×
Home National Politics Business Bangladesh International Sports Entertainment Law & Justice More News Capital News Health Features Business Icon Technology Media Features Economy Education Literature Quran & Hadish Photo Gallery Editorial Religion Tours & Travels Tourism Guide Editors Corner Campus Youth Popular Organizations Country Wide Life Style Jobs Prism Notice History & Culture Messages Op-ed Wildlife Activities Foreign relation Accident Environment Asia Videoes Analysis Energy Book Reviews Literature Others KSA Arab World Cricket Football More Banking Corporate Global economy Real Estate Entrepreneur Start-up Telecom Summit Travel Art and Culture Food Book Fourth Estate View Letters to Editor Political Icon Diplomat Scholarship Career Job

Saturday 2nd of November 2024 E-paper
* Young generation will lead Bangladesh: Nahid Islam   * Chief Adviser urges Australia to increase regular migration from Bangladesh   * Severe Brahmaputra erosion leaves hundreds homeless in Kurigram   * US to assist Bangladesh to bring stolen money back: envoy   * 7 colleges to remain under DU with separate arrangement   * Students torch Jatiya Party HQ following attack on rally   * Israeli strikes kill 19 people including 8 women   * 91% budget hike for RNPP telecom project, less than 1% completion   * Australia launches plan to build long-range guided missiles   * Nur denies alliance between Gono Odhikar Parishad and BNP  
   Life Style
  Menstruation gets a Gen Z makeover
3, February, 2022, 8:47:30:PM

Sapna Palep is launching a line of undergarments, which will include period-friendly underwear, along with her daughters, Anaya (left) and Aviana Campello-Palep.Credit...Olivia Galli for The New York Times

When Sapna Palep was younger, she was mortified by conversations about menstruation. “It was like, ‘Let’s not talk about this, I need to leave the room,’” said the 43-year-old mother of two. The mere mention of periods evoked “pure embarrassment and fear.”

Palep’s 9-year-old daughter, Aviana Campello-Palep, in contrast, approaches the topic with zero self-consciousness or hesitation. “When my friends talk about getting their period, they just talk about it,” Aviana said. “It’s just normal in a girl’s life.”

These frank conversations have led Palep and her daughters, Aviana and Anaya, who is 8, to create Girls With Big Dreams, a line of undergarments for tweens, which includes reusable period underwear that offers an environmentally friendlier alternative to disposable pads and tampons; their brand will launch in early February and be sold online.

“I’m hopefully going to make a difference in somebody’s life so they’re not embarrassed at some point by something that’s so normal,” Aviana said.

The Campello-Palep girls are representative of two emerging trends that have become clear to period advocates, and anyone who casually follows #PeriodTok: Members of Gen Z and beyond are more forthcoming about their periods than generations past, and they are more likely to care whether the products they use are environmentally sustainable. The convergence of the two ideals may signify a cultural shift in how young people are approaching menstruation.

More options for reusable period products like absorbent underwear, menstrual cups, cloth pads and panty liners, and applicator-free tampons are on the market now than ever before — some made just for teens and tweens.

“This whole movement is youth-driven,” said Michela Bedard, executive director of Period Inc., a global nonprofit focused on providing access to period supplies and ending period stigma. “Young menstruators are having a completely different experience in terms of managing their periods with reusables throughout their life.”

Reusable products represent only a fraction of menstruation supplies purchased in the United States — Americans spend $1.8 billion on pads and $1 billion on tampons yearly, which dwarfs sales of all other products combined. But the market share for reusable products is expected to grow through the next decade, according to forecasters, largely fueled by the wider acceptance and availability of menstrual cups in Western countries.

Still, the average menstruator can use thousands of tampons in their lifetime. And single-use plastic menstrual products take about 500 years to decompose, a 2021 report from the United Nations Environment Programme found.


Members of Gen Z, who studies find are more likely to get involved in climate change and sustainability efforts than previous generations, are teaching their parents about new ways to handle their monthly cycle openly and sustainably.

“I used to have conversations about how to hide your tampon or pad up in your sleeve or in your shorts or in your pants,” said Dr Cara Natterson, who is a pediatrician; the author of American Girl’s best-selling “The Care and Keeping of You” series; and founder of Oomla, a gender- and size-inclusive line of bras and puberty products. “I do not have that conversation anymore because the kids go, ‘Why should I hide my tampon and my pad?’ They are 100 percent right.”

Natterson’s 18-year-old daughter has educated her about new products in the marketplace, some of which she discovers from Instagram influencers or #PeriodTok videos. “Teens are looking for conversations around people’s experiences, not five-star Amazon reviews,” she said.

Natterson recently considered using cloth pads again after a failed experiment with them years ago, at her teenager’s behest. “They didn’t work super well when they were first being invented and iterated,” she said. “My daughter said, ‘You got to try them again.’”

Environmental sustainability and menstruation may be having a moment, but it’s not the first time, said Lara Freidenfelds, a historian of health, reproduction and parenting, and author of “The Modern Period: Menstruation in Twentieth-Century America.” Homemade menstrual rags were the norm through the turn of the 20th century, up until Kotex became the first successfully mass-marketed pad in 1921. Modernity equaled disposability, and the brand was aspirational, she said.

The first robust discussions of sustainability in menstrual care started in the 1970s as people experimented with cloth pads and sponges. “There have always been young people who were idealistic and thought about these things but did not find the products available to be practical,” she said. Sustainability has historically been sacrificed for the sake of convenience, she added.

Today, parents of Gen Zers benefit from improvements in menstrual technology: The cloth pads of yore are not the cloth pads of today; and period underwear, for example, is made of highly absorbent fabric without being bulky. New menstruators often turn to a parent for products and advice — now parents can hand over more than a disposable pad or tampon, potentially rerouting some of the more than 15 billion disposable products that end up in landfills every year in America.

“The world we’re going to have when these progressive Gen Zers become parents in 20 years — that’s going to be fascinating,” said Nadya Okamoto, a former executive director of Period Inc. and co-founder of the sustainable menstrual products brand August.


Despite these cultural shifts and advances in technology, there are significant barriers to widespread use of reusable or recyclable products. “When you first get your period, pads are the easiest thing to find and buy,” said Anaya Balaji, who is 13. “If you go into the school bathrooms, they’re stocked with Always,” she added, referring to the disposable brand’s ubiquitous presence in her California high school.

As an online community leader for the Inner Cycle, a virtual forum for the August brand, Anaya connects with her peers on social media to provide education and awareness. “You can find the products out there that fit your body and that work good for you and good for the environment,” she said.

Still, some young people can’t afford reusable products, especially in communities where period poverty — or the lack of access to menstrual products — is an issue. “Even though the investment in a $25 pair of underwear or a $60 cup would save you money, a lot of people don’t have that money every month,” said Bedard, whose organisation serves the economically disadvantaged.

Like disposable products, reusable and recyclable products are also subject to a “tampon tax” — a tax that is levied on products that are deemed nonessential — in many states. Activists argue that such taxes are sexist and discriminatory and have fought to repeal them nationwide through legislative action. In 2021, several states, including Louisiana, Maine and Vermont, nixed the tax.

The cultural stigma that plagues menstruation also stubbornly persists, despite the best efforts of young people to normalize periods. Patriarchal taboos around virginity, purity and “dirtiness” in many cultures and religions quash conversation and can impede the use of internal menstrual products, such as tampons or cups.

Corporate messaging still largely emphasizes discreetness and cleanliness, which makes periods seem dirty or bad, said Chella Quint, a menstrual activist, educator and author of “Own Your Period: A Fact-filled Guide to Period Positivity.” “For a long time, the disposable menstrual product industry was hugely responsible for propagating and perpetuating the sort of negative taboos that keep people down and frightened,” she added.

Menstrual health is a public health issue and has no gender, Natterson said. To combat taboos around the subject, anyone, even those who don’t menstruate, should be able to speak freely about periods too, she said. Natterson said she’s made sure her 16-year-old son knows to hand his sweatshirt to a classmate who has a blood stain on their pants, and to have a tampon or pad to share.

“Teaching everyone to respect other people’s bodies — everyone needs to be part of that conversation,” she said.

© 2022 The New York Times Company



  
Share Button
  

    
Know about Skin Cancer: Everyone is at risk
.............................................................................................
Iran switches to Friday, Saturday weekend
.............................................................................................
Pakistanis feed predatory birds despite crackdown on practice
.............................................................................................
Five health tips to observe Ramadan fasting
.............................................................................................
Home remedies for dry, cracked feet
.............................................................................................
‘Argylle’ soundtrack mixes disco energy, secret Beatles song
.............................................................................................
Steady hearts, steady hands as Vatican experts restore masterpieces
.............................................................................................
Mattel to make `American Girl` movie after `Barbie` success
.............................................................................................
10 tricks that actually work to stop hair fall and get strong locks
.............................................................................................
France set to ban vegan food brands from using `meaty` words
.............................................................................................
Eating Meat Daily Can Cause Heart Disease, Diabetes and Pneumonia: Study
.............................................................................................
Tokyo residents find comfort in fluffy, street-strolling alpacas
.............................................................................................
197 primary schools get laptops in Bhola
.............................................................................................
Japanese get trained in `Hollywood` smiles as masks slowly come off
.............................................................................................
In the Olympic bubble, a small taste of the food finds of China
.............................................................................................
That organic cotton T-shirt may not be as organic as you think
.............................................................................................
I`m addicted to my phone. How can I cut back?
.............................................................................................
The pandemic has made many seniors less active
.............................................................................................
What the `active grandparent hypothesis` can tell us about aging well
.............................................................................................
Ready to get married already? Some couples face postponement fatigue
.............................................................................................
Valentine`s trees? Sure, why not
.............................................................................................
`Heartbreaking`: Belgians forced to fork out more for their cherished fries
.............................................................................................
Apocalypse when? Global warming`s endless scroll
.............................................................................................
Menstruation gets a Gen Z makeover
.............................................................................................
Jeremiah Stamler, who found ways to curb heart disease, dies at 102
.............................................................................................
After 600 years, Swiss city at last has a woman on night watch
.............................................................................................
Can Hugo Boss actually be cool?
.............................................................................................
In Singapore, Lunar New Year is a multicultural feast
.............................................................................................
How exercise may tame our anxiety
.............................................................................................
Digging deep: DNA molecules in ancient dirt offer a treasure trove of clues to our past
.............................................................................................
Making these resolutions can improve a relationship
.............................................................................................
Desperate for workers, restaurants turn to robots
.............................................................................................
High-end design comes to the fish tank
.............................................................................................
Cutting out even a little salt can have big health benefits
.............................................................................................
Ditched the dye during COVID? Maybe stay grey
.............................................................................................
Fashion is not only for the young and skinny
.............................................................................................
21 May, World Meditation Day: Millions of people will be meditating at the same time
.............................................................................................
Refreshing summer salad ideas you can try today
.............................................................................................
Suleiman Al-Rajhi: The great tycoon still has no money
.............................................................................................
6 exercises for when you have been sitting on chair for long
.............................................................................................
Sleep tips: 8 steps to better sleep
.............................................................................................
6 myths about wearing face masks to avoid during this pandemic
.............................................................................................
Breathe clean for better health
.............................................................................................
Chief Advisor: Md. Tajul Islam,
Editor & Publisher Fatima Islam Tania and Printed from Bismillah Printing Press, 219, Fakirapul, Dhaka-1000
Editorial Office: 167 Eden Complex, Motijheel, Dhaka-1000.
Phone: 02-224401310, Mobile: 01720090514, E-mail: muslimtimes19@gmail.com
2022 @ All Right Reserved By www.themuslimtimes-bd.com