There’s Money in the “Monthlies”
Gentlemen, if the functions of a woman’s body make you queasy, avert your eyes now. You have been warned! And ladies, if you would like to know how anti-gay and anti-women Proctor & Gamble (P&G) is milking you out of thousands of dollars in your lifetime, read on.
While some of us may view our menstrual cycles as “curses,” “the monthlies,” or “a sacred part of being a Woman,” companies like P&G see our uteruses as bleeding money machines. By creating brand loyalty even before we reach menarche (our first period) through those dreaded “What’s Happening to Lilly?” videos, corporations that sell “feminine hygiene” products ensure they’ll have our business for the next 40 years of cramps, bloating, and PMS.
Allow me to illustrate.
Let’s pretend you got your period when you were 12, and that you’ll encounter menopause at 52. That means you will have 40 years’ worth of periods, which equals about 480 in a lifetime. (For the sake of mathematical simplicity”I failed intermediate algebra”let’s say you don’t have children and you’re always on schedule.)
Say you use only pads and you change them every 4 hours, meaning you use 6 in a day. The average period lasts 7 days, so you’re consuming 42 pads per cycle. This equals 20,160 pads in your lifetime.
Now, my brand of “choice” is Always (owned by P&G, along with almost every other feminine care product). For $7.69, you can get 36 ultra-thin, regular-absorbency-with-wings pads. You would go through 560 packs in your life if we took into account the statistics in the previous paragraph.
You would pay $4,306 over time to a company that uses advertising space and creative marketing to get women to think that their “down there” is a disgusting body part that needs all the sanitary attention it can get. And that’s if you were only using pads. P&G almost always plugs (uhh, pardon the pun) their tampons along with pads”you know, ‘cuz everyone is paranoid about leaking. Add to this the feminine wipes, sprays, Midol, Advil, and heating pads P&G will claim you need… you see where I’m headed.
I know there’s some renegade women out there who swear by the traditional, old-school cotton pads that affix by some sort of contraption”but why do we have to call them “renegades?” Is it so militant to be resourceful, more friendly to the environment, and someone who stands up to a company that tries to control every aspect of womanhood? I think not! If you wore commercial pads just half of the time (during the day) and an all-natural and super-absorbent cotton pad at night, you’d be contributing 50% less to a male-dominated company that produces women’s goods. And saving landfills. And not consuming dioxin (a controversy in itself).
Give LunaPads a try. Based in Canada, they’re kinda expensive, but way less expensive than a lifetime of synthetic-fibered pads.
Feel the power!
There is also a cuplike inserted device available called a keeper.
I have seen this advertised in many of the treehugging magazines I read.
The keeper is not great for a heavy flow, not by itelf–really messy too.
Cotton pads are fantastic,empowering, and they feel good.
I LOVE my keeper, although I have the Lunacup or something. It isn’t that messy, but you do have to take care to try for bathrooms with one seat, so the sink is in easy reach. I haven’t bought tampons in 4 years, although I do keep some lightdays pads around, though I haven’t used any of those in forever either. There’s just a kind of learning curve so you can feel when you need to change it.
In this week’s Carnival of the Green:
http://thegoodelife.typepad.com/the_goode_life/2007/03/carnival_of_the.html
I have used the Keeper for seven years since I was in the Peace Corps and knew access to pads/tampons would be scare. After a couple of months of perfecting its use, it’s really easy and not messy at all. You only have to deal with it once every 12 hours and I paid $33 for it when I bought it and not a penny since. It looks in exactly the same condition as when I bought it, so I assume it will last forever. I bought one for my girlfriend once she stopped making fun of it, and she was a convert immediately. So even with two women in the house, we spend almost NO money on periods! The trick is to keep using until you get the hang of it.
I’ve been using a Keeper or LunaCup for 3 years and I’ll never go back to tampons and pads! I totally forget I’m on my period, no problems with leaks, great for sports, and I never have to buy a thing! Plus, my periods are actually 2 days shorter and cramping isn’t as bad.
There is a short learning curve, and it might not work for everyone, but if you’re tired of toting around “supplies” everywhere you go (and lining the pockets of P&G) then give it a try! LunaCup’s website has lots of helpful information if you’re curious.
oops, I just realized it’s a MoonCup, not a LunaCup.
I use my own pads I made from a pattern online…they are a million times more breathable than store-bought…I was wondering if it was a good idea to get the lunacup…if anyone has further advice let me know.