Read your letters responding to Would
you stop menstruating if you could?
Press release from the menstrual
suppression
panel of The Society for Menstrual Cycle Research 15th Biennial
conference,
June 5-7, 2002, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Article
("Foes raise red flag against suppression of menstruation," by
Karen Hoffmann, Post-Gazette Staff Writer, on Tuesday, June 24,
2003) about
the The Society of Menstrual Cycle Research conference in
Pittsburgh in
the local Post-Gazette newspaper
Comments of M. Clara Whitaker about
the Post-Gazette
article
Why I am opposed to menstrual suppression: a
letter to
the editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,
which published "Foes raise red flag against
suppression
of menstruation," (read
it) by Karen Hoffmann, Post-Gazette Staff Writer, on
Tuesday, June 24,
2003
To the Health Editor, Post-Gazette
Cc: Karen Hoffmann
Ms. Hoffmann's article dated 6/24/03, "Foes raise red flag
against
suppression of menstruation," raises grave concern amongst
the
growing number of women and men who have come to realize that the
natural
gift of menstruation is the foundation of women's being and that
to deny,
denigrate and suppress that process is yet another act of violence
against
women.
To condone menstrual suppression is to condone yet another
generation
of women to mental/emotional/physical suppression.
I could see one this coming down the pike, with women my age
waking
up to the fact that the side effects of menstrual suppression in
the form
of HRT actually outweigh the benefits of this misaligned therapy (New
York
Times, Health, 10/17/02, Risks of Hormone Therapy Exceed
Benefits,
Panel Says). So the next step? Target an innocent market of
women not
unlike how the tobacco companies target teenagers. Duping these
young women
into thinking that one pill will reduce their periods to four a
year is
nothing less than another crime against women and another form of
control.
To quote a male doctor who believes that "what is natural is for
women is to have one to two periods a year and to either be
breast-feeding
or pregnant the rest of the time" is unconscionable. My God, women
have struggled for the hundreds of years for the right to own
property,
to vote, to be equal with men in terms of pay, promotions, to
engage in
warfare side by side with men, for the right to independence and
success,
for the right not to be abused, be considered property, or to be
chatteled;
to the right to control when to have children not because of
taking a pill,
but because of partnership in a relationship. Yet, in one
ill-informed article,
Ms. Hoffmann's using this doctor as a credible reference has sent
women
back to the Dark Ages. The reality is that the male powers that
cannot control
women any other way since our mothers and foremothers have been so
diligent
and unrelenting in their pursuit of our equal rights have now
deemed yet
another form of control over our bodies. And women are buying it.
And unfortunately,
innocent women like Ms. Hoffmann are selling it.
Wake up women! We are guinea pigs to a medical and
pharmaceutical industry
that is making big buck off our bodies! And do they care about our
health
and well being? I think not. The studies have not been done. Are
you willing
to risk the quality of your life for a pill for preventing
pregnancy? Don't
have sex! No, I am not a Christian right-winger but sometimes the
line is
thin that divides the left and right. To have sex is to give your
power
away. That is the message we should be telling our teenage
daughters.
Not to mention that 8000 teens a day are contracting STD's. Will
this
miracle pill prevent that? Oh, no! Oh, no! How many young innocent
women
will take this pill thinking they are "safe," but will contract
any number of STD's - that will affect their health care and their
ability
to have children in the future.
Sherill Sellman has stated that "tampering with a woman's
hormones
is tampering with her power." [Hormone Heresy, Oestrogen's
Deadly
Truth, Part 2 Extracted from Nexus Magazine, Vol.
3, #5 (Aug.
- Sep. 1996)]. I also believe that women's menstrual cycles are
the foundation
of our beings. This beautiful body function - and yes, it is
beautiful
when we understand the changes our bodies are going through - is
what
gave women power, respect, and sacredness in societies past.
Because our fundamental right to accurate, positive education
about
how our body's function, and how the flow of estrogen and
progestin affect
our behavior has been denied, women have been suppressed
into thinking
that this monthly flow is a "curse," a "pain," debilitating
- and they have bought into the myth of "PMS" and now "PMDD";
which to my knowledge has been defined as a mental illness. STOP~!
Ovulation - harmful? This is the process that creates life. This
is
our power. Women create and nurture life. Is ovulation harmful to
any other
creature in life? How can we deny this exquisite process of
creation? And
withdrawal bleeding is a release, a part of a beautiful process of
becoming
and letting go; it is the rhythm of life - and all life forms go
through
this process. To deny this is to deny our part in the cycle of
creation.
I agree with the Society for Menstrual Cycle Research in their
statement
concurring that "menstrual suppression may be useful for women
with
severe menstrual cycle problems, but we do not believe that
continuous oral
contraceptive use should be prescribed to all menstruating women
out of
a rejection of a normal, healthy menstrual cycle." But for the
rest
of women, I implore you to listen to your instincts. The choice is
yours;
be a guinea pig, allow yourself to be controlled, or find the
resources
that will assist you in exploring this beautiful menstrual flow in
your
bodies that is aligned with every other life form on this planet.
Ms. Hoffmann's article ended with: "Said one respondent:
"Periods
-- normal? I don't think so. Period." [The statement came from an
e-mail
to this site in the Would you stop menstruating if you could?
page.] That
statement is a death sentence.
Menstrual cycles honoring women's power and glory are normal.
Own it.
Honor yourself.
Leslie Botha-Williams
Women's Health Educator
Ms. Botha-Williams is available for an interview to discuss
her work
with women and teenagers over the last twenty years discussing
the relevance
of understanding how the hormone cycle affects their lives and
behaviors.
Botha-Williams is nationally renowned for her work, is a member
of the Society
for Menstrual Cycle Research, the International Association for
Human Caring
and is the Health Educator for Monarch Youth Homes; an in house
treatment
center for abused girls ages 13 - 17 in Colorado. She is
currently publishing
a book titled'; "Holy Hormones, Honey; A Woman's Survival Guide
to
Understanding The Hormone Cycle."
Read your letters responding to Would
you stop menstruating if you could?
Press release from the menstrual
suppression
panel of The Society for Menstrual Cycle Research 15th Biennial
conference,
June 5-7, 2002, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Article
("Foes raise red flag against suppression of menstruation," by
Karen Hoffmann, Post-Gazette Staff Writer, on Tuesday, June 24,
2003) about
the The Society of Menstrual Cycle Research conference in
Pittsburgh in
the local Post-Gazette newspaper
Comments of M. Clara Whitaker about
the Post-Gazette
article