Wednesday, April 29, 2009
I was on IM with my friend Leah, and then I had to pee and then I wiped myself, and then I saw what I thought was discolored pee and then I called my mom, and then she came into the small hot bathroom with me, and I showed her, and she told me what I feared – I had my period. “Did I really get it?” I kept asking, not realty believing it, sort of sad about it. “When will it be over”?
---JCP
Sunday, April 19, 2009
The day my period first arrived I was 10 years old. I was vacationing with my family at
---A.E.Perkins
Saturday, April 18, 2009
My friend Susie's mother threw a Period Party in 6th grade. Susie got her period before all of us, so in our minds, periods were about femininity and love and the start of a journey towards motherhood. We got to paint our nails and put on fancy smelling lotion, and her mom made us tea and we ate cookies. When the party was over, Susie and her mom sent us away with full bellies, nail polish, and craving for our periods to make us feel older, wiser, and loved by our mothers.
I was thirteen when I got my period. I was in the 7th grade. I was in the stall next to a window in the middle school bathroom when I became a woman. I didn't know what to do-- laugh or cry. So, I just sat their stunned, looking down at my panties and my changing body, changing life. I quickly stuffed toilet paper into my panties and then ran out of the bathroom, to the nearest phone. I called up my mom, so happy that I was finally entering into adulthood!
My mom laughed and told me to forget about it and go back to class. She told me about I get to suffer once a month. I hung onto the phone, desperately wanting her to tell me that she'd bake me cookies and teach me how to love babies, and paint my nails and invite my friends over for celebration. No, all she said at the end of the conversation was, "Now you can use your monthly allowance of $5.00 to purchase tampons."
When I got home, she had left the money on the table with a note: "If you're old enough to have your period, you're old enough to walk to the grocery store and get them. Love,
I didn't feel much like a woman that day. I felt ashamed, embarrassed, and I wished to stay a child. I wished I was a boy. I wished I was anybody but who I was. I wished I was Susie McDay.
---Rosia
As a fifth grader at
It wouldn’t be until about three years later, at the tender age of thirteen that I would get my “friend.” At that age, I was awkward and uncomfortable with my body. I sported a short haircut, braces, and humbly accepted the nomination as vice president of the Itty Bitty Titty Committee. Having girlfriends was a complete nightmare, boys started to become mean, and adolescence was taking its toll.
In a gauche attempt at making myself “cool,” I purchased a mini skirt. It was cream colored, with turquoise paisley print. It was quite possibly the only skirt, or item of clothing that went above my knees, found in my closet. I sat in English class staring at Mrs. Pilato’s ankles, thinking about how I would look at the age of fifty, in a mini skirt and ankle fat rolling over my shoes. As I sat there, I noticed that something about my body-specifically my abdomen, felt ill at ease and uncomfortable. After class I went into the bathroom to investigate the unfamiliar situation. On my underwear, there it was blood, blood that had come out of me! I thought to myself, “Oh, man, this is it? This is what the big deal is? This is what makes me a woman? I’m bleeding and I have a feeling that my uterus is going to fall out?” I had never been happier to be in a skirt, however. Had I been wearing pants, the blood surly would have soaked through; thus creating quite the humiliating experience for me. My mother had sent me to school that year prepared with maxi pads, just in case. I went to my locker, got one out as discretely as possible, and went back to the bathroom. I held the gigantic, puffy pink package in my hands and began to feel almost excited and proud of the fact that I was now a woman. Then I placed the pad in place and all initial moments of excitement vanished. The pad felt like two pairs of rolled socks stuck in my panties-and I wondered if the bulge could be seen through my tight, short skirt. The rest of the day, I sat in my blood, thoroughly self-conscious and completely repulsed by this completely new experience.
After school, I walked down to the Middle School, where my mom worked. I met her in the hallway, and told her what had happened. I’m not really sure what reaction I was expecting, or hoping for, but the one I got made me uncomfortable. My mother smiled, and congratulated me. I feared she was going to go tell her co-workers the “good” news, or possibly rent an airplane with a trailing banner that read “My Daughter, Katie Hamm, Is a Woman!” What followed was a giant whirlwind of hugs, and talks about safe sex. At the age of thirteen, baby-making was the last thing on my mind. Menstruation had proved disgusting enough, and the thought of a human growing inside me made me squirm.
The following few days would prove to be trying times. Maxi Pads were completely out of the question, and I wanted to use tampons. My mother explained to me how a tampon gets inserted, and so I tried, and tried, and tried. Now, when a young girl has never shoved anything up her vagina, a long plastic device is rather intimidating. How hard should I push? How far up do I go? Am I in the right hole? This went on for some time. I remember being in tears because the thought of having to sit in my blood repulsed me. One day, in a bout of pure frustration, I did it. I just shoved it on up there, and the deed was done. A beautiful lifetime relationship with Kotex had begun.
That is how I recall becoming a woman. A mix of emotions, and uncomfortable events, that has left me looking forward to menopause. Oddly enough, the whole event never once made me think of pancakes.
---Katie
At the age of 12, I got my period. I was at home with my older brother and he had just awoken me to get ready for school. I went to use the restroom and after doing so I wiped myself with tissue and it was RED!! I screamed because I didn’t know what it was and my brother ran into the bathroom and he looked into the toilet and started panicking. My mom was at work, so he called and her said “Ma, Shayla got her period what should I do?” She started laughing and said “Go get her a pad out my bathroom.” My mom had those long super absorbency pads and I had to wear one of those to school, plus I had to wear oversized sweatpants and a large shirt so that no one could tell that I was wearing such a large pad. After getting through the day at school, my mom picked me up from school and took me to Walgreens to get my own box of pads. There were so many products. I remember wondering what would work best. I really had no clue, and my mother would not buy tampons.
