Anonymous wrote:Not PP but you clearly don’t have the kind of heavy period that’s being discussed here. Let me give you the full picture: after an hour or so, the cup is full to the brim, it’s overflowing. When you remove it, your hands get full of it. There’s no sink inside of your stall.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a pediatrician and a ballet dancer. I’d recommend an appointment with your pediatrician to discuss options. OCPs might be a good fit, with the possibility of eliminating her period completely (since there is no medical reason for her to have a period). I have many teen girls who love this option. Also if she’s not able to approach her dance teacher, then the older girls at the studio will have advice on specific products.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have her try a cup, they are amazing
A cup would never hold the amount that comes out of me over the course of two hours. Plus, removing, emptying and reinserting a cup as a 12 year old? In a PUBLIC place where people are knocking on the door to hurry up? It'd NEVER happen.
Anonymous wrote:Is period underwear just a different kind of diaper?
Anonymous wrote:Have her try a cup, they are amazing
Anonymous wrote:This isn’t going to be an easy answer for you:
In the olden days, they handled them by staying sufficiently underweight to lose their period. Hopefully you know all of the reasons that this is a bad idea- RED-S, etc.
Now, there are a few options. First, heavy periods aren’t normal. And I say this as a person who suffered through them from 13 to 26 and avoided all sorts of things and lived with insane stress because I couldn’t go 45 minutes sometimes without going through a super plus tampon.
Take her to a doctor and discuss dysmenorrhea and continuous birth control- if the concept of bcp freaks you out, you need to think of it as hormone control that will help your Dd live her life. Make sure she doesn’t have PCOS or endometriosis. Check her iron levels.
Continuous bcp changed my life but I wonder what I might have done or achieved had I not spent my adolescence worrying about period accidents or getting 2 hours of sleep at a time because I had to set alarms to avoid accidents at night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This would be a case where I would talk to the teacher or director of the ballet school.
NP, but my daughter would be mortified if I did something like this. True, it’s a medical issue, but it wouldn’t feel that way to her.
As a society, we’ve made some progress in erasing menstrual stigma, but still, not many teenage girls would feel comfortable having adults, (other than their doctor) discussing the details of their periods.
If OP’s daughter is OK with it, then that’s fabulous, maybe we’ve made more progress than I thought. But I don’t think mine would be.