Anonymous wrote:Get her a trash can for her room that has a tight-fitting lid.
Anonymous wrote:In reference to the stains on sheets and cushions:
I have found that my girls need wings or they can't keep the pads to stay straight during the day. One has a heavier flow, so she uses overnight pads during the day. The other always uses extra long pads. Perhaps she's having issues with leaking at the sides or back?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sit down with her. Say more than "Hey I changed your sheets" which is very confrontational and embarrassing for an adolescent and foster child and not warm and nurturing at all.
Have a chat with her in which you explain menstruation, both how it works and how you plan for it, cope with it, and deal with it. Either do it as a mother/daughter or as "one of the girls." Give her a book (you may have already) so she can read on her own.
I'm open to book recommendations- pls let me know if you have any!
The American Girl body books are really well-written. They might skew a little younger but she sounds a little immature.
"The Care and Keeping of You-1" (for younger girls) and "2" for older girls.
Wow. If she already has a baby, she needs "Our Bodies, Ourselves" not some American Girl book. Our Bodies, Ourselves was originally written by the Boston Women's Health Collective and contains comprehensive, objective, non-discriminatory information on women's health from cradle to grave.
She has had a baby. Unfortunately, the birth of her child doesn't really correlate as much as I would hope to maturing. Evaluations of her have overwhelming compared her emotionally and intellectually as closer to a 10 year old than the adult she is biologically/technically becoming. I will look at this book too thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Both of my SDs do this. They get blood on their sheets and do not wash. They take off their underwear and leave the used pads attached. On multiple occasions I've had to fish a pad out of the washing machine or dryer. They leave wrappers on the floor - like right now there are probably 20 used wrappers on the floor in each room. I haven't said anything to either girl directly because their mom (and sometimes my husband) talk to them about it. Does anyone understand WHY this happens? I don't think they're embarrassed or ashamed (like the OP my SDs don't seem to have a problem talking about their period in front of their dad). It baffles me. In our case I've ruled out them being uninformed about hygiene and - honestly - it doesn't seem like they're being passive aggressive or aggressive aggressive, it doesn't seem like they're being defiant either. They keep it confined to their rooms (although one of them left a big blood stain on the couch which I was unable to get out - I just turned the cushion over and let it go). Does anyone have an idea what is going on? I don't have a good enough relationship with their mom (her choice not mine) to be able to talk about the girls. My husband says he's continuing to talk to them about it and so is their mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sit down with her. Say more than "Hey I changed your sheets" which is very confrontational and embarrassing for an adolescent and foster child and not warm and nurturing at all.
Have a chat with her in which you explain menstruation, both how it works and how you plan for it, cope with it, and deal with it. Either do it as a mother/daughter or as "one of the girls." Give her a book (you may have already) so she can read on her own.
I'm open to book recommendations- pls let me know if you have any!
The American Girl body books are really well-written. They might skew a little younger but she sounds a little immature.
"The Care and Keeping of You-1" (for younger girls) and "2" for older girls.
Wow. If she already has a baby, she needs "Our Bodies, Ourselves" not some American Girl book. Our Bodies, Ourselves was originally written by the Boston Women's Health Collective and contains comprehensive, objective, non-discriminatory information on women's health from cradle to grave.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sit down with her. Say more than "Hey I changed your sheets" which is very confrontational and embarrassing for an adolescent and foster child and not warm and nurturing at all.
Have a chat with her in which you explain menstruation, both how it works and how you plan for it, cope with it, and deal with it. Either do it as a mother/daughter or as "one of the girls." Give her a book (you may have already) so she can read on her own.
I'm open to book recommendations- pls let me know if you have any!
The American Girl body books are really well-written. They might skew a little younger but she sounds a little immature.
"The Care and Keeping of You-1" (for younger girls) and "2" for older girls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both of my SDs do this. They get blood on their sheets and do not wash. They take off their underwear and leave the used pads attached. On multiple occasions I've had to fish a pad out of the washing machine or dryer. They leave wrappers on the floor - like right now there are probably 20 used wrappers on the floor in each room. I haven't said anything to either girl directly because their mom (and sometimes my husband) talk to them about it. Does anyone understand WHY this happens? I don't think they're embarrassed or ashamed (like the OP my SDs don't seem to have a problem talking about their period in front of their dad). It baffles me. In our case I've ruled out them being uninformed about hygiene and - honestly - it doesn't seem like they're being passive aggressive or aggressive aggressive, it doesn't seem like they're being defiant either. They keep it confined to their rooms (although one of them left a big blood stain on the couch which I was unable to get out - I just turned the cushion over and let it go). Does anyone have an idea what is going on? I don't have a good enough relationship with their mom (her choice not mine) to be able to talk about the girls. My husband says he's continuing to talk to them about it and so is their mom.
Hi this is op. Thank you for posting this because it makes me feel like I am not the *only* one dealing with this in my home. I've also fished out used pads from laundry - still attached to underwear. Sometimes they will just be laying out in the bathroom which i have to walk through to get to the laundry room (just evidence of how close the washing machine is to the thing that needs to be washed. I can literally see it from where the underwear is!).
I am going to do what the other poster suggested and get a lidded trashcan for the room. And I did order the book. But I feel almost at a loss because I don't think she cares. I don't know how to make her care. I would not want anyone looking at my used pad splayed out on the bathroom floor.
Anonymous wrote:Both of my SDs do this. They get blood on their sheets and do not wash. They take off their underwear and leave the used pads attached. On multiple occasions I've had to fish a pad out of the washing machine or dryer. They leave wrappers on the floor - like right now there are probably 20 used wrappers on the floor in each room. I haven't said anything to either girl directly because their mom (and sometimes my husband) talk to them about it. Does anyone understand WHY this happens? I don't think they're embarrassed or ashamed (like the OP my SDs don't seem to have a problem talking about their period in front of their dad). It baffles me. In our case I've ruled out them being uninformed about hygiene and - honestly - it doesn't seem like they're being passive aggressive or aggressive aggressive, it doesn't seem like they're being defiant either. They keep it confined to their rooms (although one of them left a big blood stain on the couch which I was unable to get out - I just turned the cushion over and let it go). Does anyone have an idea what is going on? I don't have a good enough relationship with their mom (her choice not mine) to be able to talk about the girls. My husband says he's continuing to talk to them about it and so is their mom.
Anonymous wrote:Both of my SDs do this. They get blood on their sheets and do not wash. They take off their underwear and leave the used pads attached. On multiple occasions I've had to fish a pad out of the washing machine or dryer. They leave wrappers on the floor - like right now there are probably 20 used wrappers on the floor in each room. I haven't said anything to either girl directly because their mom (and sometimes my husband) talk to them about it. Does anyone understand WHY this happens? I don't think they're embarrassed or ashamed (like the OP my SDs don't seem to have a problem talking about their period in front of their dad). It baffles me. In our case I've ruled out them being uninformed about hygiene and - honestly - it doesn't seem like they're being passive aggressive or aggressive aggressive, it doesn't seem like they're being defiant either. They keep it confined to their rooms (although one of them left a big blood stain on the couch which I was unable to get out - I just turned the cushion over and let it go). Does anyone have an idea what is going on? I don't have a good enough relationship with their mom (her choice not mine) to be able to talk about the girls. My husband says he's continuing to talk to them about it and so is their mom.