Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Dude Periods?

Women suffer, we all know this, women have suffered from a multitude of things over time and there is one thing that continues to plague every single woman every single month. Menstruation. Not only do we have the blissful gift of birthing children but the ability to give birth to those children comes from a painful sometimes week long ordeal starting around our teenage years until we hit menopause (another gift from God to women). Thankfully the women of today have many options for dealing with our monthly gift, unlike the women from the medieval period. Medieval women had the awesome choice between a cotton scrap of fabric somehow attached to their lady bits to absorb the blood or they could “also wind cotton fabric around a twig and use it as a proto-tampon” (Source One). So while medieval women were walking around with cramps and twig tampons inside of them the medieval men composed stories and myths about the effects of menstrual blood. It was believed that it was poisonous, dirty, and acid-like, it could defy nature and create trenches, etc. All around menstruation was a pretty negative thing to have and talk about in the medieval era, yet it was not reserved solely for women but it also was believed that Jewish men menstruated as well. What’s worse than a menstruating woman? A menstruating Jewish man. 


People believed that Jewish men bled from their bottoms just like women because their bodies were not fully formed like Christian male bodies (same was believed about female bodies), their body temperature did not reach that of Christian males therefore they bled just like women. This butt bleeding was apparently believed to be karmic retribution for crucifying Jesus, which makes you wonder what exactly did women do to deserve periods (according to medieval men)? There even was circumcision ceremonies held for boys to replicate the coming of age period ceremonies for young girls so that it seemed that men too could possibly have children. It’s comical nowadays to look back on the crazy medieval people who thought that menstrual blood was like acid or that Jewish men bled from their bottoms but have we really come that far ourselves? Periods today are still an almost taboo thing to talk about, at least around men and kids. The commercials use blue liquid to “test” the absorption of pads and for some reason they always show women doing things like tennis in all white clothing, which is not something I think any woman wants to do while on her period. One of the articles I read mentioned that the brand Kotex is “running a campaign to explain that no, you won't get eaten by sharks if you wear a tampon in the sea during that time of the month” (Source Two).

Over the course of a woman’s lifetime she might spend around $18, 171 on things she needs for her period (pads, tampons, pain relievers, etc.) (Source 3). So yeah maybe society as whole does not believe that women’s periods can cause leprosy anymore and that Jewish men aren’t defying biology by also having butt periods but we’re still at a point where it’s shameful to see period blood and where women are spending almost twenty grand on something they can’t control. 




2 comments:

  1. I really like your point about Jewish men bleeding as a form of punishment and therefore making women’s menstruation to be seen as a form of punishment. I wonder if the medieval time thought maybe women deserved their periods just because they were women. Going off the other discriminations we’ve read about towards women, it seems every bad or evil thing can be attributed to medieval women simply because they were the weaker sex. They might have also seen menstruation as every woman paying for Eve bringing about original sin. Eve brought sin to all people but women get a little extra punishment for being the same sex. Whatever the explanation, it is so interesting to think of all the ways periods are still a taboo, even in ways that we are so used to like the pad commercials or the price of feminine products.

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  2. I liked your comment about the financial cost of periods over a lifetime, especially when it represents only a baseline where many will spend much, much more in reality (my sister actually had to buy 2 heating pads, one for her stomach and one for her back). One thing that really bugs me is the cost of comparable items not necessarily related to periods (for example, razors) where the item targeted at women costs more than that which is targeted at men. I would especially wonder what a world would be like where cis men do have periods, and how the period-related costs would compare.

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