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тАШPeriodтАЩ wants to change how you think about menstruation

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Period
Kate Clancy
Princeton Univ., $27.95

In a February golf tournament, after Tiger Woods hit his ball farther on the ninth tee than Justin Thomas, Woods handed Thomas a tampon. Get it? Thomas is weak! Haha.

Contrast this with the viral videos of writhing men hooked up to a menstrual cramp simulator created to bring awareness to period pain. When CBS News correspondent Jamie YuccasтАЩ producer tried the simulator set at the pain level Yuccas regularly experiences, he was visibly distressed. тАЬAre you serious? This is your baseline?тАЭ he said, with a following comment bleeped out.

There probably arenтАЩt enough cramp simulators to enlighten everyone who doesnтАЩt menstruate. But hereтАЩs another option: Hand them a copy of Kate ClancyтАЩs Period: The Real Story of Menstruation. Better yet, give this book to everyone. Getting accurate information about the why and how of periods is difficult even for those who do menstruate. There remains considerable stigma and revulsion toward this physiological event that half the population experiences during a large portion of life.

Clancy, an anthropologist at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, studies the impact of environmental stressors on the physiology of menstruating people. In Period, she lays out the science of menstruation along with details on the reproductive cycle and the uterus. She also challenges readers to think about the research climate, dominated by white men, that has shaped the views of menstruation and the female reproductive system (SN: 4/9/22, p. 29).

тАЬGiven anthropologyтАЩs history of removing women from the hero myths of human evolution or never noticing their worth in the first place,тАЭ Clancy writes, тАЬmenstruation is worth a closer look.тАЭ

For example, Clancy lays out emerging evidence on menstrual priming, the idea that each time the body prepares the lining of the uterus for a possible embryo and then repairs the lining during menstruation, itтАЩs conditioning the uterus to better provide a rich and nourishing site for an eventual pregnancy. In other words, periods serve an evolutionary purpose. ItтАЩs not just the body expelling the lining because itтАЩs reached the end of its shelf life, as a major hypothesis contends.

Clancy also discusses the long history of viewing menstruation as polluting. A popular тАЬmedicalтАЭ textbook from medieval times contended that menstruating women emitted dangerous fumes that could тАЬpoison the eyes of children lying in their cradles by a glance.тАЭ

This notion has persisted. In 1920 in Vienna, a doctor named B├йla Schick claimed that menstruating women secreted toxins, after a series of experiments in which such women handled flowers that then wilted. These тАЬmenotoxinsтАЭ became a go-to explanation for a number of womenтАЩs illnesses тАФ as well as the ailments of those who were nearby a menstruating woman тАФ for decades. Poisonous fumes all over again.

Of course, тАЬmenotoxinsтАЭ arenтАЩt real. But the idea that menstruation is polluting still shapes attitudes. Clancy writes of a 2002 study in which a participant was paired with a woman, an actor playing a participant. After reaching into her handbag, the actor would accidentally drop either a tampon or a hair clip. In questionnaires, the participants who had seen the tampon rated the woman less capable and likeable. And in a sign of disgust, participants were more likely to sit away from the actor after she had dropped a tampon than after she had dropped a hair clip.

Considering the stigma, itтАЩs no surprise that menstruating people tend to hide their periods. To change attitudes, Clancy writes, itтАЩs time to become тАЬmore visible as menstruating people.тАЭ The disgust about menstruation is learned and it leads to silence, she writes, which means that people with uteruses cede their agency. When menstruation is hidden, it makes it easier for the rest of society to ignore menstruating people.

Clancy would like society to acknowledge and better accommodate menstruation, and sheтАЩs not alone. In a survey of nearly 33,000 women in the Netherlands, 81 percent reported that menstrual symptoms are disruptive to work and school, researchers reported in BMJ Open in 2019. Sixty-eight percent said that, during their periods, theyтАЩd like more flexibility with tasks and their work and school hours. The Spanish parliament took a step in this direction in February, passing legislation for paid menstrual leave.

Clancy ends Period by envisioning a society that considers menstruating peopleтАЩs needs, that offers contraception and menstrual suppression options that work for more people, that takes menstrual pain seriously, and more. тАЬWhat I am imagining is a world where it is as unremarkable for someone to openly carry a tampon as it is to carry a hair clip and where discussing the care of our bodies does not label us weak.тАЭ


Buy Period┬аfrom Bookshop.org.┬аScience News┬аis a Bookshop.org affiliate and will earn a commission on purchases made from links in this article.

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