This
sense of community, most famously depicted in the Bible-based novel
"The Red Tent" (Picador, 1998), comes at a cost. Women with strict religious traditions around their periods feel more embarrassment and shame about menstruating. But their positive feelings suggest that there's an upside to having everyone know you're having your period.
"They
came up with a way of positively spinning it," said study researcher
Tomi-Ann Roberts, a psychologist at Colorado College in Colorado
Springs.
Nepalese tradition
The
idea for the study came when study researcher Nicki Dunnavant, now a
graduate student at the University of Chicago, studied abroad in Nepal in 2008. The first morning staying with a family in a traditional village, she woke up with her period.
Her
Hindu hosts followed strict rules about what women can and can't do
during menstruation. So that first morning, Dunnavant said, she had to
go up to her host mother and explain the situation.
"I
had to pull out my sad little notebook of phrases and words," she told
LiveScience. The phrase she was looking for translated to, "I have
become untouchable."
For
the next four days, Dunnavant had to sit in the hallway instead of the
kitchen, wash her own dishes and avoid contact with men. She had to wear
the same clothes every day and didn't receive a tika, a red dot on the
forehead that signifies a religious blessing. [8 Ways Religion Impacts Your Life]
"Everybody
in the village knew that I was on my period, which was definitely a new
experience," Dunnavant said. "I would walk down and the men would walk a
little bit farther away from me."
She resisted the prescriptions "a little bit" at first, Dunnavant said, but soon came to see the rules as oddly empowering.
"It
really became sort of a communal experience that I could share with the
women in my village and with my female teachers, and offered me an
entirely new perspective on how communal menstruating could be," she
said.
Rules and restrictions
The experience made her wonder if women who grow up in these religious traditions feel
the same way. So upon returning to America, Dunnavant teamed up with
Roberts to survey 340 women residing in the Rocky Mountain West, ranging
in age from 17 to 62, about their periods. The online survey gauged
women's disgust and
shame at their periods by asking if they agreed with statements such
as, "It is important to keep the period a secret," and "A woman should
feel ashamed if she 'leaks' menstrual blood on her clothes."
Seventy
of the women surveyed were Orthodox Jews, Muslims or Hindus, three
religious traditions that demand certain behaviors and purification
rituals during the menstrual period. Another 162 women were religious,
but their religions did not officially have any period-related rules,
and another 136 were secular.
The
results revealed that women from traditions with menstrual rules felt
more shame, embarrassment and seclusion during their periods. But they
also reported a heightened sense of community.
Follow-up
surveys with a dozen women revealed that individuals with strict
religious traditions often saw the restrictions as blessings in
disguise. One Muslim women who followed the prescription not to engage in sex during her period saw the rule as a break from being sexually available.
“I
like the idea that I can say no to my partner, and he's going to
understand and he’s not going to like get upset over it because it's not
in my hands," she told the researchers.
Interestingly,
being in a relationship made both religious and non-religious women
feel better about their periods, but for opposite reasons, Roberts said.
Strict religious women enjoyed the opportunity to say no to sex. For
secular women, a committed relationship eases the burden of secrecy
surrounding menstruation, she said. [5 Myths About Women's Bodies]
"People
might be horrified by this, but getting over the hump of what I would
call menstrual sex, having sexual relations while you're having your
period is a huge moment in a relationships," Roberts said. Suddenly, she
said, the taboo surrounding the period is broken a little bit.
Healthy periods
The
findings highlight that attitudes toward periods are quite negative,
even among the secular, the researchers reported online Feb. 27 in the
journal Sex Roles. Turns out, American culture has rules about proper
periods, too, Roberts said.
"We
are obliged as Western women to sanitize and deodorize and wear white
clothing and appear not to be a menstruating being at all," she said.
"We also practice rituals, they're just not codified."
That
means that in American tradition, women get all of the disgust heaped
on periods but none of the communal bonding that arises from religious
rules. And disgust is a strong driver of moral judgments, Roberts said — perhaps explaining why women's reproductive health is a favorite topic for politicians.
"When
we associate women with blood and we are disgusted by them, we persist
as treating them as less than fully human," Roberts said. She wants to
see more positivity around periods. Instead of a monthly curse, she said, menstruation should be seen as a positive indicator of a woman's health.
"To
the extent that we can help girls and women feel good about their
periods and get more of a positive attitude toward it, they're going to
feel better about their whole selves," Roberts said, adding, "I want to
bring menstruation out of the closet."
Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.