Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I flushed tampons for 30 years. That’s what I was taught. And it’s what was on the instructions throughout my teens and 20s, after which I was done reading tampon instructions. My very environmental college taught me to recycle and bring my own bag to the grocery store, but never taught me to toss tampons. I only stopped flushing them in my early 40s, and after only a couple of years or so switched to a menstrual cup. I’m almost 50.
Not flushing them is rather horrifying, gross, and inconvenient after doing it for so long. I may look into the cup option.
Anonymous wrote:I flushed tampons for 30 years. That’s what I was taught. And it’s what was on the instructions throughout my teens and 20s, after which I was done reading tampon instructions. My very environmental college taught me to recycle and bring my own bag to the grocery store, but never taught me to toss tampons. I only stopped flushing them in my early 40s, and after only a couple of years or so switched to a menstrual cup. I’m almost 50.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From 2001, last bullet
Oh dang, 21st century!
Yes! I didn't think I was crazy and totally did this until reading this thread on DCUM and then doing my own follow-up research. Had been flushing them for years and deliberately bought the ones with the cardboard applicator b/c I thought the applicator was (still) supposed to be flushable. I'm bummed about having to readjust these practices, frankly, but don't want to screw up my plumbing. For me, the flushability of the tampons and applicator was a significant benefit of using them over pads.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From 2001, last bullet
Oh dang, 21st century!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course not. Where you raised in a barn?
Those with menses in the 80s/90s were told to flush.
No, not all parents were uneducated clods.
I got my period in 1994 and was told from the day my mother first had "the talk" with me that I should never, ever, EVER flush a tampon.
DP. Why so rude?! If you really want this message spread for the greater good, maybe don’t be such a jerk? There are clearly lots of people didn’t know. (Myself included.)
OK, I apologize. I suspect this is a social class issue, and it isn't your fault if you weren't taught the right thing. Sort of the way some people were not taught healthy eating habits.
Now you know, and you can avoid flushing tampons and damaging plumbing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.campaignasia.com/article/after-100-years-of-tampon-and-pad-marketing-brands-are-still-struggling-to-embra/468235
It’s funny, people are acting like some of us who got our periods in the 80s and early 90s were a bunch of rubes for not having the common sense to avoid flushing. But if you look at that link, ads at that time were just broaching the topic of whether tampon users were still virgins or not. Common sense changes with the times.
Personally, all I remember about my introduction to tampons was the fear of TSS. We definitely covered that in health class and it made an impression. But flushing? This was the least of our tampon concerns.
I got my period in 94 and never flushed. Flushable wipes still say flushable on them too- and most people (with sense) know you don’t really flush them. So stop excusing your tampon ignorance. It was known in the 80s and 90s you shouldn’t really flush them. And now- people STILL doing it and haven’t figured out they shouldn’t despite signs, despite the box saying DO NOT FLUSH in bold are...very simple minded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I flushed tampons for 30 years. That’s what I was taught. And it’s what was on the instructions throughout my teens and 20s, after which I was done reading tampon instructions. My very environmental college taught me to recycle and bring my own bag to the grocery store, but never taught me to toss tampons. I only stopped flushing them in my early 40s, and after only a couple of years or so switched to a menstrual cup. I’m almost 50.
Same, at this point I'm curious when the instructions finally admonished against flushing, and also when this became a widely acknowledge issue. As vocal as a certain poster is, I think this change is actually quite recent. Of course, I wasn't checking in with the instructions along the way either, and there are other ways I've violated their guidance, especially having come of age during the toxic shock scare. TMI, I think the real reason I stopped flushing, wasn't new awareness, but living in a house with a slow flush, which isn't a sewer line issue, but due to calcified supply lines in an old toilet--regardless it was the sort of nuisance that discouraged any extra flushing and made me reevaluate need to do so. Also most public disposal boxes didn't have placards until more recently.
Anonymous wrote:OMG, the dog comment dredged up a repressed memory. I stayed at my boyfriend's house, disposed of my tampons in the trash only to have the roommate's dog get into the trash can and pull my period trash all over the apartment. 3 guys lived there. I was the only woman around.
Ugh. That was mortifying.
Anonymous wrote:I flushed tampons for 30 years. That’s what I was taught. And it’s what was on the instructions throughout my teens and 20s, after which I was done reading tampon instructions. My very environmental college taught me to recycle and bring my own bag to the grocery store, but never taught me to toss tampons. I only stopped flushing them in my early 40s, and after only a couple of years or so switched to a menstrual cup. I’m almost 50.