It was a warm spring day when I started bleeding for the first time. Fourteen years old, seated on the toilet, looking down at my under-pants that were now stained by brick-red brown, my stomach dropped and I could feel my face start to burn. I called out to my mum, who immediately rushed upstairs in a worry, only to sigh as she entered the bathroom and took in the scene. “I got my period,” I told her and promptly burst into tears.
My reaction was overly dramatic, perhaps. But not uncommon, nor entirely surprising. The framework I had for understanding menstruation at that time was rooted in reproduction and fear. At school, there was nothing more mortifying than having your period. It was something to hide and the greatest shame if, God forbid, you showed any signs of being a “bleeder”. When one of my schoolmates emerged from class one day with a burgundy spot on the backside of her dress, we all spoke about it in hushed tones. We felt sorry for her but were were mostly relieved that it hadn’t happened to us.
Since high school, things have changed a bit. Rupi Kaur famously posted a photo of herself bleeding through her pants in 2015, Australia’s tampon tax was abolished in 2019, and in 2020 Pantone launched a new shade of red named Period to end menstruation stigma. Writers such as Lena Dunham and Michaela Coel are producing television shows that are unafraid of depicting period sex, and companies around the world are implementing policies that account for the personal toll of menstruation. In May 2021, apparel brand Modibodi joined a growing contingent of Australian companies when it announced it would be adopting a menstrual leave policy, whereby employees are entitled to an additional 10 days paid leave per year for menstruation, menopause or miscarriage. In November, The Sydney Morning Herald declared “periods got political” as the movement to end period poverty gains steam.
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