Saturday, September 3, 2011

Who Stole My Period?

    I was the last girl in my group of friends to get my period. I was also in a training bra longer than most of the female population in North America. I could never catch up with the other girls in my class. By the time I bought my first A cup bra, my peers were tossing aside their C cups for D's. Same goes with my period. While all my friends were stocking up on sanitary pads, I was still stocking up on Charms pops and gum wrappers for my gum chain. Every time one of the girls called to tell me they'd started their period, I was a bit envious.  "Do you look different?" "Do you feel like a real woman now?" "Do you know you can get P-R-E-G-N-A-N-T?!"
     I didn't get my period until I was almost thirteen, and let me tell you, it was a big disappointment. Not that I was expecting a parade with balloons, confetti and fiesta-colored tampons. I just thought that on such a momentous occasion, there would be some sort of fanfare...or maybe just a nice dinner out with my family, where everyone would raise their glass in a toast to my period and say, "Job well done! Welcome to womanhood!" I even checked out my reflection about ten times that day to see if I had changed. Nope. Still  a goofy looking 12 year old with braces and a little patch of freckles across my nose from the sun. It also didn't help that my chest was as flat as a tortilla.
     None of that really mattered. All I cared about was that I finally had my period and the right to carry bulky, cotton pads in my purse. I could finally sit in a circle during P.E. with all the other girls and complain about cramps, bloating, and the messiness of it all. The best part about having a period  was being able to avoid doing things I disliked. I didn't have to run track in P.E. I didn't have to don a swimsuit at swim parties where all the other girls were shaped like Barbie dolls. When my mother discovered the 14 wrappers from the World's Finest chocolate bars in my drawer (that I was supposed to sell in the band fundraiser), I blamed the binge eating on chocolate cravings from my period.
     I liked having my period, especially the power it gave me to manipulate certain situations. I could be moody or foul-mouthed and it didn't matter---everyone blamed my Jekyl and Hyde personality on my period. It gave me a license to act out and plead insanity caused by high hormonal levels for one week out of each month.
     This fun lasted about six months until one day when I got off the bus and started walking home, a group of boys behind me burst into laughter. I had no idea what was so funny until I got home and saw the dark stain covering my back side. That was the day I lost my power and my period betrayed me.
     I was extremely paranoid and self-conscious after that, constantly checking my underware at school for any accidental visits from "Aunt Rose." I soon hated the fact that all of my activities revolved around my period---"Sorry, can't go to the beach today. If I get in the water I'll become a shark magnet"..."Sorry, no, I can't wear the new white sun dress to the high school dance tonight because someone might think I fell butt first into the red punch bowl."
     What about the savvy girls who learned to use tampons early in their menstrual cycle? We had some unsavory names for them, smug in our certainty that there was only one reason they were actually able to use a tampon with ease. We secretly gossiped and criticized them as we waddled down the school halls in bulky pads the size of diapers. And we thought we were the smart ones!
     Fortunately, my periods became more accurate as I became older. I could pinpoint the day the spotting would begin, and the calender never lied. It made pregnancy planning pretty easy, except for the one "oops" baby, but that was the champagne's fault. If my period was a day late, it meant one thing and one thing only--that I wasn't going to see it for another nine months.
     My period remained predictable most of my life, until this past year. It simply...vanished. After the first month without it, I was terrified that I would end up on the cover of The National Enquirer: FIFTY-ONE-YEAR-OLD WOMAN GIVES BIRTH TO TRIPLETS---CLAIMS SHE NEVER KNEW SHE WAS PREGNANT! I was on the verge of buying a home pregnancy kit when a close friend snapped me out of my momentary insanity. "You're not pregnant dummy, you're menopausing!"
     "Wait a minute," I cried, "Who stole my period? Was it that twelve-year-old down the block? She's wearing makeup and she has breasts! I'll bet she stole my period!" And then the little voice of reason inside me spoke. "Who cares? You're free. Free! Burn the tampons! Use the panti liners like sponges to clean the kitchen walls. You're free!"
     Again, my joy was short lived, because although my period had stopped, the symptoms did not. Each month I'd break out in pimples (I never had acne in high school, why now?), experience painful bloating and gas (you don't want me to go there), horrific mood swings and tears over stupid things like Publix holiday commercials. The kids run for cover at the first sign of hormonal changes in me. That usually happens when my mouth forms a thin line and I start resembling Jack Nicholson in The Shining.
     For six months I lived period-free. I cleared the bathroom cabinets of all feminine products and started carrying smaller purses. All was well until the day I attended the local renaissance festival. It was an unusally warm day, and I was dressed in my renaissance finery---hoop skirt, slips, lace, the works. I crammed myself into the tight, dirty port-a-potty at the park to pee and guess who came knocking at the door? Yup. Good ol' Aunt Rose, back from an extended vacation in Bermuda, and nary a tampon in sight.
     It was a horrible period that lasted ten days (or was it ten months?) and it drained me of all energy and enthusiasm for life. Even a chocolate bar did nothing to lighten my spirits.
     The PFH (period from hell) finally faded away, but this time I held onto the box of tampons like a shield, just in case.
     Another six months passed, and it was time for my daughter's college graduation. I was so excited to get out of town for a few days and to see my daughter receive her diploma. The suitcases were packed and stuffed into the car, and after a final check on the locks and lights around the house, I took one last trip to the bathroom before hitting the road.
      You guessed it. Aunt Rose. But this time I was prepared. I blew the dust off my box of tampons and tossed them into the car. The Red Sea was not going to stop me from visiting my daughter.
       The way I see it I'm due for another period during the Christmas Holiday season. Maybe on Christmas day. Perhaps Aunt Rose will be too busy skiing in Colorado to bother me. Or maybe not.
       The calender never lies.                                                                                                                   

6 comments:

  1. Marsha, OMG, your blog is quite entertaining.
    I love it! Not quite there yet myself but can so relate. Keep on blogging!!
    Julie

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  2. My mother packed tampons for many years after her last period. I forget how long it was before she stopped carrying them but it was quite some time - because yes, it always shows up at the worst possible time!!!

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  3. I am no where being in your situation, but I can tell you I hated getting my period when I did. I was 9 years old a year older then all my friends. The first one to get hers and I had already grown boobs. I went straight from nothing to B cups and had not transition. Thankfully I stayed that small of a cup size until my 20s when I went up to a D and boy do I miss my B cups! I remember even still as we got older feeling ostrisized because my best friend didn't get her first period until she was 17 and she was so jealous of her for it and her AA cups. I always wished I had all of that and she always wanted what I had.

    Anyway, I stopped by from Bloggers.com and felt the need to leave this comment. I followed via GFC and networked blogs.

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  4. Love this post! I'm not quite there yet either but since I have had my IUD I haven't really had one in a long time!! So I love that part...

    I was an early bloomer with everything except my period, I was almost 16 before I got mine! Then I wondered why I was so anxious to get it.. bloating and horrible cramping and fatigue! Oh.. and yes the mood swings! lol Now I am thankful for my IUD that has made them pretty much stop!! whoot whoot!! lol

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  5. Parsimoniouspash and Nicole---I know exactly how you feel! I was a late bloomer as well---the last to get everything, and a little jealous of all those girls out of training bras while I was flat chested until high school. Once the periods came, I couldn't figure out why I had been so anxious for it to start. Thank God for menopause and no more periods!!!!

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  6. This was really fun, you are a great writer. And I feel the some way. My aunt Rose is a little more unpredictable and has shorter holidays.

    Keep up the writing!

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