Anonymous wrote:I was always told that once you are in the water, your period kind of stops for a little bit. I'm not sure if that's true, but it was definitely something I was told when in middle and high school. If true though, the bathing suit would only have to do the "work" when out of the water.
Feel free to debunk this long held belief, as I forgot that it's something I believe until I saw this thread!
Anonymous wrote:There is a water repellent layer as part of the suit. You need a tight fit to make sure water does not come in and out of the suit.
If you don’t believe it, get a suit, put it on, get in a bath tub. Get out. Take off the suit. See if it got wet inside.
For all of you saying to just wear a tampon - that’s a personal decision that you really shouldn’t make a young teen do unless they want to.
Anonymous wrote:I was always told that once you are in the water, your period kind of stops for a little bit. I'm not sure if that's true, but it was definitely something I was told when in middle and high school. If true though, the bathing suit would only have to do the "work" when out of the water.
Feel free to debunk this long held belief, as I forgot that it's something I believe until I saw this thread!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They work. Not sure how. But they do. Nothing comes out. But make sure you get a tight fit.
Agree. They are pretty amazing. And they are not like a swim diaper (no absorbency with those). Swim diapers are meant to catch feces, not urine.
Anonymous wrote:They work. Not sure how. But they do. Nothing comes out. But make sure you get a tight fit.
Anonymous wrote:Omg people need to start using cups. They were life changing for me.
Anonymous wrote:Omg people need to start using cups. They were life changing for me.