GREEN YOUR: BATHROOM {GROOMING – HAVE AN ECO PERIOD}

Okay, I admit it.  I’m a Diva.

Not the prima-donna-attention-hungry-my-way-or-the-highway type {well, maybe a little}, but the DivaCup-wearing-never-have-to-stand-in-line-with-a-box-of-tampons-again kind.

WARNING! This post delves deep into world of feminine hygiene.  If you are uncomfortable with words like VAGINA or MENSTRUAL CYCLE, squeal at the thought of BLOOD, thank god you are a MAN and don’t have to know what TAMPONS are, or are freaked about by FEMALE ANATOMY then this post is not for you.  Cover your eyes, plug your ears, sing La La La and hit your back button now!

Not sure why you’d have to sing, unless you read out loud, but that would be pretty hard to do with your hands over your eyes now wouldn’t it?

Still here?

Alrighty then.

The DivaCup is a small {ha!} silicone cup that you insert into your vagina to collect blood during your menses.

Still here?

Good.

The Diva Cup

The DivaCup

I know, right?  The first time I saw it I thought, You want me to put that where?

Trust me it’ll fit.  And you won’t feel it.

Which is the same thing I can say for some former loves.  And I ain’t referring to the fitting.

The first hundred tries took some finagling to get the thing into place.  I’m kidding, it only took 20 or so attempts to get it right.  After some internet research and thorough direction reading I finally figured it out.  Who knew you could learn something from actually reading the directions?

Proper insertion is all about the bend.

They call it the “U” fold.  Here’s what you do.

U Fold

Direct from DivaCup.com

Seems simple enough.  But, it does take some practice.

Don’t fret, you’ll get it.  Remember how freaked you were the first time your mum showed you a tampon? Ah! The horror! I remember it vividly.

It’s kind of the same thing.  After you stop hyperventilating and uncover your eyes once you realize your mum isn’t actually going to show you her coochie coo, it’s no big thing.  Just another part of daily life in the wonderful world of being a woman.  {Wish I had thoroughly read the directions on that creation application before checking the box for female.}

Now I know what a lot of you are thinking.  Eww! Gross.

Well, yes and no.  You have a vagina.  It bleeds.  Deal with it. {You should have read directions better too.}

It’s no worse than changing a diaper.  Actually, I would much rather deal with a DivaCup for 5 days out of the month than look at baby shit 5+ times a day every day all month.  Just sayin’.

Know what’s grosser than gross?

Tampons in the trash.

Never have to deal with that when you use the DivaCup.  Your husband will thank you.

Twice a day you empty, wash and replace.  That’s it.

You can sleep with it in too.  In that case you’ll need to empty in the morning, so make that three times a day.  Morning, noon and night.  Depending on your flo.

Aunt Flo

Amen, Sista!

Mister bought me that off Etsy.  Ain’t he sweet?

Flo’s got a point though.  With the DivaCup you always are prepared.

No more digging through your purse for tampons or, dreading the moment you realize there are none in your purse as you sit empty handed in a public bathroom stall.  Toilet paper does not do the job!

In this situation everything you need is already with you.  Just empty the DivaCup into the toilet, wipe clean with toilet paper and reinsert.  Whew! Catastrophe averted.

You don’t even have to take your purse to the bathroom with you!  Or try to discreetly stash a stick in your pocket.  Or waste a bunch of toilet paper wrapping a used one up so no one has to look at it in the trash.  Or ever have to buy tampons again!  How sweet is that?

I know I sure don’t miss standing in line with a box of tampons when inevitably some hot guy gets in line behind me.  Happens every damn time, I swear.  How you doin’?

Ain’t doin’ that every again.

Then there’s the whole green aspect.

I’m talking greenbacks.  $$$  Dinero.  Moola.  Money.  As in the money you will save by using this product.

Most women spend between $150 to $200 annually on disposable feminine hygiene products.  The DivaCup costs up to $40.00.  The website says to replace it annually, but silicone lasts a long time.  I started using it over 3 years ago and am only on my second.  I’d still be on my first if the dog hadn’t ate it.  {Strange, but true.}

Money aside, let’s talk about the other kind of green for a moment.

Women, on average, experience a lifetime menstruation span of 41 years (11-52). From use of disposable feminine hygiene, an estimated 12 billion sanitary pads and 7 billion tampons are dumped into the North American environment each year (1998). More than 170,000 tampon applicators were collected along U.S. coastal areas between 1998 and 1999.

Most tampons and pads contain surfactants, adhesives and additives. In addition, most pads contain polyethylene plastic whose production is a pollutant. Also, dioxin, a known carcinogen, is a by-product of the bleaching process of tampons containing rayon. In landfills, many of these substances can leach into the environment (groundwater, streams and lakes) causing serious pollution and health concerns.  - DivaCup.com

This was an easy choice for me.

I can’t afford to do a lot of things I would like to help the environment – like solar panels, a hybrid car, or geothermal heat, but I can afford to do this.  In fact, it saves me money.  Now that’s going green.


EcoStiletto’s Rachel Breaks Down the Reusable Cup from EcoStiletto on Vimeo.

Rebecca JeanI was not compensated nor did I receive product for this post.
I just love my DivaCup and felt like telling the world about it.

If you’re ready to make the switch, you can find a deal on the DivaCup at Amazon, but I recommend purchasing from Lunapads.com.
You can also find it in stores locally.

{ 16 comments }

Ahh, adolescence. That wonderful time when your face resembles your favorite food, boys no longer have cooties, and girls experience that rite of passage, menarche.

My 12 year old step-daughter walked into womanhood this summer. Being the terrible procrastinators that we are, we were unprepared for the event. A late night run to the local grocery store and a myriad of choices {Oy!  None of which I have used since I was 12} took care of the problem at hand. The next day when we - I - was thinking clearer we logged on to Lunapads to discuss her options. Disposables had been covered at school, but she had no idea there were alternatives. We discussed the pros and cons of each and I left it up to her.

Bucking the norm, she chose to go the reusable route. I was surprised, but gleeful. Not even I had ventured into that territory. I started using the Diva cup a year ago, but was still using disposable pantyliners as a backup. Who is teaching who here? Having no personal experience to base her decision on, she went with economics. Although I think the leopard print had something to do with it. Putting aside all societal perspectives going green just makes sense. It seemed a pretty easy decision for her. “I can buy these and use them over and over, or buy these and buy them over and over?” Ahhh… Yep.

So we ordered a mini pad and a few liners to get her started. The total came to $34.97 with shipping. Not exactly a small price for 5 liners and 1 pad, but will ultimately save money in the end. She has been using them for several months now while with us during the week and disposables while at her mother’s house on the weekends. After experiencing both options she has decided to go reusable all the way. Stating, “they feel better.”

Since participating in Rob’s Make Do an Mend Challenge and the simplicity of their design we thought a little DIY was in order. She found purple flannel fabric and matching thread she liked. Total for the half yard of fabric and thread was $4.32. We used one of her Lunapad liners as a template and cut out a few pieces.

  • Overcast around a single piece for a pantyliner.
  • Pin two pieces together, sew a straight stitch down the center, and overcast the edge for light days.
  • Using an old towel, cut an inner lining piece. Cut two pieces of fleece slightly larger (1/4 inch or so) than your inner liner. Pin inner liner to one piece. Sew zig-zag down center and around perimeter of inner liner. Pin second piece of flannel on top of first. The inner liner (towel piece) should be face down. Sew straight stitch around edge of inner liner leaving a two inch opening on a straight side. Trim excess flannel and turn right side out through opening. Sew two straight stitches on either side of center zig-zag. This will prevent shifting. Hand stitch opening shut. This would be for heavy days.

We have not even used half of the fabric and already have nine pads of varied thickness and design. Some with wings some without, some short some long, some fasten some do not. Add a waterproof layer of nylon if you like. Use scrap fabric you have, old flannel shirts, whatever. You can totally customize them! Ask Pauline has a great tutorial and free pattern to make your own. The Cloth Pad List is a great resource for finding every brand, size, shape there is. Also lists tutorials and free patterns available.

Before buying the fabric we walked past a pack of disposable pads in Target. They were nearly $9.00 for 32. When we got home she started doing the math. According to a 12 year old:

21 pads per month x 12 months = 252 pads per year x 33 years (she’s assuming she doesn’t have to pay for them until she’s 18 & the average age of menopause is 51) = 8,316 pads divided by 32 (the number in the package she saw) = 260 boxes she would have to buy x $9.00 (the cost of the pack she saw) = $2,340.00 for disposable.

33 years divided by 5 (the number of years Lunapads states their pads last) = 7 (she rounds) times she would have to make new pads x $4.32 (the cost of fabric and thread) = $30.00 for reusable. (the cost of laundry doesn’t even cross her 12 year old mind!)

$2,340.00 – $30.00 = $2,310.00 she saves! “That could feed a lot of cats!” HA!

She certainly gets the economic benefit of reusable pads, but also understands their environmental impact, too. Way less waste and no plastic. It has served as a great life lesson and a launching pad for her to think outside the norm for common sense solutions for the rest of her life.

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