Stuff You Should Know - How Menstruation Works
Episode Date: July 28, 2022Two dudes talking about menstruation? You bet! And there’s no way you could be any more nervous to listen than we were to record it. But give it a listen, we think you’ll find it enlightening – ...whether you menstruate or not.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey and welcome to the podcast I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here with us
For oversight and this is stuff you should know
Yeah, just a couple of dudes tucking minstration
That's right, and it sounds totally normal when you say it like that sounded like the making copies guy
You sounded to me like Troy McClure
Yeah
You're right. I am. I'm definitely more right than you were Troy McClure
That's right. That's exactly right. That was dead on actually. You weren't even trying Chuck. Oh, I used to do Troy McClure back in the day
Yeah, that was one of my bits
Well, you still got it buddy. Thanks
And I don't know I think long-time listeners will have picked up Chuck that we're stalling right now
New listeners might be like what are these guys doing and talking about I'm never listening to them again
But hang on wait just chill out. We do this sometimes especially when we're taking on a topic that we're
Only equipped to understand as researchers. Yes, I think is a good way to put it
We are researchers is what we do and anybody who researches something
Well and with an open mind. I think is perfectly legitimate in a perfectly legitimate position to talk about whatever it is
Carving out our Territor here. I guess so
Yeah, yeah, we're talking menstruation today. We are and another bit of just upfront knowledge that we want to drop is
We're gonna use different terms. We're gonna say girls. We're gonna say women
We're gonna say people who menstruate
Because we don't want to overlook the trans community and even though, you know
Most websites you go to will still say girls and women
We're gonna just sort of interchange words here and there to cover all our bases and to be respectful of
Everybody yeah, another one will be menstruators. Yeah, we should just say menstruators period
Oh
Didn't even mean that
So yeah, I think that was really good to say and it's not like you know
I'm sure we'll fall into women girls pretty frequently and that's not to say that we are
Judgy or critical of the concept of men menstruating
It's just that it's it's a fairly new concept to us and we're still
We're still getting used to it. So please please accept our apologies in advance if we do that and also
For our younger listeners, especially our the young girls who listen to our show, you know
In addition to our puberty female puberty podcast. We did we did male puberty too, right? We did both. Yeah. Yeah, we did both
This is something that you know, I think is a lot of anxiety comes with
We'll go ahead and say the word monarchy, which is the first period the first menstruation cycle
That someone can undergo we've used that before it's one of our favorite words from the early days of the show
From I think the totem pole episode. I think so because Native Americans celebrate the monarchy, isn't that right?
Monarchy, that's right
but
especially to those listeners
We just want you to know that
We hope that you embrace this as a the wonder of human biology that it is because it's just an amazing
thing that happens and
Knowing more about it. I think it's just powerful for little boys little girls across the gender spectrum and men and grown men and
women alike I
Suspect out of all those groups grown men are the most childish about it probably and probably know the least about it
Mm-hmm, but I think we're dying off slowly
But surely we're being replaced by way cooler smarter with it
People so that's cool. It'll go away eventually
but what we're talking about is menstruation which is
And again, we're gonna say some stuff like four weeks is a menstrual cycle a biological cycle
But we know that there are wide ranges of times
There are people who don't menstruate at all or whose menstruation is occasional
There are all sorts of reasons for all these things. So we're using a lot of like averages and average terms here
So just know that going in but it's roughly takes place every four weeks
And what is simply happening which is amazing is that the lining of the uterus the endometrium is getting ready to
host an egg that is fertilized and
that thing sheds and
Yeah, with that shedding comes blood and become and some tissue and that's called men's ease and
It starts generally with that monarchy anywhere from 12 to 13
It ends generally at menopause somewhere around 50 to 52 53
So that means that between the ages of 12 to 13 and the early 50s
someone will go through an average of
456 cycles
Or about 6.2 years of their life. Isn't that interesting?
Wow, that's amazing nice math. Yeah, there's a lot of lifetime math. I figured out
So I think even people who have had
Cycles there they're reaching the end of there. What'd you say 436?
556 give it 456 cycles. Maybe they're on 455 and they're like one more baby
By the way, if you're just going through monarchy, it doesn't actually work like that. I'm just teasing right
But my point is is that I think even people who menstruate and have menstruated for years and decades
Don't necessarily know why?
Women menstruate in the first place. Why would a human being menstruate?
There's practical reasons which we'll get into but evolutionarily speaking
We don't fully understand it and the reason why we don't really understand is because so few mammals actually menstruate
There's plenty of other adaptations for getting an egg ready to be fertilized
And then what happens if the egg doesn't get fertilized what you do after that?
But menstruation is is fairly rare in the animal kingdom humans are one of just a handful of bright shiny
People yeah, they have companions and the some primates like the chimp or the large-headed
capuchin
The fulvis fruit bat interestingly
There's a shrew an elephant shrew and a mouse. Did you look those up? Yeah. Yeah. Oh my gosh
And the spiny mouse they all
menstruate
But most mammals undergo something called an estrus cycle
It could be a seasonal thing which is why you have things like mating season
In the case of some other mammals like cats
It's actually or our friend squirrels
Friendly squirrels that we just talked about for sure
It's actually brought on by the act of sex, which is really interesting and sort of make sense last minute
Yeah, but it also makes sense. It's like let's not let's not get into anything before it's really time, right?
So that to me makes a tremendous amount of sense and the reason that there would be any kind of cycle at all
Whether it's an estrus cycle or a menstrual cycle
Is because there's a really high energetic and metabolic costs to keeping the uterus
prepared to host a fertilized egg and
That if you're an animal that
Constantly has a uterus ready to accept an egg you're going to expend way more energy way more of your metabolism
Keeping that uterus
Fluffy as they say sometimes and ready for an egg a fertilized egg
Then an animal who just does it once in a while or when it's triggered by sex
So evolutionarily speaking it makes sense for it to be seasonal or activated by sex or even a monthly thing
Yeah, and I just that's something I never thought about I never stopped and thought well
Why can't you just get pregnant anytime evolutionarily speaking because that would seem like a big-time?
Advantage yeah, if you're trying to you know put people out and if you're took took and you're trying to help put people out
There in the world right, but it does make a lot of sense and they've seen evidence in this like if
Someone and like a developing nation. Maybe this you know have like extreme nutritional deficiencies
They may not
Minstrate at all because their body like it extends that kind of like that drastic of a I guess just a
Workload on the body that that's that's one of the things that can get rid of if you're malnourished
Yeah, malnourished it also pops up in elite athletes because they are
Exercising so much and also usually have such a small amount of body fat
So there's like I guess your your body does like a body check
Every month and it's like okay, are we equipped to do this and if not, okay?
We'll just skip it if so let's go through it. Yeah, and the really interesting thing is we were talking about some of the
mammals that go through the estrus cycle
They don't actually
Believe they don't have an external shedding process
They reabsorb it and it is literally digested in the body by enzymes that are there just to do that
So that question is still there like why would?
Evolutionarily speaking why would the menstruation process to where you literally shed that lining out of your body?
Take place and they're not really sure why
No, but there's theories and one of the predominant ones up until the
1990s and after I say this you'll be like you mean the 1890s and I'll say again. No the
1990s. Yeah, they used to think that the purpose of menstruation was to wash the uterus out of pathogens that might have been
introduced by semen during sex
Until the 1990s, that's what they thought that menstruation was for and then finally somebody was like
Let me let me study this and they did they conducted a study where they tested bacterial loads of different phases
From a woman's uterus and found that no that's actually not the case at all
So that one finally got discarded it did and whoever proposed it to begin with you're lucky. Sure
And I'm like, yeah, man, I got a nirvana show. I'm trying to get to it sounds good to me
They went nirvana. This is the 1990s
Yeah
That was kind of a dud
I'm sorry. I tried to bring forth the chuckle a laugh or something. I can't do it like you. That's okay
The other thing they thought might at least be related to this is maybe the size of the animal or the size of the uterus
In relation to the size of the animal
But there's such a large range of uterine size in the animal kingdom that do menstruate that they basically kind of toss that out as well
Yeah, and it's the reason why that was a theory because you're like elephant shrew spiny mouse
Right kind of stupid theories that we've just very recently discovered that other animals menstruate. We didn't know that at all
So that's why that theory was so long-standing and then also they think maybe it has to do with
The way the endometrium forms or the fact that some animals
Carry their young and placenta. Yeah
Yeah, those are still the juries out on them
But yeah, we don't really have any idea of you know, what what menstruation is actually
For we know what it does
But how did it come along and so it remains a beautiful mystery of the springtime of womanhood
All right, should we take a break and get into the the nitty-gritty?
Yes, all right, we'll be right back after this with details on
menstruation
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
Give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this
I promise you. Oh god. Seriously. I swear and you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you
Oh, man, and so my husband Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yep
We know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band or each week to guide you through life step by step
Oh, not another one. Uh-huh kids relationships life in general can get messy you may be thinking
This is the story of my life. Oh, just stop now. If so, tell everybody. Yeah, everybody
About my new podcast and make sure to listen. So we'll never ever have to say bye. Bye. Bye
Listen to frosted tips with Lance Bass on the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
I'm Mangesha together and to be honest
I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment I was born. It's been a part of my life in India
It's like smoking you might not smoke, but you're gonna get second-hand astrology and lately
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you it got weird fast
Tantric curses major league baseball teams
Canceled marriages K-pop, but just what I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world can crashing down situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
And my whole view on astrology
It changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer
I think your ideas are gonna change too
Listen to skyline drive and the I heart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
Here's to the great American settlers
The millions of you has settled for unsatisfying jobs because they pay the bills and uh
You just kind of fell into it. And you know, it's like totally fine
Just another few decades or so and then you can enjoy yourself
Of course, there is something else you could do if you got something to say
You could oh, I don't know start a podcast with speaker from my heart and
Unleash your creative freedom and spend all day
Researching and talking about stuff you love and maybe even earn enough money to one day
Tell your irritating boss as you quit and walk off into the sunset. Hey, I'm no settler
I'm an explorer
Spreaker.com. That's a sbr
eak er
Hustle on over today
I
Chuck no one can see me right now, but I'm holding each elbow
Very tightly and I didn't realize I was even doing like I'm really anxious right now
We got this we didn't we shouldn't get nervous about this stuff every time we tackle something like this
we always get great support and say you guys do what you do which is
You know research something and it's not like we're not serial killers yet. We've talked about them. I
Would have to say that almost all the things we talk about we don't have experience with no no definitely
I'm not really anxious about that what I'm anxious about is screwing it up. Yeah, I'm doing a 13 year old
some bad information or
Making it harder to understand them before or you know, just I just want to be helpful with it
And I'm anxious about not being as helpful as we could be that's what I'm worried about. No, I'm totally with you
and I think that this nitty-gritty part is
Straight-ahead science pretty easy
So let's do it. Yes, but we have to say so Ed helped us with this one Ed doesn't menstruate either
But he's a really good researcher too and our hats off for really kind of diving into this and wrapping his head around it
But he he points out something that is not commonly seen, but I researched it and it's it's I guess the more clinical and medical
You go the deeper into it the more it becomes apparent that the menstrual cycle is actually
What we think of the menstrual cycle is actually a couple of different cycles and Ed did the clinical way and like really broke it out
Into these two different cycles that are happening simultaneously into the same end, right?
So we're talking about the ovarian cycle mm-hmm in the men's in the menstrual cycle, right?
and like I said generally like when you think about you know a period or something you think about a
Week or so in someone's life, but it's really it's a four-week cycle and
Each part is triggered by the release of hormones and it's sort of always going on and these two
different cycles are sort of working with each other to you know to
Get ready to have a baby basically
Yeah, and an easy way to remember it or think about it that I kind of stumbled upon is that
the menstrual cycle gets the uterus ready for an egg and the
Obulation cycle gets the egg ready for the uterus. What a beautiful dance
Thank you. You know well, I think so too. I wasn't crediting you with that. I was saying biology and nature, but sure
Well, I consider myself God. I created all
So in this case, we're gonna describe it and I think Ed does a does a good job of where he places this in the cycle as a
Listener or you know in this case as readers
But we're gonna start at the midpoint of the cycle
Right after the period has stopped and at this point like we said that the uterus
The lining has been shed
That would mean it's at its thinnest point at that point and this is the beginning of what is known as the proliferative phase
Yeah, the proliferative phase of the menstrual cycle
Is the the big star of that is a hormone called
estradiol
Which says hey endometrium get a little thicker
Double in size. Let's how about we build some new arteries and blood vessels called spiral arteries to bring blood to all this
New tissue that's being developed
New structures are are being built the cervical mucus take a break normally
Well kind of yeah, or chill out. I think is a way to put it the cervical mucus usually has a pH of
2.8 to 4.5 or sorry 3.8 to 4.5, which is very acidic
And the pH raises more toward neutral like around 7 during this time
Which is makes the the the uterus much more hospitable the sperm because sperm thrive in about a 7 pH
They would die very quickly in the normal acidity of the of the uterus
So that's like this is the process that it's like the very beginning of the phase of prepping the uterus for
An egg if it happens, that's right. And while this is happening the ovarian cycle kicks in with the follicular phase
there are two ovaries and they have hundreds and hundreds of thousands of eggs within these little sacs called follicles and
the
Hormones control all this like we said so in this case, it's a follicle stimulating hormone is gonna allow a few follicles to mature
And eventually most of them will die off and then there will be one follicle left
That's in to rule them all. That's right one to rule them all and this lasts about 10 to 14 days
It's a little bit pre the proliferative man. That's such a hard word for me
proliferative phase
The menstrual cycle and that's also about 10 to 14 days. So as you can see it's all sort of kind of syncing up
Yeah, I saw the follicular phase actually begins on day one of the menstrual phase
So it has a couple up to maybe five or so days head start on the proliferative phase
But the two work in conjunction right egg starting get ready the endometrium or the you of the uterus is starting to get ready to
That's right
Now we move on to two more fun phases with fun names
The the luteal phase in the case of the ovarian cycle and then the secretory or secretory phase
I would say secretory me too
And that's part of the menstrual cycle
Yeah, and they call the secretory phase
That it's not a secret no, there's a lot of secretions going on that's right
And this is when like those initial preparations that were begun in the proliferative proliferatory phase see
proliferative phase
It's a tough word all those preparations that were like the very basic structure of the endometrium that was being developed
Really starts to fill out and I said the the womb is frequently referred to as being fluffy at this time
It's maybe doubled in size
It's much more hospitable through an egg and then the reason it's called the secretory phases
The chemicals that are being secreted are all sorts of like proteins and hormones and other things that will sustain
Carbohydrates to that will sustain an egg if a fertilized egg shows up in your uterus
It's it all sorts of secretions are being fed into your endometrium
So that the egg will be nourished as it grows into a little bouncing baby. That's right
Back to the luteal phase at this point. The follicle is going to rupture and this is called ovulation
It's when the egg is released and the egg travels down that fallopian tube toward the uterus and
If it becomes fertilized, it's you know, ideally if everything goes right and the wide end of the fallopian tube
Where it meets the uterus you can
Also undergo what's called an eptopic pregnancy. That's when it implants on the outside of the uterus
Emily and I went through one of these with one of our miscarriages that leads to a miscarriage
It's very very sad thing, but also quite common
at some point we should probably do a
Whole episode on miscarriages because that is something that people don't talk nearly enough about
Yeah, and it happens like 25% of the time and it's just not the sort of thing that people, you know
Bring up with one another but once it is brought up among friends and family more people start saying oh, yeah
I had one I had two yeah, I had three definitely sure and it's all very sad stuff
So we'll cover that at some point, but I wouldn't have the daughter
I have now had our life not taken us in that direction. So I
Can't imagine things any other way, you know
It's like Garth Brooks said Chuck some of God's greatest gifts are unanswered prayers
You sure that wasn't Chris Gaines?
Chris Gaines covered that Garth Brooks song in a head spinning dose of post-modern irony
But at this point if everything is going well you have the egg
Again at the wide end of the fallopian tube
Yeah, so that's where it's fertilized if it's fertilized it goes
Boop and falls into the uterus where it sticks to the endometrium and gets secreted all over and nourished and fed with lots of
carbohydrates and proteins and there's hormones going berserk and the pregnancy begins
That's if the egg is successfully fertilized and we should say that ovulation phase is the shortest phase of this whole cycle
It lasts only 24 hours
That's how long you have for your egg to become fertilized into a blast assist is what they call it
It's a very unromantic name for a fertilized egg, but that's that
So you've got 24 hours and if that doesn't happen that the
Luteal phase keeps going so you've got that that follicle that the egg came out of
That turns into like this kind of conductor that's conducting the symphony that's going on in your uterus
That's making it just more and more hospitable for a fertilized egg if it shows up
So the egg has 24 hours, but the Luteal phase keeps going on well beyond that 24 hours
It doesn't know immediately that there's
There like the fertilized egg isn't coming so it keeps preparing for it as if it's going to for many days
I think
Something like a week and a half the Luteal phase lasts and then eventually
They realize that the fertilized egg isn't going to show up and so that follicle that's a conductor. It's putting out
Progesterone suddenly just stops putting out progesterone and all of a sudden you have a huge imbalance
Between your progesterone levels and your estrogen levels and it can make you
Extraordinarily irritable sad anxious and a bunch of other stuff just a few days before your actual period starts
And that's what they call premenstrual syndrome aka PMS. That's right. It is a very normal thing to happen
This is something that we maybe could we could probably get a whole episode out of this
It can be very severe in some cases and be very disruptive in some cases
And when that is the case it's called premenstrual
dysphoric disorder
And it's funny, you know Emily and I were talking about menstruation, you know because I was researching this and
She just got back from the doctor and they told her flax seed
Mm-hmm is can really aid with PMS symptoms. Oh, yeah, and you know, it's like here
We are, you know, she's cruising up toward 50 years old and it's you know, just learning this stuff
About flaxseed. So there's always room to learn I guess is what I'm saying
You said that
The progesterone and estrogen are gonna cease to be produced at this point
Mm-hmm. And but what does happen is a substance called?
Prostaglandin is gonna come along and it's gonna
Constrict all those spiral arteries that made those connections
To get ready for you know, they're big scene and that's gonna cause them to tear themselves apart and
It's gonna basically you're not gonna get the blood flow to the endometrium that you had going on
So it's gonna start breaking down away from the uterine wall
And so that that is the men's ease that is the menstruation and that's what's happening is those blood vessels
That's where the blood comes from right
And then the tissue is your actual endometrium that lining of your uterus that was built up into like this fluffy
Fertilized egg-loving habitat that's no longer needed because the fertilized egg never showed up
So you got to get it out somewhere and again animals that go through estrus they reabsorb this
Animals that menstruate get rid of it
They discharge it and the reason why is because if you didn't that stuff would build up awfully quick over the course of even
Just the first year you started to have periods and also as we'll see it could cause you a whole host of health problems
So it's actually really good and really smart
Evolutionarily speaking and biologically speaking to have the menstruation phase of the menstrual cycle
And one of the things with that endometrium that I saw Chuck it can come out
Almost intact as a whole
Like it can come out in the shape of the uterus like the whole lining just comes out
And as in one chunk it's very rare, but if you go look on the internet, it's actually a real thing
They're called decidual casts like a cast of something
Not a not a cast of like a play a
A cast of like a like you'd make of a statue. All right, so I mean that's that's it in a nutshell, right?
Yeah, I would say even more than a nutshell like that's several nutshells worth
Acorn squash shell. I yeah, I think that's good
But we should say that you wouldn't need an acorn squash shell to hold all of the blood that comes out because typically
When you go through the menstrual phase of or the menstruation phase of the menstrual cycle
What you call your period? Usually it's only results in about five or six tablespoons of blood over the course of like five to seven days
That's right, but it can come in inconvenient times. People can be caught off guard
And we'll talk about all that stuff, but first let's get into some of the disorders and
Problems that can happen with the menstrual cycle because it can be a very finicky thing
if you are someone who has just a super regular very
You know
Straightforward menstrual cycle, then you should count yourself lucky because it can go in all sorts of different ways
there's one way can go called
dysmenorrhea and
These are cramps basically it there are changes to the uterus that can cause these muscle contractions and
That cramping is very normal
And I think most people who menstruate have some amount of cramping generally
But it can get really severe and also as with other things very disabling a disruptive
Right. There's also a menorrhea
Which is where you just don't menstruate when you should be menstruating at least biologically speaking, right?
So they say that there's two kinds primary a menorrhea is after a girl
Who has turned age 15 still hasn't had her first period. That's primary a menorrhea and then a woman who has
Had periods regularly before and then all of a sudden misses three of them and we should say in who is also not pregnant at the time
That would be secondary men a menorrhea and both of them are nothing necessarily to be super scared about or anything
But they're probably something you would want to go talk to your gynecologist gynecologist about
One other thing well a bunch of other things that can cause a menorrhea to like I said
Elite athletes get it from too much exercise and not enough body fat
You can be malnourished for whatever reason or maybe have an eating disorder that causes you malnourishment
Stress can do it. Your doctor might say I think you're sniffing too much cocaine that can definitely bring on a menorrhea
There's a lot of lifestyle changes that you can make that are probably fairly easy
That would that would bring your period back again if you want that kind of thing, right?
and we'll talk about it, but birth control pills or
Sometimes people get on birth control pills to regulate their period and it really has less to do with getting pregnant or not
Yeah, so what else is there?
Menorrhagia
Is that what you're going? I see that
Menorrhagia I heard and you know I looked it up, but again with these pronunciations
Sometimes that you'll get three different ones. So it's kind of frustrating, but I saw or heard rather
Menorrhagia
Okay
I'm gonna go with Menorrhagia. Well, this is essentially heavy flow, right?
Yes, and again usually you're looking at what three to five tablespoons of blood that comes out again over the course of five to seven days
On average that is that is not there plenty of people who menstruate out there who are like
Yeah, like quadruple that or whatever
There are there are people who have heavy bleeding and either it's they bleed for longer like beyond seven days is considered
Menorrhagia or if you apparently soak
five sanitary products a day or
You soak more two or more in two hours
You definitely have Menorrhagia and the two or more in two hours actually means you want to go to the emergency room
because you're losing blood don't forget and there's all sorts of things that can happen when your
blood levels drop like
Iron deficiencies like anemia
All sorts of terrible stuff. So you want to go to the ER if you're bleeding that often or that much. Yeah, you're probably
Passing more clots as well
And you're probably also going to be having much more severe cramps if you're undergoing
Menorrhagia sounds no fun. It does sound no fun
And I guess we should talk about
Dealing with periods. I mean, that's all part of it, right? Or should we take a break and do that?
Yeah, I say we take a break Chuck and we come back
All fists and elbows talking about dealing with periods. All right, let's do it
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new iHeart podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass the hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or
You're at the end of the road. Ah, okay. I see what you're doing
Do you ever think to yourself? What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do?
You've come to the right place because I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god
Seriously, I swear and you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you
Oh, man, and so my husband Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boyband
Are each week to guide you through life step by step. Oh, not another one
Kids relationships life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody
Yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye. Bye. Bye
Listen to frosted tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology, but from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life
In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're gonna get secondhand astrology
And lately I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you it got weird fast
Tantric curses, major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, k-pop
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world can crash down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
And my whole view on astrology
It changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too
Listen to skyline drive and the iHeart radio app apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
Here's to the great american settlers
The millions of you have settled for unsatisfying jobs because they pay the bills and uh
You just kind of fell into it
And you know, it's like totally fine
Just another few decades or so and then you can enjoy yourself
Of course, there is something else you could do if you got something to say
You could oh, I don't know start a podcast with speaker from iHeart
And unleash your creative freedom and spend all day researching and talking about stuff you love
And maybe even earn enough money to one day tell your irritating bosses
You quit and walk off into the sunset
Hey, I'm no settler. I'm an explorer
Spreaker.com. That's a sbr
eak er
Salon over today
All right, uh
We talked a little bit I talked a little bit about uh in the beginning about
just
Getting past monarchy can be very anxiety inducing uh getting into the world of administration
For someone at the age of 13 or so can be very anxiety inducing
But it's again, it's a wonder of nature. It's not unusual. It's not uh gross. It's not weird
At the same time it is blood coming out of your body. So it's something that
Uh, you want to you know, take care of you don't want to I read that god, I can't remember the statistic of the amount of ruined underwear
That a person goes through in their lifetime of administration and just the simple cost of that
So if for no other reason than that
And you know health and sanitation it's something that you're going to want to take care of with what's called a sanitary product
Yeah, and from what I can tell
The desire and the drive to use sanitary products
Um is almost innate to where it's like you said, there's nothing to be ashamed of but at the same time
You will want to use the sanitary products so much so that I've seen it described as a human right access to
Sanitary products for menstruation is considered a human right everyone should have it because if you don't have access to them
It can induce so many hits to your well-being like anxiety
Um hits to your social life like you might stay home from work
You just you you just don't want to leave your house or interact with people
You just don't feel comfortable doing that because you have no protection
Between your period and the rest of the world
Which is one of the big points one of the main points of sanitary products in the first place
Yeah, I mean it's an evolutionary thing if you see
Your body bleeding you either want to stop the bleeding or if you can't you are going to be wiping it off
Your arm or your leg or wherever it's coming out
Right exactly and nobody wants that and most of all the person who's menstruating. That's right
There are many different ways to deal with this. Uh, I think most people
Um sort of probably experiment around until they find something they like
Uh or can at least tolerate. Um, I think the word like is probably not the right word to use there
I don't know. I think so. I mean there's definitely like a fit to it
You know, I think that it can you can feel reassured by it. Maybe yeah, I mean absolutely
In that kind of way, but I don't think any of them are any kind of picnic to deal with
Okay, agreed. You know what I'm saying? So yeah, I do the one that you tolerate best and uh that you
Deal with the best I think is probably what you're going to end up going with after you kind of try different things out
Um, one of them is a menstrual cloth. This is sort of the non disposable diaper
of the sanitary
Uh product world in that it is fabric that is washed and rewashed and reused again
Um, you're probably not going to see this used very often in you know
Develop nations. It's mainly in uh places that are poverty stricken
Or in an emergency or if there's like a refugee crisis going on
Right
If you take that menstrual cloth and you add wings to it. Um, so that it stays fast into the underwear
What you have is a reusable pad basically
And with both of them you can actually remove them after they become saturated wash them out
Really really well and then reuse them
So they're reusable and as because they're reusable reusable pads in particular starting to see an uptick in use in countries like the united states
Because environmentally speaking they're way preferable to things like disposable pads and tampons
You also have the disposable pad and the tampon. These are the two
Um, I think the two still to the two most common used in the us
Far and away a pad is gonna, you know, have some absorbent material
There's going to be some plastics in there
There will be an adhesive to hold it in place in the underwear these like I said are disposable
Um, along with the tampon which is a cylinder. It's also absorbent
This is inserted into the vagina and it's going to soak up that menstrual blood on the inside before it actually leaves
the body
and again, obviously disposable
And we'll talk about toxic shock syndrome in one second, but I did a little calculating
Uh, or actually I went to websites that did the calculating for me because I would get it wrong
And I was just wondering about costs like we hear about the uh
The pink tax isn't that what it's called? Yes, which is just sort of the amount of money that
Uh, that women pay over their lifetime and for stuff like this and other things that men don't have to pay for
Uh, and I think that they said
For tampons, you're looking at close to $2,000 for a lifetime
Uh pads about $4,700 for a lifetime
Um far and away that uh, the the best deal going
Is the menstrual cup. Uh, this is a sort of like a bell shaped cup that's flexible
Uh, it's usually like silicone
And this is reusable. It's it's washed through and I think you're supposed to boil it like once a month. That's about
Uh, you're still not going to use that one for your whole life, but they say about 80 bucks maybe
Over your life. Uh, and there are also menstrual discs
And the difference between a menstrual disc
And I think that they're newer than menstrual cups if I'm not mistaken
But a cup sits in the vagina below the cervix
Uh, and extends into the canal
Um, it depends on the brand of course, but the disc
Uh fits back into the vaginal fornix, which is where your cervical canal meets your cervix
Thank you helfline.com for that direct quote
Very nice menstrual cups. They're usually made of like silicone
And yeah, you can I saw that you use them for about two years before you need to get another one
They're also considered fairly green especially considered compared to pads and tampons
But like you said, pads and tampons remain far and away the most popular sanitary products in the united states
So much so chuck that in the same paragraph
I saw that 62 of Americans use pads while 42 use tampons
Which means that there's 104 percent Americans out there, uh, who menstruate
In the same paragraph this wasn't from like two different sources either. That's weird
The other thing I did want to mention I found was interesting is we didn't get into too much history here, but
Uh, apparently in ancient Rome they use wool
Uh, in Africa they rolled up grasses
Sort of like a tampon and they used to tell them about hawaii ferns
Then beautiful in a way. I think so
Yeah, it sounds like I would hope it's like very pleasant
And not like
Not pleasant, but yeah ferns. I saw that too. I wouldn't think they'd be very absorbent, but I guess I don't know
I guess it's better than nothing. Who knows sure
Um, there's also hormonal birth control or the birth control pill which we did an entire episode on a while back
And you can actually prevent
menstruation on birth control pills
Uh, if you don't do don't eat the sugar pills or placebo pills that fill up the week at the end of the
Pill pack if you just jump right into your next birth control pill immediately
You want menstruate and the reason why is because those hormonal pills keep your estrogen levels nice and even
So there's no spike and if there's no spike in estrogen levels
There's no, um, there's no signal to trigger the follicular phase or the luteal phase
Because both of those phases which are really important in dropping an egg
Um, are uh, are triggered by estrogen. So if there's no estrogen spike
There's no egg that's going to come out of the um, the follicles very interesting
Yeah, I'm sure we talked about that in uh birth control, right?
I'm sure we had to too. Yeah, but apparently they've they've decided now once and for all that it's totally
If you're not trying to get pregnant
You could just stay on birth control
Um, constantly and never have a period if you didn't want to and from everything
of
Gynecologists and biologists can tell
There's not really any ill effects that come out of that. It's supposedly safe to just do
Uh, well a minute ago we mentioned toxic shock syndrome
Uh, with a promise to go back to it and this is something that can happen if you leave a tampon in too long
uh, it is a
pretty rough bacterial infection
And it can include, you know dizziness vomiting
Diarrhea it can include organ failure and death
And it is a very specific toxic staff bacteria
That can really grow and flourish in the fibers of a tampon
And this has led, you know a lot of people especially, um, you know in politics women in congress to say
Hey, you know what these tampons are all have these proprietary
Uh, constructions and what goes into a tampon and we need to know like there needs to be more transparency here
Of what what is in these things? I mean, it's generally thought to be like cotton and rayon
And quote synthetic fibers, but like I said each one is proprietary so they don't release the ingredients
And these bills just repeatedly die in uh,
Uh, you know die on the floor and just spend years and years and still haven't gotten through I don't think right?
No, that's absolutely the case. Um supposedly in response the um, like the pads and tampon makers
Uh have started to release more information about what goes into their products on their websites
But they also still point to the FDA. Um, a lot of people don't realize this but tampons are regulated as a medical device in the united states
Which means the FDA
uh supposedly
Tests them verifies their safety. Um and make sure that the the stuff that's being sold in the u.s. Is fully safe
Again ostensibly we've done plenty of episodes about how the FDA has dropped the ball here or there
Um, but there there is still kind of this like ongoing
Struggle to find out exactly what is in tampons and um and pads
Um, but yeah, again the FDA regulates tampons at least so um, I find that curious it is curious
Uh, but I think the reason why they got into a chuck was um from that toxic shock syndrome and realizing that that staff can grow
When the fibers of the tampon and I think that's when the FDA got involved and started claiming domain over tampons in particular
interesting
Um, and then chuck we talked about all these different um sanitary products again, which is what they're called
um
And even if you use them there can be times where they just malfunction or don't work
Or it wasn't in right or who however you want to put it and accidents happen
And I think if you are a teenager in high school and this happens to you you probably feel that your life is over
And I just want to take a moment to assure you that as embarrassing as that probably is for you
Um, your life is not over. Eventually. It's going to become something that you laugh about make fun of
And you will get past so please don't let that
Don't feel like that's going to frame the rest of your life even though it it does feel like it now
of course, uh, and you know that kind of leads us to
uh
Just sort of the the culture around it period not only here in the united states, but uh worldwide because in some countries it is
um
it's really awful how
menstruation is treated
And how people can be ostracized for menstruating or even if they might be menstruating
I think ed points out that the uh k-h-o-i the koi people
They eat their meals separated by gender
Just in case someone might be menstruating
Yeah, those are the people from the gods must be crazy right in the kalahari
Um, yeah, so there's like that's a really good example of a very ingrained social taboo
Um against menstruation that you find in
undeveloped or less developed cultures and you know those of us in the west tend to be like
You know, that's so undeveloped. Of course, there's a weird social taboo
But we should not judge so fast because it was not very long ago that um, Europe had its own well-engrained
Social taboos against menstruation as well, right? Yeah, I mean, we're talking
You know late 1800s, which was not that long ago
uh france
Which you would think is a very advanced country. They barred
Uh women who are menstruating from working at food production jobs
Like if you were a winemaker you had to take off and not work and therefore not get paid
When you were menstruating and as late as the 1890s in britain even
Uh, there were doctors that refused to perform surgeries on women who were menstruating, right?
And so, I mean, there's like reasons behind this. I think part of it is just simple, um, misogyny
Um, just just a way to to keep women
um
Feeling ashamed, um feeling controlled by society
I think that's a big part of it and then also definitely tied into it is the idea
I mean, there's blood and you know humans are just hardwired to not be comfortable at the site of blood
Or want to go toward it or anything like that, you know, so I think those combine probably
Uh, at least partially explain where some of these social taboos came
From and how they've remained for so long. Yeah, and you know, this is uh, there are some countries that actually celebrate it
We did talk about the monarchy being celebrated
In certain native american cultures. There are other
Um, there are other countries where they they really take care of women who are menstruating, whether it's, um
Like in gana menstruating women have an umbrella that they they sit under and little tints that they sit under
So they can at least be in the shade when they're having their period
And you found another country too that uh, did something similar, right?
Well, it was a native american indigenous group the Ojibwe. Oh, okay
And they actually they consider women. Um, who are menstruating actually on their period in that phase of their menstrual cycle
As being spiritually powerful like this is a time where
They might have visions
where they uh, they usually
Use it to self reflect or to learn from elders and they actually would seclude women
Um, who were menstruating on their period
They would put them in like these little houses that were purpose built for it
But it wasn't to be like ew get away from us. It was like you're in a really
Um significant place right now and you should go use this time to again reflect on yourself
reflect on you know, what you're learning from your elders and just basically
Making the most out of this spiritually powerful, you know, few days out of this month
Yeah, and I mean, it's great hearing those stories. There are far too many places though where where it is the opposite
There's a term. We should talk about
briefly called period poverty
these are cultural barriers political barriers economic barriers to
sanitary products to services
to education
and they they affect everything everything from
Um hygiene to your job to your health uh to your education and going to school
And it's a it's a problem in the world and there are all kinds of great
Um organizations that if you want to help provide minstrel products to people in need
There's some great charities out there doing it. Um
Just you know, just google that like minstrel product charity and there are all there are many many of them
There's one called freedom for the number four girls
Uh, but there there are lots of them and you should just check them out if that's something
That you feel like is worthwhile
Because it is
Yeah, I mean, it's a really easy thing to overlook in you know, the united states or canada or australia or the uk
um
And then it's especially easy to overlook in those countries as a man
Like you just don't think about that kind of thing
Yeah, but even in those countries people do experience period poverty
So, I mean, it's not like you're just helping people in less developed nations
Like you're helping people in your own country too
Don't have access to it. And again that access to sanitary products is considered a human right or it's becoming more and more considered a human
Right. Absolutely. Uh, should we close with some minstrel myths?
Yes, this is fun. It is fun. Uh, this is a myth that
I heard so much in my life. I assumed it was true
Which is that women if they hang out a lot together like in an office or or a small business or in a dorm
Uh, or a sorority house that they will sync up
Uh, it can be called minstrel synchrony
Uh, or the mclintock effect, which is named after who was to blame for this
Which is a 1971 study by martha mclintock
about women in a college dorm that was published in nature
Uh, magazine and uh, it got a lot of attention and I think people still
Think that women can sync up and that just has proved not to be the case
It's been debunked over and over and they found a lot of problems with the initial study
So I saw a couple of things. I saw that it was discredited and debunked and um, I also saw that it remains unproven
And apparently mclintoxin initial study was you know
Had left a lot to be desired. So her methodology was not really great
So the whole thing couldn't be reproduced using her exact methodology, but
Apparently anecdotally speaking. It's so prevalent
Um that like people just refuse to believe it just doesn't exist and say we just haven't figured out how to how to prove it yet
Well, what I saw and again, maybe the jury's still out
But what I saw was that the variable the variability of the menstrual cycle among
people who menstruate and
The days that it can change and get thrown out of sync and it can last longer or be shorter
Then that overlap is what accounts for people thinking that they're syncing up. I see. I see but who knows
I mean, I think maybe the jury's still out, but
We can definitely say that no one proved that women sync up
That's fun. Right. Let's both say that yes
What are what other myths are out there? Oh, we've got some good ones Chuck. This is one that I didn't realize either
um
The idea that you can't get pregnant on your period
Newsflash you totally can yeah, and in like really take that to heart
You can get pregnant in your period
And the reason why is if you'll remember back to what we were talking about when we kind of were doing the nitty gritty
of the menstrual and
Ovulation cycles they kind of overlap
So that follicular cycle
Starts when you start your period and if you have a short follicular cycle
You might drop an egg pretty shortly after you stop your period
That's fine and dandy. The problem is is sperm is viable for up to five days
In the human body in a woman's body. So if you drop an egg and there's sperm that's saying hanging out on day five
It can fertilize that egg even though you're still on your period. You had sex while you were on your period
That's right. So again, you can get pregnant on your period
very important if you're just getting started in your uh
Sexual life to understand this or at any time in your life. Yeah, I was gonna say or you don't want a big surprise
You know in your midlife, right? Uh
what about
sharks and bears
Despite what steve correll said in anchor man
Which is one of the very funny scenes. It really is
Uh, apparently some people think that's true and what's weird is there was a 1988 study
Uh, that was conducted that the national park service hosts on their website or mentions on their website
that um said that it's entirely possible
that um a period could attract bears because bears have such an amazing sense of smell
Um, but that they would not be any more attracted to that odor than any other odor that might attract them
So it's not like you're just guaranteed to be attacked by a bear if you go into the woods while you're menstruating
Right like the bear smells. It might as well be a
uneaten hot pocket
to a bear
That's the equivalent of menstruating as far as bears are concerned. Uh, did you see the part about polar bears though?
No, huh? They did this was on the same nps uh site. They did an actual study and it seems that
Or at least in the study polar bears actually were
specifically attracted
To menstrual blood. Oh my god. So we not only didn't bust a myth. We actually supported a myth
Well, it's it's they said grizzlies and black bears. They did tests where they had like, you know
tampons and stuff out with other things
And the grizzly bears and black bears didn't really care
but um
The polar bears did and I don't know like how foolproof that study is
But they they basically said the jury's still out on polar bears and polar bears are just
Super aggressive. Anyway, they're one of the only animals that like will stalk a human
Uh, I think polar bears lions and I think there's one more but um, so that it may be due to that, but uh
Jury's still out on that. I think sharks is a definite no, right?
Yeah, from what I saw from what our friends at you by Kotex say it's definitely no
Is that where it all comes from? That's where that one came from. Yeah. Oh goodness
Um, just a couple more things to button up before we go. Uh, we definitely didn't want to scare you about toxic shock syndrome
It's actually exceedingly rare. I think there's something about like 50 to 80 cases a year
And you can stay on top of it by staying on top of changing your tampon regularly
Uh, I think no longer than eight hours and then also don't use one that's more absorbent than you need
Because again, they proliferate on the fibers
So more fibers means more chance for that bacteria to proliferate and create those toxins
That's one and then also one other thing
Even, uh, if you're not worried about getting pregnant on your period you can still catch sexually transmitted diseases on your period
So you should be wearing a condom in that case anyway. That's right
Good job, buddy. Thank you. Good job to you. There's also a tampon shortage going on right now. Chuck. Did you see that?
I did, uh, there's a lot of things that there's a shortage of right now. So that's um,
obviously worrisome especially
Uh, with these organizations that try to send these to places where they really really need them
Yeah, for sure. But there's few shortages that can be attributed to amy schumer
Uh, and this one has been at least in part. There was a big, um, tampax ag campaign featuring amy schumer that tampax said was so
colossally, um
Impactful and sales went up so high that they blamed part of the tampon shortage on that ag campaign
I'd buy anything amy schumer told me to buy
I love her
Sure. She's america's greatest national treasure. She's one of them. She's better than the declaration of independence and abe lincoln's hat rolled together
Which is what some people used as tampons during the civil war. That's right
Nice, uh, you got anything else? I got nothing else. All right, chuck way to go, buddy
Um, we did it and since I just said that
It's time for listener mail
Uh, we had our drowning episode run on our saturday selects recently and got a lot of
people writing in again about that and this is a water safety psa from
Um, someone who worked as a lifeguard
Uh, her name is ella feinberg and ella says a couple of things one of which is
Water wings are not safe
Uh parents and these are the things that the parents put their little kids in
That goes around their chest and then their arms. They're called floaties. You know, they put their little tiny arms through there
Sure, uh
Many parents think they're legit floatation devices. I don't blame them
Um, but they don't secure under their arms very well
And there's a very real risk that if a kid goes under the water wings will float up to their wrists
And not do anything to keep their actual head above water
That's not good and newsflash. You can't breathe if your hands are above the water
That's the second newsflash of this episode if only your hands are above water, but I should say
right, uh, and here's another newsflash, um,
Ella says
Something you didn't mention is
If you are not a strong swimmer and you don't have a floatation device with you
Do not help someone who is drowning
Uh, and it fights
Probably most people's instinct
But you see stories all the time about two people drowning instead of one person drowning
Um, or you know, maybe causing that person to even drown quicker because you're not a good swimmer
Uh, but Ella says, uh, just reiterates a few different times
Just do not attempt to rescue a drowning victim if you can't swim very well yourself
Uh, call your local emergency number
Wait for someone go screaming for help
Uh, and fight that instinct and that
Is from, uh, Ella Feinberg, former lifeguard
Nice, thanks a lot Ella. I think you really did some good work here and we appreciate you
And hello to your husband because they listen together
Nice, um, well if you want to be like Ella and share some really great important information
We would love to share it with everybody else
You can share it with us via email at stuffpodcastatihartradio.com
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