Iv just been looking at something called a Mooncup for ladies on periods, what are they like? good, bad?
Answers:
How do i know if she is having an orgasm?
Hi, I get one of these last month so hold only used it for one cycle but it's brilliant. I enjoy very heavey p's but didn't filter once, not even at night. I also find i capture more cramps when I wear tampons than pads s wasn't sure if the mooncup would be matching but because the cup sits lower down than tampons it was fine. My extent was 2 days shorter than usual (5 days instead of 7) although this could be co-incidence as you would expect. The only down side is you entail to feel comfortable just about your body as inserting it takes practice. But once you've found what works it's confident. I'm really chuffed with it.
A menstrual cup is a type of cup or chain worn by a female inside the vagina during menstruation to collect menstrual fluid. Unlike more adjectives methods, such as tampons and pads, the cup neither absorb the flow nor catches it outside the body.
There are two basic kinds of menstrual cup currently available to buy contained by countries like the USA, Canada and UK (or over the internet). The most adjectives kind is a bell-shaped cup made of rubber (latex) or silicone. It is reusable and designed to end for about 10 years, near proper care. Brand name of this type of cup include The Keeper, The DivaCup, Lunette and The Mooncup. The second kind of menstrual cup is currently solitary manufactured by one company and is called Instead. It resembles the contraceptive diaphragm (although it is not a contraceptive device ) and is disposable, designed for one use with the sole purpose.
Menstrual cups are not commonly used; the vast majority of women surrounded by Western countries use disposable tampons or disposable sanitary napkins (also known as towels or pads). A number of different companies own attempted to promote the use of menstrual cups during the 20th century; many of these products be withdrawn when they failed to gain global popularity. There are currently a growing number of women who are looking for alternatives to brand-name tampons and disposable sanitary napkins (for health, green, economic or other reasons). Other popular alternatives to these products include: non-bleached (and recurrently non-GM cotton) or organic tampons; washable cloth sanitary napkins; raw sponges; and menstrual cups
oooh, what are they? never heard of them
enjoy to pop into boots now and look 'em up
any registered nurses out in attendance? share your self defence thin spots.?
I have never see them. But they sound a bit worrying. I would be unnerved it twisted inside me and spilled all the contents.


