Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this to be comfortable, probably like sitting in a wet bathing suit all day.
I also don't see how it can be sanitary.
I imagine it's totally NOT like sitting in a wet bathing suit. We've got pretty advanced in many areas, you know. Why not clothing for women? Maybe it works like diapers, which can hold a lot of liquid inside while the part by the skin still doesn't feel really wet.
You're being way too open minded about this. If you'd only work a little harder, you could properly shame the women of dcum for not using the "approved" menstrual products. You didn't even mention how much women stink while they bleed from their whatevers.
Definately the THINX marketing crew. Old blood stinks. You can deny it till your blue in the face, but it does. Walking arounf in und you bled erwear that you've bleed into all day is the same as walking around in a pad that you bled in all day. You stink.
The wearer not smelling it means little, you are the last to know you smell.
Same idea as the people who claim not to need deroderant and only shower once a week, but don't smell. They smell. Everyone around them smells their funk.
If you;re cool with being funky go for it, but don't pretend like you don't stink or are some how a SJW and feminist because you wear enstrual panties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just think how lucky teens are today with the thin type pads. I remember the days of the thick stayfree pads in the cardboard box.
I actually had to use one of those the other day. It's unforunate they don't stoc the lades room machines wth the thin type.
Lol.....me too last month. OMG I forgot how thick they are. It was literally like a small pillow. Funny how quick we forget
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this to be comfortable, probably like sitting in a wet bathing suit all day.
I also don't see how it can be sanitary.
I imagine it's totally NOT like sitting in a wet bathing suit. We've got pretty advanced in many areas, you know. Why not clothing for women? Maybe it works like diapers, which can hold a lot of liquid inside while the part by the skin still doesn't feel really wet.
You're being way too open minded about this. If you'd only work a little harder, you could properly shame the women of dcum for not using the "approved" menstrual products. You didn't even mention how much women stink while they bleed from their whatevers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this to be comfortable, probably like sitting in a wet bathing suit all day.
I also don't see how it can be sanitary.
I imagine it's totally NOT like sitting in a wet bathing suit. We've got pretty advanced in many areas, you know. Why not clothing for women? Maybe it works like diapers, which can hold a lot of liquid inside while the part by the skin still doesn't feel really wet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this to be comfortable, probably like sitting in a wet bathing suit all day.
I also don't see how it can be sanitary.
I imagine it's totally NOT like sitting in a wet bathing suit. We've got pretty advanced in many areas, you know. Why not clothing for women? Maybe it works like diapers, which can hold a lot of liquid inside while the part by the skin still doesn't feel really wet.
Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this to be comfortable, probably like sitting in a wet bathing suit all day.
I also don't see how it can be sanitary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just think how lucky teens are today with the thin type pads. I remember the days of the thick stayfree pads in the cardboard box.
I actually had to use one of those the other day. It's unforunate they don't stoc the lades room machines wth the thin type.
Anonymous wrote:I just think how lucky teens are today with the thin type pads. I remember the days of the thick stayfree pads in the cardboard box.
Anonymous wrote:I just think how lucky teens are today with the thin type pads. I remember the days of the thick stayfree pads in the cardboard box.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People are making a lot of uninformed assumptions here. Instead of guessing what you think might happen, why not actually read the literature and try them out yourselves. You sound freaking ridiculous with these guesses and ideas based on no idea about how the product really works
+1 Especially the PP saying another poster must smell bad. How absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine this to be comfortable, probably like sitting in a wet bathing suit all day.
I also don't see how it can be sanitary.
No offense but if you haven't tried it, you can't really know. I have used them for leak prevention (on the days leading to my period and in combo with tampons on heavy days) and just by themselves on light days. They don't feel wet or smell. They're very comfortable. I don't know about using them solely on heavy days b/c I've never done it.
Anonymous wrote:People are making a lot of uninformed assumptions here. Instead of guessing what you think might happen, why not actually read the literature and try them out yourselves. You sound freaking ridiculous with these guesses and ideas based on no idea about how the product really works