Anonymous wrote:Yes- of course. Why is this a question?
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t flush them, what do you wrap them in for disposal? I use tampons without applicators and would prefer not to add more plastic to the situation. But tissue seems insufficient and messy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don’t flush them, what do you wrap them in for disposal? I use tampons without applicators and would prefer not to add more plastic to the situation. But tissue seems insufficient and messy.
Just wrap it in toilet paper until nothing bleeds through. Trash bag is plastic so it’s contained there, and trash can has a lid so smell isn’t an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never!
You aren’t supposed to. That is why every public restroom has that little white trash bin for them.
No! That’s for pads and tampon tube trash.
Please ask yourself—why is it okay to flush tampons but not pads?
Pads are plastic. Tampons are organic cotton.
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t flush them, what do you wrap them in for disposal? I use tampons without applicators and would prefer not to add more plastic to the situation. But tissue seems insufficient and messy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never!
You aren’t supposed to. That is why every public restroom has that little white trash bin for them.
No! That’s for pads and tampon tube trash.
Please ask yourself—why is it okay to flush tampons but not pads?
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t flush them, what do you wrap them in for disposal? I use tampons without applicators and would prefer not to add more plastic to the situation. But tissue seems insufficient and messy.