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Vulvas, periods and leaks: women need the right words to seek help for conditions 'down there'

Date

Maggie Kirkman and Jane Fisher

COMMENT

Girls are socialised early and told normal functions of the female body must be spoken of, if at all, in strictest ...

Girls are socialised early and told normal functions of the female body must be spoken of, if at all, in strictest privacy, indirectly, and not to men.

This is the first in a series first published on The Conversation examining hidden women's conditions.

I think it would be folly to expect that women will ever dominate or even approach equal representation in a large number of areas simply because their aptitudes, abilities, and interests are different for physiological reasons.

So said Tony Abbott when he was a university student, reflecting the historical view that men's bodies are the standard from which women's deviate. As prime minister and minister for women, Mr Abbott refused to say he had changed his opinion.

Given this traditional acceptance of a woman's body as inferior, when it malfunctions it can produce an acute sense of shame. No wonder then that women often find it embarrassing to deal with problems "down there".

That coy term exemplifies euphemisms used in our culture to describe women's bodies and their functions. They deny women the accurate, unambiguous language to communicate about their bodies with confidence.

Women need access to language that is appropriate for different circumstances: formal (in public), anatomically correct (with a doctor), intimate (with a sexual partner), and casual (with friends).

Talking about vulvas

When it comes to menstruation, a girl isn't supplied with appropriate language for her experience. Girls have long been taught that periods must be spoken of, if at all, in strictest privacy, indirectly, and not to men.

Periods have generated a variety of mundane and vivid euphemisms: "that time of the month", "on rags", "aunt Flo visiting" and "painting the garage" are just some of them.

There is an extensive lexicon of derogatory, aggressive, and cute words for female genitals, most of which would be unhelpful and inappropriate in a medical consultation.

Many women use the term "vagina" (the passage between the uterus and external genitals) inaccurately to describe the vulva (the outer genitals). Even Eve Ensler, creator of the Vagina Monologues, failed to use "vulva" when naming her play, despite claiming to free up discussion of women's genitals.

If you can't name a body part, how can you seek medical help if something appears to be wrong with it?

A major contributor to healthy discussion is someone who will listen and talk. If women are concerned about a gynaecological symptom, they need a doctor prepared to listen, respond helpfully, and ask the right questions.

Damned whores or God's police

Society has a binary view of women, seeing them as either violating or upholding social morality; or in the words of Australian feminist and writer Anne Summers, as "damned whores" or "God's police".

Ailments of the vulva or vagina, especially related to infection or discharge, have often been assumed a result of a woman's (usually promiscuous) sexual activities. One of us interviewed a woman diagnosed with cervical cancer who had asked a nurse how it could have been contracted. The nurse replied, "All I can say is that nuns don't get it".

If you grow up absorbing such ideas, it can be difficult to speak about normal functions such as menstruation or to recognise symptoms indicating need for clinical care, without fearing judgement.

It doesn't help that it's challenging for a woman to have a close look at her own vulva. Men's experiences at urinals have no female equivalent, meaning that few women have seen another's genitals. This leaves them to question whether their own appear "normal" (questions now answered by the Labia Library).

Women's bodies also tend to be defined by their reproductive capacity. In Western cultures at least, women can feel inadequate or like ex-women after menopause. Gynaecologist Robert Wilson once described a woman's life after menopause as "the horror of this living decay" in which she was "no longer a woman".

Then there is the powerful narrative that women's "leaky" bodies require concessions and extra care. In seeking support for women who are pregnant, breastfeeding, or experiencing conditions such as endometriosis, we take the risk of reinforcing the belief women will be a burden to their employers and to men.

When causes are not understood and cures not found, there is a tendency to blame women's problems on their volatile emotions or their poor psychological state. Until too recently, any cause of infertility not fully understood was described as having a psychological origin.

Men's bodies have problems too

American feminist Gloria Steinem once asked what it would be like if men menstruated. She suggested it would be celebrated and identified as a heroic act, perhaps a subject of pride.

As it stands, women's sanitary products are taxed as luxury items in Australia. Their purchase can still cause embarrassment, requiring a quick check of the supermarket aisle to make sure nobody is watching.

But it is wise to keep in mind that men's bodies can also be sources of shame. They can deliver involuntary erections at inopportune moments, grow breasts, be subject to prostate problems, and even arouse disgust when they're generously donating semen.

Men and women both experience hormonal changes throughout life and both can be troubled by similar problems, such as incontinence.

All bodies need extra care and attention from time to time. We need to find ways to enable informative, helpful conversations about women's bodies that don't stigmatise them (as individuals or as a group) and that contribute to their physical and mental health.

Maggie Kirkman: Senior Research Fellow, Jean Hailes, Monash University. 

Jane Fisher: Professor & Director, Jean Hailes Research Unit, School of Public Health & Preventable Medicine, Monash University.

The Conversation

35 comments so far

  • Great article....up until you *had* to remind us that the poor menz has problems too.

    The headline said the article was about women's bodies! Who cares if men get embarrassing erections? Yeah, yeah, teh poor menz care...but they will never ever walk across a school campus or had to stand back-to-the-classroom at the chalkboard with blood all over their clothes because the damned pads shifted and leaked *again*. You know, the pads we pay a GST on because they are such discretionary items.

    If you are so desperate to be "balanced" then write a separate article about men, okay? Because you just wasted those last pars when you could have mentioned PCOS, ovarian cancer, Bartholin's cysts...and if you didn't have the word count to mention all the women's issues with their vulvas and vaginas, then how about a few references so readers can do further research? Maybe even a list of the Women's Health CLinics operating throughout the country.

    You know, something about WOMEN instead of penises.

    Commenter
    Ruby
    Date and time
    February 09, 2016, 10:31AM
    • Hey Ruby, see where is says the first in a series? They can't cover everything in one article. There are already other articles up at 'The Conversation', if you want to have a read - a very interesting article about Bacterial Vaginosis, for example.

      Commenter
      JustAFan
      Date and time
      February 09, 2016, 11:41AM
    • Will you ever have to stand with your jumper in front of your crotch because you know that if you don't, the person you're talking to will actually see physical evidence that you are having sexual thoughts about them or somone else nearby?

      Commenter
      Phat Boy
      Date and time
      February 09, 2016, 12:57PM
  • i actually believe woman's body to be superior, they have the ability to create a child, a complex process, but that does come with it's challenges and sometimes unintended repercussions, i don't see it as a challenge in a first world country.
    people with antiquated approaches will always exist but they are an ever smaller minority.

    Commenter
    Victorious Painter
    Date and time
    February 09, 2016, 10:36AM
    • Thank you, thank you for using the word vulva. It seems like vagina has taken over replacing the whole with the hole. It's female circumcision via lexicon. If we can't accurately name our body parts, what hope do we have for understanding and controlling our sexuality. I can't imagine reducing the male genitalia to penis would ever be accepted as that would be akin to castration. Names are so powerful.

      Commenter
      Lucy
      Location
      Newcastle
      Date and time
      February 09, 2016, 10:59AM
      • lexical circumcision - what a lovely turn of phrase you have.! Thanks.

        Commenter
        AB
        Date and time
        February 09, 2016, 11:30AM
      • Well put!

        Commenter
        Hugbug
        Location
        MEL
        Date and time
        February 09, 2016, 11:36AM
      • Agreed, and this recent , very recent predilection for calling a vulva a vagina is a result of the intrusion of the US puritanical influence on our vernacular.
        It irks me no end.
        And yes men do leak seminal fluid, thing is it's not so obvious and in such quantity as girls and women menstruating. It's not painful or needs GST products to abate the mess.
        Mind you when they get a hard on, err erection, it's plainly obvious.
        Nothing wrong with a bit of slang, but when specific body parts are renamed then we do have a problem Houston.

        Commenter
        A country gal
        Date and time
        February 09, 2016, 8:27PM
    • Wow Ruby so much hate. I also thought the last section dealing with men's issues was a bit out of place in the article but gee, "the poor menz". Couldn't you just make a statement that this wasn't an article about men?

      Commenter
      Mike
      Date and time
      February 09, 2016, 11:13AM
      • Suddenly, out of the blue we have a writer who is grown up and adult about nudity and female sexuality, There is no snigger, snigger or giggle point in the article. Wow. This is revolutionary.
        Write another article. You did just fine. I am going out to paint the garage as read.

        Commenter
        Glen6
        Date and time
        February 09, 2016, 11:30AM

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