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Ladies:
I’m curious. For those of you raised in a religious household, were you told you couldn’t use tampons or anything similar because of some religious purity reason? For example; girls who use tampons aren’t virgins anymore and good Christian boys don’t want a slut for a wife?

Beatlesandsuch 4 June 1
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14 comments

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7

Oh yeah. I was forbidden from using tampons.
First thing I did, after I got booted out of my mother's house, was buy
tampons (okay, maybe not the FIRST thing, but it was close to that).
Interestingly enough, my tampon use had NO effect on my virginity.
Another fucked up religious myth ruining the lives of young females.
Fuck religion.

It's the first time i have ever heard of this,!... it is sickening how religious dogma has invaded the lives of the idiots who have allowed themselves to become virtual puppets of religious
scammers...

@madmac Oh yeah! Unbelievable amounts of bullshit directed at girls. At least catholic girls. That's what I was raised to be. It didn't take, but I still had to put up with all the bullshit.

It is stupid things like this, that are causing people to leave religion. I think they can keep coming up with more idiotic things like this, so more people leave.

@Beatlesandsuch And thank goodness for THAT! Heathens have more fun!! 😉

@KKGator
I still say Southern Baptists give Catholics a run on every score!

@hemingwaykitten I'd say they're dead-even for being completely whacked out and misogynistic.

@madmac

Agreed! My mother gave money to Jim Bakker and his Praise the Lord program in the 70's. Now that he's out of jail for that he's back at it, selling supplies on TV for the end of the world. Bastard.

@madmac
You're a Kiwi, come to the Southern US and we'll take the 100 flavor Baptist tour. Then if you can stomach it, we'll visit the snake handling church!

@KKGator, @hemingwaykitten Yes, I have seen on TV about the crazy snake handlers. I have also watched programs of an infamous Baptist family who preach a revolting load of poison against gay folk, and perpetrate the same abuse against returned soldiers at their untimely funerals. ..........During the second world war the American servicemen and women, were responsible for saving New Zealand and Australia from the terror of what was then, those Japanese savages, I will never forget that....We have a new generation of Japanese servicemen, who have put all that cruelty they practiced during WW2 behind them now,....thank Christ for that !!.

5

Raised Episcopalian, so no. However, a good friend of mine who is southern Baptist god-squad once asked me in a hushed voice if I had any and could she use one, and did they come with instructions? She had been married for a few years and I was silenced with shock. She was planning a pool party and was worried her menses would arrive. She later returned them to me, same number I gave her. Unreal.

I remember back in the 70s Tampax came in a very discrete unmarked box & included detailed instructions on how to use & even remove them. Sadly, a diagram was included to show you where your vagina was in case you didn't know.

@Carin

I thank heathens for those instructions...they were still on the Tampax I bought in 1982!

2

Even as a youngster, I always wanted to stay clean down there. In a family of six boys, it seemed very odd indeed that anyone might ask for anything more than toilet tissue. But I never felt ‘right’ without more protection. When in my late teens, I finally got my mother to consider purchasing serious hygienic products for me. I liked the security of the pad but the tampon had a little ‘je ne sais pas’ that felt good inside. When I went to college and met more people outside the family circle, I discovered that pads and tampons were for women and my need for inner cleanliness called for different solutions. I still sometimes blush at my innocence but I must admit I miss the tampons.

Really ?

@Cast1es No.

9

I am not a lady, make no mistake.....buuuuuuut, I have two daughters adults now. Tampons, condoms, pills...all was fair territory, that way they will make informed desitions. Worked out perfectly fine

@Beatlesandsuch my daughters, having passed the difficult teen years, think so too !! I am happy on that front

3

Wow, no, never. Southern Baptist and Episcopalian upbringing. They simply did not get into this with us!

I can't imagine how a Southern Baptist and an Episcopalian got along!

@hemingwaykitten It was sequential not simultaneous.

3

When I hit puberty it was 1965, before tampons. My mom even showed me how to use an uncomfortable elastic harness to hold the bulky pad in place, and to wear plastic underwear over the cotton ones.

Furthermore, I was hit with such sickening cramps I had to go to bed for three days a month, on heavy pain medication. I thought I'd fallen into hell. Years later, a gynecologist found I have a tipped uterus, causing the problems.

But ALSO, I was horrified when my body started changing shortly before the periods started. I didn't realize I'm a partial transmale and had assumed I'm male, never thinking about it.

Up to that point I'd blended in with and been accepted as a male by the other Haiti MKs (missionary kids), even led a gang of boys. But when my body began to transform, my male pals began to change their behavior toward me in alarming ways, and missionary men began finding excuses to sit next to me and try to hug me.

I wanted to kick them in their privates, but settled for cold looks and walking away.

I used to beg god to change my lumpy legs back to the beautiful straight sticks I had before, and my painfully growing chest interfered with my throwing arm.

@Beatlesandsuch I'm only a self-labeled transgender person..many of the Europeans I meet here in Thailand are so androgynous it's difficult to tell what gender they are, and some women dress exclusively in men's clothing and boots, yet none of them use the transgender label for themselves. To them, they are just normal.

It's just the US and their obsession with labeling people as "other." If you were to meet me, you wouldn't be able to tell the difference.

It's more about people now being more aware of what they are, and are not. The new definition of "transgender" is "anyone who feels uncomfortable with any aspect of their assigned gender," and that definition raises the "transgender" percentage in the US to 30%.

Millennials Are the Least Binary Generation Yet [themarysue.com]

20 percent of millennials identify as LGBTQ, GLAAD survey finds [nbcnews.com] via @nbcnews

1

Satan's little fingers.

This made me laugh hard.

@Emerald Thanks, now give Satan's Helper a 👍

6

Slut shaming was strong, books about dangers of masturbation that would suddenly pop up all over, no tampons for virgins of course, strict curfew for me but not for my younger brother. Many things to instill subservience really and bias towards women by women.

Most definitely a double standard , when it comes to the way my younger brother and I were raised , but , hind sight showed , I was better off in the end . His self indulgences , have left him in much less healthy state than I am , and it has been that way for many years .

5

LOL! Yeah. I was told exactly that. In fact, I didn't use a tampon until I was 22 years old and that was out of necessity. I was in basic training (boot camp) for the Coast Guard at the time and we were going to be training in a pool and I just happen to get my period the night before. At that time, the USCG issued us (the females in the company) only tampons the first day we arrived. I didn't understand this lack of choice at first, but it's just the most sensible thing to use under those conditions. Wearing a pad in a pool while you are trying to get through drills... Not going to work. Of course, at the time, I was not even a virgin, but I had never used tampons before regardless, never thought to use one, since I had been taught not to in my very early teens. It's amazing how such little things can stay with you even after you leave religion behind. You just don't think about it. Anyway, I never used a tampon again after basic training, not because of any previous religious training that had already gotten over, but because I still managed to have a bad experience in the pool anyway. The frigging thing didn't stay in and well... I just don't bother swimming when I'm on the rag. Ha!

3

I was familiar with that line of reasoning, but wasn't explicitly told that by my mom. She never bought them for herself or us girls and I think it had more to do with concerns over TSS than hymen-breaking.

She also had something against bikini-cut underwear and would always buy us granny panties even though they showed a good two inches above the loosely fitting boy jeans we were required to wear for modesty reasons.

3

My apology for commenting uninvited, being neither a lady nor being supportive of the system that gave birth to the term.

Can't recall the article's name or author, but this very topic is addressed in a way soooo funny, that I REALLY almost fell off the chair with laughter. Perhaps someone here remembers the article. If not, it is easily found as one of the contributions published in an anthology edited by Ruth Barrett titled 'Female Erasure'. I bought ot on Amazon and it was published, this year.

The piece is a scream! The book itself is NOT to miss, great stuff.

4

Religion is so misogynistic.

9

Yes, I was told tampons were for married women. Lol

4

Southern Baptist, and yes, very much so! Mostly indirectly, not verbally. Mom bought pads for me but would not buy tampons. She wouldn't say it but I knew it was hymen or turn-on related. When I turned 16 and got a job, guess what I bought?

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