismartiskainen7729
      @ellismartiskainen7729 3 года назад +2

      @@osiyetteopurupruprupurupru3334 That is a bit concerning. Maybe you should talk to a doctor

    • @osiyetteopurupruprupurupru3334
      @osiyetteopurupruprupurupru3334 3 года назад +2

      @@ellismartiskainen7729 thanks

  • @vt1527
    @vt1527 4 года назад +482

    Fun fact about the topic of periods I recently learned.
    In ancient rome boys had legal capacity when they became fertile (when they started puberty and grew a beard) and later on the romans decided to go by age and settled on 14 years (in an empire as large as ancient rome it was simply easier to go by age than to look for a single little beard hair).
    Girls however had legal capacity by age 12. The ancient romans always went by age when it came to the girls. Now one would think it rather easy to tell when a girl starts being fertile - when she gets her first period - but the ancient romans found it immoral "to ask about these types of things" so they never went by the rule that applied to boys in the earlier times lmao

    • @gia3442
      @gia3442 4 года назад +9

      kshiftkometh true like i’m pretty sure i know how my uterus works

    • @catherinelempke8451
      @catherinelempke8451 4 года назад +17

      I'm sorry, but I'm afraid you're mistaken. *Puberty* for the ancient Romans, was deemed usually to hit around age 14 for boys and 12 for girls (though children could legally become betrothed as early as age 5), but the age of *majority* was held to be 25 for *both* genders.
      Before age 10, children were not held to have any legal rights; once they hit puberty they had some legal rights (they could get married, or drafted into military service), but were still considered in need of protection in regards to legal cases, property law, official decision making, etc. In fact, The lowest rank of the cursus honarum, the sort of "employment ladder" for the Roman government as set out by the Emperor/Princeps Augustus, had a minimum age of 20; the next rank, a minimum age of 28, even for members of the nobility.
      Between puberty and the age of majority, a male (or highly ambitious/respected female) relative would be appointed as a guardian of the teenagers affairs, and would take responsibility for their moral character and education. This guardian had legal power to overrule any decisions made by their ward. Only in rare instances of demonstrated and unusual maturity could someone apply to the state for full legal rights prior to reaching the age of maturity. This was called venea aetatis, and in order to be granted this privilege a public hearing would be held and high ranking character witnesses would have to vouch for the applicants exceptional maturity and intelligence. But even the application for this status was age restricted, at least by tradition, to a minimum age of 18 for women and 20 for men.
      Sorry, I don't mean to lecture but I've been listening to the History of Rome and History of Byzantium podcasts, and have taken an interest in the subject. I hope this is helpful to you!

    • @monkiram
      @monkiram 4 года назад +2

      @@catherinelempke8451 Omg I love those podcasts!! It's so cool to find somebody else who listens to them. Well, not them as I still have not finished Rome, I'm like 3/4 of the way through it

    • @daphne4983
      @daphne4983 4 года назад +1

      @kshiftkometh wait, what questions???

    • @mollyahern6982
      @mollyahern6982 4 года назад +1

      At least they had a legal age (to them, the earliest age at which the boy or girl could reach puberty.(. In the middle east, to this day, there is no legal age for marriage and shocking young children end up married.

  • @vanidaknutson4616
    @vanidaknutson4616 4 года назад +375

    Back in the 70s I had my first baby, and of course huge pads were used with a belt. My husband came out of the bathroom waving a pad and asked how do you get one of these up inside of you? 😂. Bless his heart at least he asked right?
    .

    • @juliab.75
      @juliab.75 4 года назад +20

      Vanida Knutson lol haha 😂 aww that's cute and funny

    • @victormillen8393
      @victormillen8393 4 года назад +3

      @@swissuz lmao

    • @SusanBishop555
      @SusanBishop555 4 года назад +3

      OHHH...lmaoooo

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 4 года назад +6

      Vanida Knutson
      Then you had to explain the difference between pads and tampons?

    • @lauraarcher1730
      @lauraarcher1730 4 года назад

      Vanida Knutson awww.😂😂😂

  • @TheTiffgriffiths
    @TheTiffgriffiths 4 года назад +339

    great topic!
    my great grandmother would never say anything, but when my grandmother got her first period she thought she had sinned and was dying!!!
    My native american heritage has taught me that a Woman's First MOON is very important and to be celebrated :)

    • @catvergueiro8905
      @catvergueiro8905 4 года назад +19

      I would love to know more about the native american beliefs when it comes to womanhood :)
      u know if there are books about it?

    • @saturniiiidae
      @saturniiiidae 3 года назад +6

      I was fascinated with Native American beliefswhen I was in 2nd grade but haven’t put much thought into it anymore as it was a long time ago. I find it fascinating though and I read some articles about the moon time. I would also love to know more about this :)

    • @LL-tr5et
      @LL-tr5et 3 года назад +2

      me too! id love to know

    • @indumathi6501
      @indumathi6501 3 года назад +4

      I'm from South India , u can search for puberty ceremony in RUclips

    • @missnerd9555
      @missnerd9555 3 года назад +11

      It's worth noting how indigenous cultures celebrated periods, and saw it as something powerful. I am from India, in my midtwenties and i am only now discovering a whole lot of beliefs that have been misrepresented as taboos as a result of being knowledge being colonised, what with many non-eastern beliefs about periods seeping into the culture. I am glad you are in touch with your native American heritage. :)

  • @Premchik
    @Premchik 4 года назад +71

    I'n Russian, my grandma told me that when she was at the university and lived in a dormitory with like 40 other girls, they used cloths, handwashed them and dried them by hanging UNDER their beds!!

  • @katy6516
    @katy6516 4 года назад +314

    I guess it was one bloody Period drama

  • @NaysWays
    @NaysWays 4 года назад +120

    My Grandmother (her first period was around mid 1930's and in New Zealand) use to use a cloth nappy - the same ones they used for babies - folded several times longways (like it was a long rectangle) then the short ends would be turned over and stitched into a tube at each end, then a torn length of sheet (bandage) would be threaded through the tubes at each end and worn like modern underwear but tied tight at one hip. When she told me about this, she said that was what her mother and grandmother always did, so going by their ages that would take us back to at least the 1880's. They knew about the garter type devices, but could never afford them. My Mother and aunts (6 girls out of 14 kids) were all given the same thing when they started their cycles in the 60's/70's and used this type of nappy (period belt they called it) until they left home and earned their own wage, or at least got assess to the sewing machine to make their own washable and reusable "napkins" from the larger nappies. Thankfully they were always a very open family and things like periods, and how babies were made, were always dealt with in a matter of fact way so there was never any prudishness or lies. So we learnt a lot about feminine health history, and what her family use to do in the past from her. I hope this aural history is useful information for you.

    • @Ross_mo
      @Ross_mo 4 года назад

      Renee Christie +

    • @El-ee6hz
      @El-ee6hz 4 года назад

      Renee Christie interesting interesting

  • @yourboss8176
    @yourboss8176 4 года назад +178

    I'm so happy to live in a time where this topic is not being silenced to death

    • @ladyjustice1474
      @ladyjustice1474 3 года назад +3

      Are you sure about that? A lot of parents don't talk to the kids about the physical changes they'll go through. Sex ed in the schools doesn't deal with the emotional fall out that occurs during puberty.

  • @pay1370
    @pay1370 4 года назад +671

    Currently bleeding and sending a prayer to the ibuprofen gods

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 4 года назад +26

      pay1370
      I can’t even imagine going through that every month without painkillers - man, we‘re sooooo lucky!

    • @t.h.1492
      @t.h.1492 4 года назад +11

      If it helps, I’ve heard caffeine has some mild analgesic qualities. Good luck and drink tea!

    • @bayinthebooks4286
      @bayinthebooks4286 4 года назад +2

      same here dude

    • @ElinWinblad
      @ElinWinblad 4 года назад +1

      Rara Avis I be only had period pains a few times in my life and those only happened to me when I went vegan. I quickly stopped And went back to how I had been eating and haven’t had pain since. I did read in high school ppl thought the pain could be linked to specific nutrition deficiency but I’m no scientist.

    • @sinapisalba
      @sinapisalba 4 года назад

      i can't take painkillers during period, they make it stronger :o( but thank god for modern tools to deal with it :oP

  • @Happy_Tails_Toy_Poodles
    @Happy_Tails_Toy_Poodles 4 года назад +841

    My mother in law just turned 90 a couple of days ago (she was in her 40’s when she had my husband and my husband is 46). She told me that her first period scared her to death because she was wearing white pants and was playing on the playground when it started. This was in Chicago. Someone pointed out the blood and she ran home thinking she had sat on a tac! He mother gave her a belt and explained things and she wanted NO part of it. 😂 she refused to have her period, but of course that doesn’t shop biology. She also didn’t know anything about sex and on her wedding night she refused (this was in the 40’s) and her husband called her mother to talk sense into her. Her mother said, “don’t you want to have children?” And she said, “No!!! Can’t he just stick it in my ear!??” 😂😂😂 when she finally did get pregnant and went into labor her husband thought the baby would come out of her belly button. 😂🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @nincigo9499
      @nincigo9499 4 года назад +68

      I would refuse to have it, if it would do anything😂

    • @leventdhiver
      @leventdhiver 4 года назад +64

      I adored this story!!!!!

    • @samanthareardon3330
      @samanthareardon3330 4 года назад +149

      This is a great story, I love hearing about stuff like this considering how different things are today.
      I read a story once about a man (late 1800's - early 1900's?) Who considered filing for divorce after his wedding night because his new wife didn't look like a female Greek statue, which was the only reference he had for naked women. All that body hair freaked him out!
      I'm glad we can openly talk about things like this nowadays, it makes for many less akward moments.

    • @scarlettstott7570
      @scarlettstott7570 4 года назад +97

      Yeah my great grandmother thought she got pregnant by her husband touching her knee

    • @rebeccatexaschick7621
      @rebeccatexaschick7621 4 года назад +30

      @Dela Flowers i don't even know how because even the bible describes a man coming into a woman and she conceived a child.

  • @celiahache
    @celiahache 4 года назад +163

    My grandmother's sisters grew up in the 30s and 40s. They would use simple pieces of cotton rolled and stuck to their underwear while working in the fields or up the mountains with the sheep. Because it was dangerous to change in the woods (because the used pad could attract wolves and whatnot) they only used one for the whole time they were up there, sleeping in huts for days at a time. She remembers (gross stuff coming) the pads being black with clotted blood. They would plow, reap and sow, ride horses and manage sheep while on their periods as their mother did in the late 1890s. Funnily enough, in my village, there's the superstition you shouldn't bake or try to make mayonnaise or minced meat while on your period because they would spoil.

    • @Evija3000
      @Evija3000 4 года назад +22

      With how unhygenic those clotted pads sound, I don't think it's just a superstition. 😄

    • @celiahache
      @celiahache 4 года назад +22

      @@Evija3000 well, you have a point! But I think is just funny like riding 4h to give your brother some tobacco and food is OK but don't go near the mayonnaise because you'll spoil it xD

    • @OmenaOmega
      @OmenaOmega 4 года назад +13

      My grandmother says the same thing about mayonnaise! (She's 80). And i even met a girl in her twenties once who believed this myth... i went to such extent as making mayonnaise to prove her wrong lmao (didnt have to show her my full menstrual cup as proof though 😂)

    • @emeng8998
      @emeng8998 4 года назад +10

      I read a book by Sandra Ott about Basque culture and they believed that menstruating women could not make mayonnaise. It had something to do with the Basque belief in the way your bodies dealt with heat (I remember thinking it sounded like Chinese ideas about chi) and that when a woman was on her period the extra heat came out her wrists and would ruin the mayonnaise

    • @celiahache
      @celiahache 4 года назад +1

      @@emeng8998 My village is actually very close to the Basque Country and has a lot of early Basque influence (Basque people moved here in the 9th century but that's a very long story) so it makes sense! And I had no idea, so thank you!

  • @kaleey
    @kaleey 4 года назад +111

    My grandma, who has 2 younger sisters, always told me that when she got her period, at 12 I think, she never told her mother (her mother never, ever, talked about it, my gran had to figure out what it was from her girlfriends). Years later, when all of the three sisters had their periods, my grandma's mom saw one of the cloths they used, with a little bit of blood, and she asked my granma, very afflicted, silently and disturbed: "Did you... had your period?" And my grandma responded her very angrily, asking her why she, their own mother, had been avoiding the subject for so many time... Because it wasn't the first time she saw the blood, just the first time she wanted to mention it. Pretty sad

    • @ysag.1227
      @ysag.1227 3 года назад +1

      Wow, so your grandma didn't know?

  • @zeaccent5788
    @zeaccent5788 4 года назад +381

    my grandma born, 1942 at the german-french border, recalls using clothes and having to wash them in the cellar during wintertime which was horrible for her. she didn't like to hide and to freeze for something so normal for her.

    • @thienkimnguyen1260
      @thienkimnguyen1260 4 года назад +15

      Lara Wieauchimmer my grandma has a similar story: she had to use cloths or handkerchiefs and had to wash them regularly. By the way, she was born in 1951 in southern Vietnam

    • @toqa6735
      @toqa6735 4 года назад +6

      My Arab grandma also used old unused cotton fabrics and sometimes she used to wash them by her hands and airdry them and reuse them🌚

    • @erikakraemer6963
      @erikakraemer6963 4 года назад +4

      I remember reading in history books about how hard it was being a peasant woman in northern Europe, e.g. because they had to wash clothes in a hole in the ice during winter, which ruined their hands. I wondered for years why they didn't just heat water in the sauna and wash the clothes there, because basically everyone had a sauna or at least access to one. Then it dawned on me (not so long ago) that they were probably (also) washing their bloody rags, which have to be washed in cold water to get the blood off, and they may have been ashamed and didn't want anyone to see them doing this 😔

  • @MzClementine
    @MzClementine 4 года назад +852

    Hence the claim, “being on the rag.” I asked my grandmother this very question my great grandmother told me well you’ve heard of being on the rag ...correct we used rags and attach them with these terrible belts. Very uncomfortable very uncertain if everything will stay in place. Those days it was best for you to do things you could do sitting down like mending... folding... anything to sit... hahaha. Grandmother actually had one of those loop belt things from the 40s or 50s. The pads that they sold with those oh my goodness my aunt my mother my grandmother and great grandmother we all laughed as my grandmother came out with it on and showed it off and give us a fashion show.. absolutely hilarious!!! I was just 10 then, and there were plenty of girls that could start there period then. I tried it on. And the cries and laughter commenced, I swear that thing came up to my armpits. If I even had budding breasts they would’ve been in between it... I started my period when I was 13 so grateful for the modern things that we have today... so grateful I got to experience four generations of women. Now it’s just me... I miss them so.

    • @elizabethdickerson2915
      @elizabethdickerson2915 3 года назад +1

    • @LL-tr5et
      @LL-tr5et 3 года назад +9

      maybe someday you'll be the grandmother watching over your children

    • @missj6923
      @missj6923 3 года назад +10

      Gorgeous story, thank you for sharing. Slightly off topic but I remembered my great grandmother buying me tights and they came up to my armpits so I'd wear it like a onesie and dance and creep my mum out. I thought it was so fun, good times ☺️

    • @58jennypenny
      @58jennypenny 3 года назад +1

      you couldn't fix the back loop on otherwise the pad would ride up the back while walking.

    • @theembersinside1420
      @theembersinside1420 3 года назад +2

      Eeeew really? U gotta say "budding breasts???" Ughhh.. 🤢🤢🤢

  • @geegnosis8888
    @geegnosis8888 4 года назад +517

    I am of an age (66) when I had to wear a sanitary belt with a large cotton filled sanitary pad which hooked onto the belt. We changed the pad or moved it aside when peeing, depending on the 'flow rate'. Everyone would know who was on their period during gym because the pad outline showed through the gym knickers. It was an excuse sometimes not to do gym! And of course there was the 'smell' if someone didn't change frequently enough. My mother was from Malaysia. She remembers as a child that the women of the kampong (village) would use large square cloth towels with strips of cloth to act as string at each corner. They would be folded and then tied to a makeshift belt around the waist. They would have quite a few of these and tinse then soak after use. Once their period was over, the whole lot would be boiled till very clean and dried ready for use next time. Hope this gives you some insight.

    • @grittykitty50
      @grittykitty50 4 года назад +17

      Gerry Bruce-Ahrens, when I was young in the 60's you knew a girl was on her period because she carried a purse when normally she wouldn't and she wasn't very active.

    • @suzbone
      @suzbone 4 года назад +57

      I'm 53 and in the last generation of women who wore belted pads. When the sticky-backed ones came out we were like OMG WHAT IS THIS SPACE AGE TECHNOLOGY. I used to use scotch tape to tape the sides of my pads to my panties to prevent leaks, and then pads with wings came out and I was irked that I'd had the idea first! lol

    • @geegnosis8888
      @geegnosis8888 4 года назад +24

      A also remember being scared to use tampons and tamoax because I was still technically a 'virgin'. More gross though was my mother's 'family' tradition that on our first ever period we would need to drink a raw egg in linseed oil straight down so it would not give us painful cramps. Both my sister and I agreed it didn't work! Hopefully, Carolina will keep these stories as archival material.

    • @clairekurdelak2913
      @clairekurdelak2913 4 года назад +2

      Gerry, that sounds like a great system, actually!

    • @mauiinheart
      @mauiinheart 4 года назад +6

      Yes this was my experience also regrading carrying your pocket book in the 70's too. You would think we would have been more discrete. Everyone knew why you carried your pocketbook. :) Same for going to the pool in the summer. IF you went to the pool in your shorts...that was a sign you had your period. Silly stuff. GrittyKitty I have to tell you. One can not "BE ON" their period just like one can not be "ON A COLD"....Saying, She, Sally, or even I am "ON" her/my period is incorrect.

  • @sheilapasquini6232
    @sheilapasquini6232 3 года назад +93

    My mom was a nurse and we went over several booklets, along with Q and A. She had everything ready for me when the time came, including menstrual meds. Thanks, Mom!

  • @GiantParfait
    @GiantParfait 4 года назад +1534

    I've just spent half an hour reading really interesting comments and noticed not many Asian examples were present.
    So here is some trivia about Japanese women.
    The monthly blood wasn't understood, and was associated with death. There was a time when women would go into these.. Purification huts and even a couple rituals to ward off death, so says me mam.
    My mother also said her _grandmother_ told her about a kind of.. Loincloth? (You can look up traditional Japanese undies if you want a better idea, they were like loincloth thongs lol) And they would stuff flax or silk and paper in there depending on what kind of household you were in.
    It wasn't until after the second war that they started to use cottons.
    Tbh I bleed clots and I bleed heavily so I'm glad iron supplements and hormone balancing medications like birth control/iud and painkillers exist.
    Otherwise I'd be bedridden the whole time.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 4 года назад +12

      AJ D
      Hormone medications and birth control pills and such will end up giving you cancer of some sort. You should stay away from that shit.

    • @mrsanchor9019
      @mrsanchor9019 4 года назад +12

      Perhaps it might be helpful? Or maybe someone else might find it useful. (Short Story) Fish Oil Supplements did the trick for me!! And I had all those “remedies” which are just Carcinogenic...So my Dad getting desperate like parents do since I was missing plenty of School and having many ER visits. He decided to read up on the matter. He found a U of A Doctor speaking about how many Women experienced a balance in their menses/period/menstruation by taking Fish Oil Supplements for over a little more than a Month to feel the Healthful effects for the next Menstruation Period.
      The First Period after being on it was better than the last and so I continued to see if the next month it would work. Lo and behold, much better improvement from the last... It took 3 months for me to even Notice I was on my Period thats how well it worked for me who by that time was getting shots to subside the pain at 14.

    • @rebeccaartemisia96
      @rebeccaartemisia96 4 года назад +55

      Anti - Ethnic Cleansing some women with endometriosis really need them, it's the only thing can relieve their pain and other symptoms

    • @theMoporter
      @theMoporter 4 года назад +44

      @@anti-ethniccleansing465 Not only is this a greatly exaggerated risk, it ignores that life is literally untenable for lots of people with extremely heavy or frequent periods or conditions.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 4 года назад +4

      @theMoporter
      I don’t think it is an extremely exaggerated risk. I think you are severely understating it.
      Fucking with our bodies hormone levels isn’t a bright thing to do, when all is said and done.
      I am a female myself and I get really painful periods as well, but I’d much rather douse myself with Aleve/painkillers, heating pads, and things of that nature then to pump hormones into my system.
      This is related: my mother took hormone supplements while going through menopause, and she ended up getting breast cancer from it some years back. She defeated it with radiation and cutting it out, as she luckily caught it very early on since she gets her routine mammograms.
      She then got breast cancer a second time and is currently getting a mastectomy for it, along with undergoing chemotherapy (you can only do radiation one time and then never again).
      They tested her for the gene that some people carry which is genetic and causes breast cancer, but she doesn’t have that. The doctors are certain that it was from the hormone therapy.

  • @christinakav5029
    @christinakav5029 4 года назад +259

    When I was 14 or so and my parents and brothers went out I would sit on the toilet and read so I could get a break from wearing a giant pad and all the chafing etc

    • @evae6129
      @evae6129 4 года назад +11

      ChristinaKav50 haha I do that, and I’m 14.

    • @yahee122
      @yahee122 4 года назад

      Evae get a menstrual cup!!! It feels like nothing

  • @kuafer3687
    @kuafer3687 4 года назад +375

    Russian here. My mother actually had a conversation about it with my great-grandmother (born 1905) who was a peasant most of her life. She told her a funny story: when she was a little girl she was returning from the fields with her family and neighbor woman was walking ahead of them...leaving a trace of blood. She freaked out and asked her mother what's wrong with the woman. The mother laughed and said she probably just killed a pig and got her skirt stained. Only years later she realized what it really was :D
    Apparently Russian peasants (at least in Simbirsk region) just used the special underskirts to wipe the blood when it was too much. That's also probably the reason why in rural areas women weren't allowed in churches during their periods.
    And I've read somewhere that women didn't get as much periods as we do since they became pregnant much more often.

    • @aliveslice
      @aliveslice 4 года назад +9

      It was worse than I thought.

    • @zebraskin
      @zebraskin 4 года назад +10

      My cousin came over from Russia in the early 2000s and the russian/greek orthadox chruch still doesn't allow them in the chruch while on their period, you also stand during the whole service and the hair has to be covered. When she came to America though she kinda went hog wild wearing short skirts and such. My ex is also Greek orthadox so I got to experience the church services which were beautiful, but not something I'd subscribe to.

    • @cathyfollowandfeel
      @cathyfollowandfeel 4 года назад +14

      My grandma(very rural Germany) told me women would be working in the fields- i am assuming it would be around 1950s- and just let their pee go standing up, which leads me to the conclusion that periods must have been just like your great grandma described. Times sure have changed :o

    • @kellyk.8519
      @kellyk.8519 4 года назад +11

      Im a mother of 4, in my experience the more babies you have the worse the period becomes, its a lot more heavier then a pre birth period. I use maternity pads and tampons together for the first 3 days. 😒

    • @mariasimkova8493
      @mariasimkova8493 4 года назад +9

      I know that my great grandmother (also Russian), who was a peasant too, did not even use any additional wiping skirt (they were really poor and walked barefoot till winter, so I guess an extra underskirt would be unattainable luxury). She just used to wipe the drops of blood from the floor when it got too messy 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @mysafespace1744
    @mysafespace1744 4 года назад +113

    My grandmother first got her periods at the age of 17-18. It's kinda late but it was post-war (late 1960s) Soviet Union countryside and because of that she was malnourished and very skinny. She got it at her prom while she and her classmates were waiting for the sunrise. She did not know about periods (because in USSR there was no sex) and she was surprised and scared but her more experienced classmates helped her to calm down. So she bled through her white dress and headed back home with a towel (or was it a scarf?) tied around her hips. At home her mother explained how to deal with periods. Basically they used to sew multiple layers of fabric onto crotch of panties and changed them when it got used up and bloody and then washed them with cold water only, sometimes leaving them to soak in cold water. And there was no soap back then, at least in that part of USSR, so yeah, it was crazy.

  • @margaretta000
    @margaretta000 4 года назад +340

    I really enjoyed this video and comments section. For ages now i was wondering how period was dealt with in the past. Unfortunately never had old women around me that i could ask.
    Only once i got to know this lady in her 80s )about 10 years ago) and i asked her. She was still very shy about it and i could tell that this subject makes her quite uncomfortable. I asked her if she knows anything about past generations, like her mum. she only said, that it was very taboo subject, but she witnessed once her mums bloodied legs,, when her mum who worked on the farm, was walking up the ladder. She said she was scared but didnt dare asking about it. Her mum was bviously free bleeding
    This is something i cannot imagine at all.. I understand they were wearing many layers of skirts, most of the time from quite thick materials, like linen for example. But still, no matter how many layers of skirts you wear, its enough that you sit down for an hour or so on your heavier day and your skirts would be totally soaked through.
    Considering that it was very taboo subject, i bet that blood stained clothes were not normal and accepted, so how these women dealt with it?! Or waking up in the morning for example? Even now, with all the amzing pads with wings i stain my bedding and pyjama quite often. How did these women deal with it so many years ago? especially that there was hardly any privacy and most of the time many family members slept in the same room.
    As for using rags to absorb blood. What i find really perplexing is all the technicalities of it.
    Women had to use outside toilets in those days. Also, when we say rags today, we think about something everyone had in abundance and it was not true! People were wearing and repearing everybit of clothes they had, so cotton or other rags were not something everyone had plenty of. So now,i try to imagine a lady on her period going to an outside toilet, she removes her blood soaked rag, that she will not throw away as she does not have enough money to replace rags all the time. So what does she do with it now?! There were no plastic bags,, there was no privacy at homes most often, how is she carrying this rag home for washing? or if she wants to change it at home, where does she do it, if she is not middle class, with plenty of rooms at home, but simple peasant living in one room with many family members? I bet rags needed to be replaced quite often, how does she do it knowing its something taboo and shamefull?
    Or another thing i find perplexing is the 30s. Especially in the summer. Women started wearing nice dresses from light materials, skirts that were qiute close to the their bodies. Summer dresses looked so thin and light, how in these kind of garments were they able to prevent massive blood stains if they were wearing rags or things like that? Women by then were attending universities, having hobbies, being active at sports, yet periods and the protections were still the same as 100 years before i believe. Period belts that so many ladies have mentioned i guess were more known in the west as i have never heard about them in Poland. So how how how these women managed to keep something like this so secret, deal with it in such privacy without shame of stains, blood everywhere etc?

    • @chloekit4861
      @chloekit4861 3 года назад +15

      margaretta000 that is so so interesting thank you so much for sharing this wow I can’t even imagine dealing with regular everyday womanly life things that they had to deal with back in those days with very little they had

    • @fossilfighters101
      @fossilfighters101 3 года назад +9

      11/10 comment

    • @LuLuAnnE96
      @LuLuAnnE96 3 года назад +8

      I guess working on the farm land where you're outside or in a barn often, free bleeding makes sense. It'd just be one other task out of 100 to tend to during their period. Why deal with changing and cleaning rags? Long skirts cover the legs and if you go barefoot then it won't go into or on the shoes. And if it was flowing moment you could just squat down on the ground in some isolated area.

    • @tamtamzhra8463
      @tamtamzhra8463 3 года назад +7

      For me ,
      I asked my grandma she is "90 yr old"
      Am from Arabic world
      And they used rags
      But bcz our libyan traditional outfit , it was easy to make it steady in place

    • @gloriamontgomery6900
      @gloriamontgomery6900 3 года назад

      You have raised some very good questions. I seem to recall that tampons first became available in the 1930’s-but it does seem possible that internal protection could have been improvised with rolled cloth

  • @joni--bologna
    @joni--bologna 4 года назад +427

    The thing I remember is Mom said tampons hurt, so I gave up swimming at the local pool all those days until my best friend asked me WTF. And then handed me one. Thanks Terese.

    • @lucyapanda6499
      @lucyapanda6499 4 года назад +36

      My mom is a doctor and we don't wear tampons in our household. Apparently she just isn't used to them so doesn't buy them, plus there's the added risk of shock after having it in too long, right?
      I never knew they enabled swimming during periods until I read it online, instead I would always be forced to avoid swimming during that time...

    • @erincalhoon7066
      @erincalhoon7066 3 года назад +39

      @@lucyapanda6499 From what I've read and experienced, toxic shock syndrome is rare and usually caused by the use of a larger than necessary tampon for a very long amount of time (I believe it is usually longer than 8 hours). So for example, a scenario which may cause TSS would be having a light flow day but using a super plus absorbency tampon (definitely not intended for a light day) for 12 hours.
      There is a lot of good info about it online too!
      (It seems like you are more aware of tampon use at this point? I just wanted to add this info in case it was helpful)

    • @saturniiiidae
      @saturniiiidae 3 года назад +28

      @@erincalhoon7066 - I’m pretty sure menstrual cups don’t cause toxic shock syndrome, and can be left in for a whole day. I’m not sure though I’ve never used one but I think more people should look into it, especially because they’re reusable and have no added chemicals and scents.

    • @joy-ks6ht
      @joy-ks6ht 3 года назад +11

      i was at a friends house and she wanted to go to the pool to go swimming but me being the shy kid i was didn't mention i was on my period so i just had to deal with blood coming out of me while swimming and playing it was very awkward and weird

    • @macocadena
      @macocadena 3 года назад +2

      @@joy-ks6ht that's weird - usually your period stops in the water but starts again once you come out

  • @emblanoe9572
    @emblanoe9572 4 года назад +247

    My aunt told me that she used those belt-things as a young girl. This was rural Norway in the 50s. They called them hammocks

    • @MissCaraMint
      @MissCaraMint 4 года назад +5

      Embla Noe really? Hengekøye? 🤣

    • @emblanoe9572
      @emblanoe9572 4 года назад +6

      Hahah yes! Hengekøye.

    • @MissCaraMint
      @MissCaraMint 4 года назад +5

      Embla Noe Har så mange venner som er aktive i DNT og har hengekøye at dette er gull.

    • @Abby_Liu
      @Abby_Liu 4 года назад

      that's kinda funny

    • @janyenyo
      @janyenyo 4 года назад

      I used them in the 60's, they were called sanitary belts, but soon after the pads were developed as we have today....

  • @totallyawsomeh
    @totallyawsomeh 4 года назад +147

    My great grandmother told us how she she handled with hers. They definitely wore some kind of split underwear when she was a girl. She talked about how you could just lift your skirt and ‘make a branch’ which means pee. But she said she was lucky her grandmother sewed button in their underwear so they could button in their ‘panty rags’ when needed, and go about their life’s.

    • @Delicate_Disaster
      @Delicate_Disaster 4 года назад +3

      The underwear were most likely like puffy shorts. Tied around the legs and waist but loose in the middle. The crotch area wasn't sewn shut, it was more like mens boxers, but between the legs. So you could lift your skirt and open the underwear up and be quick.

  • @IJustWantToUseMyName
    @IJustWantToUseMyName 4 года назад +255

    I remember my grandmother (born 1913) telling me her mother thought the new disposable sanitary napkins were a waste of money and made her wear the old style folded towel that you described. My grandmother said disposable pads were the first thing she started buying when she got a job.
    Meanwhile, my grandfather (born 1906) was a young man working at the neighborhood grocery. He asked his boss what these odd pad things were used for and his boss told him they were for washing cars. So my grandfather took some home and actually used them to wash his car. His father had to explain it to him. lol

    • @mortisCZ
      @mortisCZ 4 года назад +35

      It is rather strange how many men wanted and still want to avoid any talk about menstruation. I understand that we are not bothered by such a thing but our mothers, spouses and doughters are...

    • @queenSummerKeli
      @queenSummerKeli 4 года назад +13

      Funny about washing the car! My Grandmother told my my Mom the same thing, in 1968. My poor mama had use torn up wash cloths!! Older Aunt did help out once she found out.

    • @luciarodrigues7416
      @luciarodrigues7416 4 года назад +1

      My grandmother used to force me to wear a small folded towel and wash the blood off to save it for next month period, I was 13. At 15, I got married to a boy from a wealthy family, so, this problem was over. I am 50.

  • @pistacho.cerrao
    @pistacho.cerrao 4 года назад +345

    My mother told me that when she started working at age 14 in the factory almost all the women used like a cloth (similar to what you described) but they attached it to their underwear with diaper pins and they cleaned it and reused it (my mother said it was disgusting for her), but that her mother sometimes used some straps attached to a belt so she wouldn't need those diaper pins but it was uncomfortable. My mother always remembers that when you moved there was many chances that the diaper pins will open and hurt your legs or crotch.
    But when sanitary pads were starting to be more common in Spain, the factory (man bosses) made them try pads so the odor from the work place would be nicer... Every worker was a woman, so... (I'm talking about the 70's before Franco the dictator died, and was super catholic so this things were taboo). My mother was really happy that the pads started to be easy to get in stores.
    I think that period methods have change a lot in a short period of time!

    • @samud7041
      @samud7041 4 года назад +9

      Odor from the work place 😱😱😱😱😰😰😰😰🤗🤗🤗

    • @chloejohnson6861
      @chloejohnson6861 4 года назад +16

      The odor thing...GROSS. I never thought about that, or how by not having a pad or tampon, it would just be like body fluids collecting. The old days were disgusting.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 4 года назад +5

      Chloe Johnson
      Yeah, there is an odor and indeed it is gross. Being a woman sucks in so many ways tbh.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 4 года назад +2

      @nobita nobi
      You’re glad you got out of what phase?

    • @AlaynaMoebius
      @AlaynaMoebius 3 года назад +4

      Funny. I found out that the odor became nicer after quitting disposable pads. I am guessing it actually had to do with having no chance of properly changing and storing the pads during the working hours.

  • @TheBc99
    @TheBc99 4 года назад +567

    For those interested in this kind of thing, I'm reading a novel called "Longbourne" by Jo Baker, which came out a few years ago. It's Pride and Prejudice, but from the POV of the servants who are never mentioned. There is a part right at the beginning where the protagonist has to launder the Bennett sisters' period-soaked undergarments, which I think sets the tone pretty well.

    • @selobee4831
      @selobee4831 4 года назад +21

      Nice! I'm adding this to my "To Read" list, thanks!

    • @malinasworld
      @malinasworld 4 года назад +4

      I found this comment and looked it up, I just finished the preview. It already feels like a great book, thank you for the recommendation!

    • @YeshuaKingMessiah
      @YeshuaKingMessiah 4 года назад +1

      Zackly

    • @maggies88
      @maggies88 4 года назад +1

      Great book.

    • @lisaneufeld4567
      @lisaneufeld4567 4 года назад +2

      I loved that book! What a different perspective!

  • @Martinique325
    @Martinique325 4 года назад +41

    Menstruation is one of the most monumental experiences for a woman. There are 2 things you never forget; your first period and your last period. I started mine 10 days after my 12th birthday. It will be 2 years since my last one this upcoming July. I chose to do what my mom did. I decided to go through this life change naturally. I'm really grateful I did. I was also blessed with an easy transition. I don't get hot flashes. It did take a long time going through menopause. I started around age 45. It started out as them being less regular. After a short while, I started having a lot of clotting. What was funny was, I remember going for 7 months without one and I was so happy. Right after telling my sister-in-law and we were like "Yay!" 2 days later I started. I was so pissed because I had to start my count all over
    The sucky thing about being a female is that you spend your entire life in 'bondage'. We wear diapers the first few years of life. We get a little break fora decade and then spend the next 40 years in pads and tampons. When we finish that, we then end up wearing protection for urinary stress incontinence. I did a happy dance on the 12-month mark.

    • @lokicooper4690
      @lokicooper4690 3 года назад

      Can't say I really remember the first one. I do remember that the second month I skipped, and then I never skipped a month again until the late 30s when my body, which had already been miserable at that time of the month, started really going haywire. Spent the next decade asking for a hysterectomy because they were all over the place, and an absolute nightmare. During my second last period I hemorrhaged, which put me in the ER. Due to that, I finally got my wish, and they removed it at 49. Best thing that ever happened to me. I am finally no longer a prisoner to my body and the bathroom.

    • @Alexandriaaaaaaaa
      @Alexandriaaaaaaaa 3 года назад

      All I remember for my first one, I was 9 years old abt to go to school. My upcoming one is gonna be on August

  • @mrmursidi5620
    @mrmursidi5620 4 года назад +184

    Story from late grandma was that back when her grandma was a child, cloth was too precious so they used coconut husks instead. I think it was a common practice in SEA.

    • @mrmursidi5620
      @mrmursidi5620 4 года назад +17

      @@katyb2793 Don't want to go to graphic but the lady's own down might provide some barrier/cushioning. What she said was you just lived with it. Then chuck it in the fire so the animals don't get it.

    • @b26550
      @b26550 4 года назад +4

      That would be hard on yur lady bits O_o. Like sand paper down there def hope they did the moss method said in an earlier comment...

    • @daphne4983
      @daphne4983 4 года назад +1

      Ouch.

  • @algarvestrikk
    @algarvestrikk 4 года назад +332

    They had "The headache"! It is mentioned all the time in novels. :D

    • @krishnaashokmenon2816
      @krishnaashokmenon2816 3 года назад +5

      Dude u right

    • @gloriamontgomery6900
      @gloriamontgomery6900 3 года назад +20

      They also called any stray spots of blood “flea bites”.

    • @evasmojang
      @evasmojang 3 года назад +2

      Wait what

    • @elizabethconnolly8958
      @elizabethconnolly8958 3 года назад +5

      Some women suffer real bad with them it's not a laughing matter ..my daughter has real bad times ..me I was blessed thank God

    • @evasmojang
      @evasmojang 3 года назад +10

      @@elizabethconnolly8958 Umm who's making it a laughing matter?

  • @rubyrattler891
    @rubyrattler891 4 года назад +145

    When I taught social studies, the kids loved the nitty gritty of History. This makes it REAL to children which they need in order to value the learning experience. Thank you for an informative video.👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

    • @ChippedPaint16
      @ChippedPaint16 4 года назад +13

      I wish more teachers would emphasise that and make our studies not so dissociated from our day to day "reality".

  • @GradKat
    @GradKat 4 года назад +78

    Ah, periods! The only benefit of getting old is at least you don’t have to deal with that monthly misery any more.

    • @macocadena
      @macocadena 3 года назад +3

      ah then the hot flashes began, the loss of sleep, the depression, the dry vulva...being a woman ain't easy- but we can take it!

    • @teachersusanute199
      @teachersusanute199 3 года назад +1

      Yep

    • @taylorrice8612
      @taylorrice8612 3 года назад

      @@macocadena I’ll take the discomfort of menstual cramps in exchange for my libido

    • @peggyscott125
      @peggyscott125 3 года назад

      Girl, ain't that the truth. Praise God!

    • @peggyscott125
      @peggyscott125 3 года назад +2

      I started at 12 in 1969, one night before bed. I saw blood in my cotton undies, thought I was dying. Ran to the kitchen screaming. My mom said let's go in the bathroom, your father doesn't like to hear about female stuff. Lol. One thing I found out back then was that PMS caused me to throw a mean sucker punch! I hit a boy for sitting in my chair. He was stunned! Fast forward to 2011, it stopped. I went thru a mini menopause. Had a few headaches and I was done and I've been cheering ever since!! Worst thing for a women to endure every month. Glad I'm 64!

  • @Tea.and.Wonderland
    @Tea.and.Wonderland 4 года назад +465

    I might be a dude, but this was very intresting actually lol. I'm very invested in Victorian times and saw this on my reccomended and was like "Woah, thats an odd question but...a good one." XD loved the video.

    • @judieg.7945
      @judieg.7945 4 года назад +39

      Thank you, that's nice for you to appreciate women.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 4 года назад +35

      Avakin Alessia
      You’re adorable, but nobody is an expert at anything at age 12. I hope you keep your thirst for knowledge up though, kiddo.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 4 года назад +18

      Avakin Alessia
      Sorry if I don’t bullshit you kid. I tell the truth, no matter how good or bad/complimentary or hurtful that truth may be. Everyone deserves to be told the truth. I repeat: nobody is an expert at anything at age 12, _unless_ they are an utter genius - which I very much doubt you are because there are hardly any geniuses born these days - that is something that barely happens because we have been undergoing dysgenics for quite some time now.
      You trying to guilt trip and blame a stranger for your choosing not to do something is absurd and pathetic. You are quite frankly making excuses. Do it if you feel so inclined and have the free time - see if any publisher wants to publish it. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain, especially considering you don’t have tv or painting to take up your free time. Other than that, I will not be manipulated into apologizing or giving you fake compliments or pity.
      You’re not special. I can’t afford cable and all that crap too; I just watch RUclips for entertainment (I am living in poverty due to disability that hit me ~15 years ago, and I too grew up with a single mother who got divorced and we were always short on money... I started working very young, when I was only a year older than you, to pay for stuff that my mother either refused to pay for or couldn’t... I suggest you start babysitting for other peoples’ kids as soon as your mother lets you, and use that money to buy acrylic paints as they are much more affordable to paint with than oil paints and there isn’t enough difference in the look of the final product to really matter, especially when you are starting out and just learning how to paint, it is better to use cheaper paints to practice with as you learn - I say this as someone with an art degree).
      We didn’t have internet when I was your age - so you should be grateful to have so much knowledge at your fingertips to keep learning about anything you desire, including things like how to paint. The only way to learn back in my day was to take expensive painting classes.
      So as I said, you aren’t special/“suffering” more than I in terms of poverty, but moreover, you aren’t special in the world... this is from globalissues dot org, to give you some perspective in life (these 2005 stats are just scratching the surface, and more can be found there by copying/pasting some of these stats and searching for them along with the term “globalissues org”):
      - Rural areas account for three in every four people living on less than US$1 a day and a similar share of the world population suffering from malnutrition. However, urbanization is not synonymous with human progress. Urban slum growth is outpacing urban growth by a wide margin.
      - 1.6 billion people - a quarter of humanity - live without electricity.
      - At least 80% of humanity lives on less than $10 a day.
      - More than 80 percent of the world’s population lives in countries where income differentials are widening.
      - The poorest 40 percent of the world’s population accounts for 5 percent of global income. The richest 20 percent accounts for three-quarters of world income.
      - According to UNICEF, 22,000 children die each day due to poverty. And they die quietly in some of the poorest villages on earth, far removed from the scrutiny and the conscience of the world. Being meek and weak in life makes these dying multitudes even more invisible in death.
      - Around 27-28 percent of all children in developing countries are estimated to be underweight or stunted. The two regions that account for the bulk of the deficit are South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.
      - If current trends continue, the Millennium Development Goals target of halving the proportion of underweight children will be missed by 30 million children, largely because of slow progress in Southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.
      Why you decided to come back to this thread 2 weeks later is beyond me, but whatever kid.

    • @anushasan9452
      @anushasan9452 4 года назад +54

      @@anti-ethniccleansing465 Chill damn let the kid live

    • @wms72
      @wms72 4 года назад +28

      @Avakin Alessia Don't let some random internet narcissist bring you down. Nobody knows you better than you. I believe you have expertise far beyond you critic.

  • @ral1329
    @ral1329 4 года назад +480

    The only family story I have is my mother becoming hysterical & enraged when she found out I was using tampons, because using tampons meant I couldn't prove I was a virgin. This was around 1967. My mother was born in 1929 to very old fashioned southerners, maybe having to prove virginity was a southern thing, I don't know. I just thought it was one more crazy thing about my mother.

    • @Krazykat3141
      @Krazykat3141 4 года назад +72

      Maybe this is TMI, but I used tampons for year before I had sex. My hymen was alive and kicking when I first had sex. I was 16. After the first painful attempt my boyfriend said, " Your Wall of Jericho is still intact". I said, my what? I had no idea what a hymen was. I felt it, though.

    • @giverny28
      @giverny28 4 года назад +93

      I was told the same thing and shamed heavily...in the 90s.
      People are just ignorant I think.

    • @elan825
      @elan825 4 года назад +129

      Yeah, that is pretty messed up. Sadly, misconceptions about the hymen and the hurtful 'purity' culture are still around - mostly in very religious areas. If anyone claims that an intact hymen proofs virginity or that a broken hymen proofs sex, please correct them. This is simply not the case, and some people don't even have a hymen, while others may have such a thick one that it has to be surgically removed.

    • @aliciadoshi1249
      @aliciadoshi1249 4 года назад +42

      My mom said the same thing in the 80s except she said it meant I wasn't a Virgin (which I was). I just gave her the side eye and kept using them.

    • @naolucillerandom5280
      @naolucillerandom5280 4 года назад +13

      Heh, I had to explain to my boyfriend last week why it didn't hurt in our first time
      ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @rein2148
    @rein2148 4 года назад +144

    I feel for my women ancestors, they had to go through so much garbage of men telling them about their bodies. I would have been committed to an asylum by now.

    • @grittykitty50
      @grittykitty50 4 года назад +5

      You have to realize that people didn't go to doctors like they do today. They only went to doctors if something was seriously wrong and they didn't know what to do about it. People generally couldn't afford doctors and they often had family remedies for most maladies. Couple that with the fact that many didn't trust doctors.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 4 года назад +1

      @Rein - Many women WERE committed to asylums for many "maladies" that are perfectly normal. Menopause was one such "malady" - hot flashes, irritability, insomnia meant to some that women were cRaZy! Some husbands actually took advantage of these myths and their superior position to be divested of wives that they didn't want anymore.

    • @pangeadei6650
      @pangeadei6650 4 года назад

      Stupid feminist

    • @blackswan4486
      @blackswan4486 4 года назад +4

      Pangea Dei stupid misogynist

    • @pangeadei6650
      @pangeadei6650 4 года назад

      Black Swan i’m a woman with common sense. Fuck yourself