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A campaign for period positivity

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    Menstruation.
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    A simple word describing
    a natural biological process,
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    weighed down by centuries of stigma,
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    has been transformed into something
    most of us can only speak about
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    in whispers.
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    But why?
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    As I speak to you right now,
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    more than 800 million women
    around the world
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    are having a period.
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    None of us would exist without it,
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    and yet it remains an "embarrassing"
    subject to broach.
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    From my experience and that
    of the women around me,
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    I can tell you that it's exhausting.
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    It's exhausting to carefully take out
    a brown paper bag hiding a pad,
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    stuffing it into your pocket
    in the middle of a class
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    and rushing to the washroom
    as discreetly as possible.
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    It's exhausting to sit
    through lessons and meetings
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    pretending to be absolutely normal,
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    while internally crying out
    from intense period cramps.
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    It's exhausting to be dismissively told
    that you’re PMSing
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    or suffering from
    "that time of the month,"
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    and it's exhausting to continuously
    fight back against age-old traditions
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    that ask you not to pray,
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    visit temples, cook, touch pickle
    and the list goes on and on,
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    while you're just trying to bleed
    and be left in peace.
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    (Laughter)
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    But you know what the worst part is?
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    The worst part is that the things
    that seem tiring to us
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    are merely the tip of the iceberg,
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    because we in this room
    are privileged enough
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    to be able to afford
    sanitary napkins every month,
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    to be able to visit a gynecologist
    in case of any problem,
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    to be able to tell what's normal
    and abnormal with our monthly cycle.
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    We have access to water,
    sanitation and toilets
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    that help us maintain
    our privacy and hygiene.
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    But what about those who don't?
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    What about 335 million girls
    around the world
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    who go to school without even having
    access to water and soap
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    to wash their hands?
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    What about 15-year-old
    schoolgirls in Kenya
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    who have to sell their bodies
    to be able to buy sanitary napkins?
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    What about two-thirds
    of rural high school girls in India
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    who don't even understand
    what their bodies are going through
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    at menarche?
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    And right now, we are all
    gathered here in the USA.
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    So what about 64 percent of women
    in St. Louis, Missouri,
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    who weren't able to afford
    menstrual hygiene supplies
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    in the previous year?
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    What about the struggles
    of homeless, transgender,
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    intersex and displaced people
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    who menstruate?
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    What about them?
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    The scale of the problem,
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    stemming in part from the deep-rooted
    stigma attached to menstruation,
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    is unimaginable.
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    And the desire to voice this frustration
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    led me, along with three other teammates,
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    to initiate a campaign
    that calls for change,
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    questions the taboos
    surrounding menstruation
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    and spreads period positivity.
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    The name of our campaign, "Pravahkriti,"
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    was born from the message
    that we want to convey to the world.
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    "Pravah" means "flow,"
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    and "kriti" means "a beautiful creation."
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    Because how could the monthly cycle
    that ultimately gives rise to all creation
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    be anything less than beautiful?
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    Now, as a social issue,
    menstruation has several facets to it
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    that overlap, reinforce
    and worsen the situation.
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    So we based our campaign
    on four fundamental pillars:
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    health, hygiene, awareness
    and spreading positivity.
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    But how did we actually implement this?
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    Well, we started within the walls
    of our school classroom.
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    Instead of simply explaining
    menstruation to children
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    from a textbook or biological standpoint,
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    we adopted an innovative approach.
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    We conducted an activity where students
    strung together a bracelet
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    consisting of 28 beads signifying
    the length of the menstrual cycle,
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    out of which four to seven beads
    were of a different color,
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    demonstrating the days a woman bleeds.
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    And in this way, we not only
    explained what periods are
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    in a manner that was educational
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    but also approachable and engaging.
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    To offer another example,
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    we explored various ways
    of alleviating cramps,
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    including preparing some
    natural remedies in school itself.
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    And we didn't just stop
    at involving girls in our campaign.
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    In fact, boys were equally involved,
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    and one of our co-team members,
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    as you saw,
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    is also a boy.
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    Through internal conversations
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    where girls could freely share
    their personal experiences
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    and boys could just ask questions,
    no matter how "dumb" they might seem,
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    our male volunteers quickly
    got over their awkwardness,
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    not just supporting but also leading
    educational sessions.
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    Clearly, starting
    an inclusive conversation,
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    including members of all genders
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    and listening to
    and supporting each other,
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    can go a long way.
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    Now, to make our campaign successful,
    we conducted extensive research,
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    interviewed gynecologists,
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    surveyed people to gauge
    public opinion on periods
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    and conducted a panel discussion
    with professionals working in this field.
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    And then we undertook the journey
    to create change.
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    We organized a stall
    at Shilpotsav, a local fair,
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    where we distributed
    sanitary napkin-shaped envelopes
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    and bookmarks containing
    period-positive messages.
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    We donated hundreds of pads
    that we had collected
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    through a pad donation drive at school.
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    Interacting with young girls
    in government and charitable schools,
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    we explained periods to them
    through a game of hopscotch
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    and distributed period kits
    that we had made ourselves
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    that consisted of a pad
    and other items like a paper soap
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    and sanitizer for maintaining hygiene,
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    a piece of dark chocolate
    just to lift their mood,
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    a sachet of ginger tea and so on.
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    In whatever we did, we strived to think
    beyond the norm and break barriers,
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    be it by creating
    a physical period tracker
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    to help girls without access
    to the internet
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    to record their monthly cycle,
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    or sensitizing the masses
    by performing street plays,
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    or even developing a video game
    called "Crimson Crusade" --
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    (Laughter)
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    that introduces both boys and girls
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    to problems faced
    by menstruating women globally
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    and players progress in the game
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    by defeating menstrual monsters.
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    (Laughter)
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    To sustain this effort,
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    we've installed 10 sanitary napkin
    dispensers in several schools.
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    Gradually, people's mindsets are changing.
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    But does change come so easily?
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    At a school for the underprivileged,
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    we encountered a girl who had just
    got her first period
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    but wasn't wearing anything
    to absorb the flow.
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    Imagine being her,
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    sitting in class feeling
    embarrassed and uncomfortable,
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    looking down and seeing red,
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    asking your parents for help,
    asking what was going on with you
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    and being dismissed.
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    Imagine the shame, fear and embarrassment
    for being "caught" doing something wrong
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    that forces you into living
    in ignorance and silence
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    at the cost of your health and dignity.
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    While we do our part,
    our endeavors will only be successful
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    if each one of you internalizes
    and spreads onward
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    the idea that menstruation
    is completely normal,
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    if each one of you conveys this message
    to every person you know.
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    When we can discuss digestion,
    blood circulation and respiration --
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    all natural, biological processes --
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    why should menstruation be off-limits?
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    And you, too, can help make it less taboo,
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    simply by being more open
    with male friends and family members,
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    supporting local
    and international organizations
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    working to improve menstrual
    hygiene management,
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    making menstrual bracelets
    with middle school kids in your area
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    or even by playing Crimson Crusade
    with your friends.
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    Every small steps counts, because
    brushing this topic under the carpet
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    perpetuates lack of access
    to sanitary absorbents,
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    ignorance of menstrual health issues,
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    school absenteeism, infection
    and so much more.
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    I'd like to end with a few lines
    a volunteer wrote for us:
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    "Let the crimson tide turn.
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    Let there be waves of positivity,
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    thundering applause,
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    villages full of women
    who bleed with pride.
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    Let there be a scent of education
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    drifting through the oxygen
    inhaled by men, women and children.
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    Let all know the marvels of menstruation
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    and celebrate Pravahkriti."
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
A campaign for period positivity
Speaker:
Ananya Grover
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
09:08

English subtitles

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