Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So OP’s the one who ignores the signs in the public restrooms asking people not to flush feminine hygiene products.
I always wondered why they had those signs. I thought, isn't it obvious not to flush trash down the toilet? I guess not. If OP is stupid enough to think that's okay and she can still type a message on DCUM then I guess there are people even dumber than her out there and who the hell knows what they're doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy shiat, is this serious?! People flush the applicator and wrapper?!
You do not flush ANY part of the tampon - even the tampon itself, and no "flushable" wipes (because there is no such thing).
Toilet paper, poop, pee, water. That's all. You flush nothing else.
Sorry, but when I catch/crush bugs, or scoop up dead bugs I throw them in the toilet. I have the weird fear that it isn't really dead and it is going to crawl out of the wastebasket and come and seek revenge.![]()
You are not going to get me to stop flushing dead bugs. Besides, they are definitely biodegradeable!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe people even buy tampons with plastic applicators, much less flush them.
+1
Is the plastic recyclable? Why not put the plastic applicator in the recycling?
No!
If you're not sure if the recycling system where you are takes a kind of plastic, it's better to throw it in the trash. Otherwise your little applicators and your neighbor's plastic bags, and their neighbor's toys, etc. can soil the entire batch and it all goes to the trash. Look up what your city takes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What other PLASTIC product would you flash down the toilet?
NO, stop doing this. Our oceans are full of plastics, which are killing sealife and getting into the humans that consume that sealife.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/from-fish-to-humans-a-microplastic-invasion-may-be-taking-a-toll/
Umm, solid waste in the sewage doesn't end up in the ocean. Do you know how the sewage system works?
Umm, Google "combined sewage overflow."
Anonymous wrote:LMAO People on DCUM so frequently fail to thoroughly read the OP and consider more than their own narrow circumstances, that I was going to write an annoyed comment that said, basically, "Absolutely the OP shouldn't be flushing applicators and wrappers, but why is everyone assuming she's flushing plastic?! Paper and cardboard exist?!"
Then I thought to double-check the OP and sure enough, she says it right there. I have become what I hate.
Anyway.
I will admit that for some time, I didn't really realize that the cardboard and paper and tampon itself shouldn't be flushed. I wasn't being lazy, it had just escaped me somehow, except for when I'd visit, like, a historic home and they'd have a million warning signs about the old plumbing. I don't know how I failed to grasp this-- it helped that I lived almost exclusively in newish apartment buildings from 18-30 or so, when I realized I had been doing it horribly, horribly wrong. Can't remember how I learned it, but it wasn't because I ever clogged the plumbing (at least not immediately, because I never knew). Because I lived in spaces with strong-- and shared-- plumbing, it just never came back to bite me. I guess I was lucky it also never did when I was visiting someone's home or whatever. I feel terrible about it now!
For the past ~15 years, I have done the right thing and thrown everything away. I feel I should also make penance somehow. Maybe donate money to help build better sanitation systems in other countries.
It definitely never occurred to me it would be okay to flush anything plastic, though.
Anonymous wrote:LMAO People on DCUM so frequently fail to thoroughly read the OP and consider more than their own narrow circumstances, that I was going to write an annoyed comment that said, basically, "Absolutely the OP shouldn't be flushing applicators and wrappers, but why is everyone assuming she's flushing plastic?! Paper and cardboard exist?!"
Then I thought to double-check the OP and sure enough, she says it right there. I have become what I hate.
Anyway.
I will admit that for some time, I didn't really realize that the cardboard and paper and tampon itself shouldn't be flushed. I wasn't being lazy, it had just escaped me somehow, except for when I'd visit, like, a historic home and they'd have a million warning signs about the old plumbing. I don't know how I failed to grasp this-- it helped that I lived almost exclusively in newish apartment buildings from 18-30 or so, when I realized I had been doing it horribly, horribly wrong. Can't remember how I learned it, but it wasn't because I ever clogged the plumbing (at least not immediately, because I never knew). Because I lived in spaces with strong-- and shared-- plumbing, it just never came back to bite me. I guess I was lucky it also never did when I was visiting someone's home or whatever. I feel terrible about it now!
For the past ~15 years, I have done the right thing and thrown everything away. I feel I should also make penance somehow. Maybe donate money to help build better sanitation systems in other countries.
It definitely never occurred to me it would be okay to flush anything plastic, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually flushed tampons themselves for several years because I genuinely didn’t realize you weren’t supposed to flush them for some reason.
But flushing plastic applicators and wrappers?? That’s straight up flushing garbage. And how is it easier?? The trash is right there!
Same. I had no idea you weren't supposed to flush the tampon itself until reading DCUM but the applicator???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you just use tissues? It’s safer and better!
Agree. And it’s better for the environment
Anonymous wrote:It is shocking how some people seem to think it is okay to flush tampons as well as applicators. Yikes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy shiat, is this serious?! People flush the applicator and wrapper?!
You do not flush ANY part of the tampon - even the tampon itself, and no "flushable" wipes (because there is no such thing).
Toilet paper, poop, pee, water. That's all. You flush nothing else.
Sorry, but when I catch/crush bugs, or scoop up dead bugs I throw them in the toilet. I have the weird fear that it isn't really dead and it is going to crawl out of the wastebasket and come and seek revenge.![]()
You are not going to get me to stop flushing dead bugs. Besides, they are definitely biodegradeable!
Anonymous wrote:Holy shiat, is this serious?! People flush the applicator and wrapper?!
You do not flush ANY part of the tampon - even the tampon itself, and no "flushable" wipes (because there is no such thing).
Toilet paper, poop, pee, water. That's all. You flush nothing else.