Tampons or napkins in Japan? [Archive] - Japan Forum

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dochira23
Mar 6, 2005, 18:10
Sorry, I'm not trying to troll, but this is a question that caught my interest, after reading about Japanese hygiene.

It seems that many Japanese are obsessed with extreme hygiene, like wearing masks when they have a cold, and so on. So what is the preferred hygiene product of most Japanese women - tampons, or sanitary pads? I have always thought of tampons as a prime growth medium for bacteria when used improperly, and wonder if the Japanese have a way aound it.

Emoni
Mar 6, 2005, 18:11
Weirdest question I've seen on ths board EVER...

Yet, I'm wondering answer out of shear weird curiousity. Guess when you are majoring in the culture you gotta learn everything :P

GaijinPunch
Mar 6, 2005, 19:53
I can currently only speak for one Japanese women -- pads.

Timsan
Mar 6, 2005, 21:30
Hey Emoni, where do you go to uni?

PopCulturePooka
Mar 6, 2005, 22:17
I've heard via numerous sources that pads are the norm.

Uncle Frank
Mar 6, 2005, 22:45
my Japanese girlfriend always called her "time of the month" BLUE DAY. She was soooo embarassed by the whole thing. I lived with her for a year and never saw what she used, she was so secretive about it all. Maybe it was because she was a small town girl?

Frank

:blush:

epigene
Mar 6, 2005, 23:03
my Japanese girlfriend always called her "time of the month" BLUE DAY. She was soooo embarassed by the whole thing. I lived with her for a year and never saw what she used, she was so secretive about it all. Maybe it was because she was a small town girl?

Frank

:blush:
That's because you lived with a girl in my generation, Frank... :giggle:

Scrutiny of the drugstore shelves in my part of Tokyo shows that roughly 80% of these shelves allocated for peronal hygiene products are occupied by sanitary napkins. :relief:

RockLee
Mar 7, 2005, 04:17
not many girls wear strings either...more like those old fashion undies...I wonder why ? And I guess san. pads are more common...maybe the whole idea of tampons is not that big in japan :?


btw...no girl responded to this topic yet :giggle:

Emoni
Mar 7, 2005, 04:19
Well, interesting posts...

Tim, I'll email you where I go.

Elizabeth
Mar 7, 2005, 04:44
not many girls wear strings either...more like those old fashion undies...I wonder why ? And I guess san. pads are more common...maybe the whole idea of tampons is not that big in japan :?


btw...no girl responded to this topic yet :giggle:
The pads are really bulky and straight as well....that makes two girls that have responded so far, if I had a scanner I'd show you more clearly what I'm talking about ! :p Sorry about that....but I don't really agree that Japanese women are more embarrassed about it, just that not having cabinets in the toire means you have to keep them in a satchel or the opaque, colored bag is was separated into at the store for everyone to know. :blush:

cicatriz esp
Mar 7, 2005, 05:15
All the Japanese girls I've ever dated have used pads.

kirei_na_me
Mar 7, 2005, 05:38
I'd say pads are the norm. Every Japanese woman I've known uses them instead of tampons.

Speaking of "that time of month", one of my Japanese friends told me that she was so embarassed when her mother made "red rice" for almost the entire neighborhood when she first started. Yikes.

smoke
Mar 7, 2005, 05:59
Speaking of "that time of month", one of my Japanese friends told me that she was so embarassed when her mother made "red rice" for almost the entire neighborhood when she first started. Yikes.

for some reason i find that hilarious...i'm sure that makes me sick and twisted!

when my girlfriend first had her period her mum told her that a tampon may be a little uncomfortable...but she said it was fine!
what does that tell you about her!?

ahh, my girl the village bike!!!
(only joking babes)

RockLee
Mar 7, 2005, 07:59
Ok..that is so....OMFG.... :souka: village...bike...djees.. :souka:


Sorry about that....but I don't really agree that Japanese women are more embarrassed about it, just that not having cabinets in the toire means you have to keep them in a satchel or the opaque, colored bag is was separated into at the store for everyone to know. :blush:What do u mean with not agree on the embarrased...nobody said anything about being embarrased ? :relief:

Nightwalker
Mar 7, 2005, 08:08
O.O Wow...I don't know why but I don't find it ever so slightly embarassing when I get it and people find out. Hmm different for everyone I know but I tell people I have it so they know if I get nasty or something then they know the cause. Who really wouldn't want to get it anyways but back on topic kinda. XD They only use pads...why no tampons? @.@ Or is it just different for everyone?

epigene
Mar 7, 2005, 08:12
Speaking of "that time of month", one of my Japanese friends told me that she was so embarassed when her mother made "red rice" for almost the entire neighborhood when she first started. Yikes.
That was old Japanese practice (before my time :giggle:) to celebrate womanhood. It was an announcement of the girl becoming eligible for marriage.
I have always thought of tampons as a prime growth medium for bacteria when used improperly...
That's what many people think about tampons. (When my daughter first got her period, my husband was adamant that she never use them. I secretly told her she can do what she pleases. :bluush: )

Brooker
Mar 7, 2005, 08:15
Red rice? That's pretty gross. Why couldn't they just give out cookies or something. They don't need to make the connection with blood.

epigene
Mar 7, 2005, 08:25
Brooker,

Red is the color of celebration, not blood. Red rice is cooked for celebrations (New Year, birthdays, etc.), as far as I know, in many parts of Northeast and Southeast Asia (including Guam).

Brooker
Mar 7, 2005, 08:27
Brooker,

Red is the color of celebration, not blood. Red rice is cooked for celebrations (New Year, birthdays, etc.), as far as I know, in many parts of Northeast and Southeast Asia (including Guam).

Oh, whoops, I didn't know that. I thought it would be strange if they only did that for when a girl reached puberty.

ArmandV
Mar 7, 2005, 13:23
Red rice? That's pretty gross. Why couldn't they just give out cookies or something. They don't need to make the connection with blood.


This has got to be the weirdest topic I've seen here.

I suppose I can see the symbolism of red rice (somewhere).

Someone mentioned bacteria fears regarding tampons. Maybe some remembers the uproar over tampon-related toxic shock syndrome.

Malaika
Mar 8, 2005, 10:44
This has never occur to me, until I saw the topic, that I always wondered about "the time of the month" thing and if they use pads or tampons.

From reading all the post, I'm learning alot. :)

Takara
Mar 8, 2005, 15:42
^ I'm learning a lot as well. I always thought that the whole "pads or tampons" thing goes by what the girl/woman is more comfortable with.