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paperroot

Submission Request: MENSTRUATION

paperroot

Hi friends! I’m writing a year-long series of articles about periods for 2016 and I couldn’t be more excited about it. Like blood, not like punctuation! Each month is going to have a different theme (food, language, anatomy, and so on) and there is just so much I just don’t know. As a white person. As a cis woman. As a queer woman. As a mostly able-bodied person. My experience is so limited. While I can teach myself the relatively-objective things like how the uterine cycle works, I don’t want to rely on books written by old white dudes to talk about cultural aspects of menstruation. Instead, I want to highlight you, dear queer and trans readers, as primary sources and people who experience periods in all different ways.

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I’ve got all kinds of questions and am hoping that you want to participate. If you want to write something brief, I want to publish it! If you want to be interviewed, I want to talk to you! If you want to make art, I want to show it! If you have ideas to share, I want to amplify them and credit the sh*t outta you!

Here’s what I’m looking for specifically:

  1. Do you have some kind of special knowledge related to periods? I’m talking medicine and science, library stuff, doula wisdom… ANYTHING. You’d be an ideal candidate to be interviewed or write a little piece.
  2. What’s your favorite period-related or period centric media? I’m talking books, movies, zines, poetry, visual art, or anything else. I’d love to just be pointed in the direction of good stuff, but I’d also like to hear about anything you have a connection to.
  3. Speaking of media, how did you learn about periods? Did your parents give you a book (I’m a product of The Care and Keeping of You). Did you watch a horrifying movie in school? Maybe all you had was the back of a kotex box. Were you obsessed with period media or did you feel alienated and unrepresented by it?
  4. Do you speak another language very, very fluently? What is it? What words in that language are related to periods? How about slang? Do you have any idea where those words or phrases come from?
  5. Have you ever synced up periods with someone? Did something fantastic or frightful happen?
  6. What was your first period like? Did people celebrate with you? Did something mortifying happen? What are your best menarche stories?
  7. Have you experienced menopause? Would you share your joys, sadness, or other reflections (funny, serious, anything) with me?
  8. What do menstrual taboos look like for you? Do they revolve around sports? Sex? Food? What do you think about the total taboo-ness of showing period blood in advertising and other media. Are there any religious or cultural taboos you’ve experienced?
  9. How do you envision the future of menstruation to look? How will we collect fluid? How will we talk about it?
  10. Would you like to interview an elder in your life about blood-catching products they used? I’m going to be talking to my mom and grandma, but I want to hear from the important people in your life.
  11. Let’s talk about food. Do people in your community have traditions or taboos about menses and food? Maybe someone baked you brownies during a really bad period. Or maybe you’ve been told you can’t make pickles while you’re bleeding. Tell me about it.
  12. One last one: the moon and nature. If you’re one of those people who relates best to your period via nature, I’d love to know how. Do you have theories about the moon and your blood?

If you’re a person who has, had, or will have periods and is queer and/or trans, I want to hear from you in whatever way suits you. I want to compensate everyone for their work, so we can negotiate what that means for you. I make body products, sew, grow plants, cook, do calligraphy, woodworking, digital design, papercrafts, and teach all those things, so I can almost guarantee there’s something for you. I’d especially like to highlight the experiences of people of color, trans people, disabled people/people with disabilities, and Deaf people. Whether you’re a writer or a talker, send me 1-3 sentences about any topic you have thoughts about. I’ll get back to you so that we can talk about whether your piece looks like a paragraph you write, a drawing or photograph, or an interview that I have with you over the phone or gchat.

In the interest of both accessibility and signal-boosting, I’m willing to credit you however you’d like or keep you totally anonymous. Ideally, I’d like to get whatever email, website, other other links you want featured and a picture of each contributor so that I can draw a picture of you kinda like these posters I made (although obviously without the IDNYC business):

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If you want to participate, please send me an email at paperrroot@gmail.com, a tweet at @laurrrrita or send me a facebook message at https://www.facebook.com/laura.wooley. Sooner (before November 1, 2015) is better, but that can mean that you just send me a quick message saying “I want to participate but don’t have time to send you something longer yet!” If you’ve got doubts or questions or suggestions or want to see the first post to get an idea of the tone of the series, feel free to send those my way too.

periods menstruation feminism
carmenrios
I’m glad I changed. I’m glad I finally did this thing I wanted to do and quieted all the clamoring in my heart about it. I’m glad I became a million people, a tiny piece of dust, a more experienced driver and the kind of person who watches cable television and eats chinese food in a Motel 6 instead of exploring the city she’s gonna be in for just 24 hours. I’m glad I’m here without half of the things I thought I’d miss but now I can’t remember and all the clothes Soph hasn’t brought me yet and all the memories I haven’t unpacked. I’m glad I’m starting over. I’m glad I left. I’m glad I made it. I’m glad I changed, over and over and over again with each continental breakfast and scenic route and tourist attraction.
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“In this anthology you’ll find sci-fi and fantasy comics of all kinds. There are comics about ghosts, dragons, goblins, aliens, robots and even alien robots. It also features queer characters of all kinds, there are protagonists of all genders (and...

In this anthology you’ll find sci-fi and fantasy comics of all kinds. There are comics about ghosts, dragons, goblins, aliens, robots and even alien robots. It also features queer characters of all kinds, there are protagonists of all genders (and no gender), all sexualities and across different body types, ages and ethnicities. 

Drawn to Comics: ‘Beyond’ Anthology is Packed Full of Terrific Queer Sci-Fi and Fantasy

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“Karma and Amy have been trying to live their truths for about two minutes and six seconds and are therefore wary of this plan, which would cause them to fall off the WAGON OF LIES. Dad implores them to go along with it, for Molly’s sake, and Amy’s...

Karma and Amy have been trying to live their truths for about two minutes and six seconds and are therefore wary of this plan, which would cause them to fall off the WAGON OF LIES. Dad implores them to go along with it, for Molly’s sake, and Amy’s won over. She explains to Karma that Molly’s always been there for her and well this is the least she could do, right? (Sidenote: Why hasn’t Amy just offered to let Karma live with her for now? This has been bugging me all season! Think of all the sleepover tension!) Karma’s worried that this isn’t good for Amy with all of her hot groin-area love-type feelings for Karma, but Amy insists that those feelings are “ancient history.” Karma, unsurprisingly, seems surprised and maybe a bit sad to hear this. Also, I mean, it’s a lie, but whatever!

Faking It Episode 216 Recap: Let’s Be Lesbians… Again

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gaywrites
Especially if we’re LGBT adults, there may be an urge to enact what we think of when we think of LGBT youth, or what we wish we had when we were younger — rush to counsel them about coming out, or assume that they want to talk about a same-sex crush. There’s a dangerous seduction in allyship to think of ourselves as heroes, and to be drawn towards the most noble allyship we imagine, whether that’s crusading for a student’s right to wear gender-nonconforming clothing to prom or to magically fix all their internalized homophobia through the strength of your support. LGBT youth may very well need all those things, but we need to commit to letting them determine how you can help them for themselves. They may be more concerned about a conflict with friends than with coming out to their parents or more invested in starting a manga club than starting a GSA, and that doesn’t make your support for them any less necessary.
10 Ways Educators Can Make Schools Safer for LGBT Youth | Rachel Kincaid for Autostraddle  (via gaywrites)
subtlecluster
The thing that makes me feel most like a grownup is that actresses who are my age are all moms on TV now. I think the weirdest thing about life is you’re Buffy, you’re Buffy, you’re Buffy, and then one day, when you’re not even paying attention, you become Joyce. It throws you when you realize it happened. You knew it was coming, but you never expected it.