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Showing posts with label sexual health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sexual health. Show all posts

6 Important Foods To Make Your Vagina Healthier


You are what you eat, and apparently, so is your vagina. Given that your diet affects pretty much everything from your menstrual cycle to your mood, it's no surprise that it can affect how things are going in your nether regions.
Here are a few tips from experts to keep everything down there working as it should.
1. Eat plenty of prebiotics and probiotics.








According to Jennie Ann Freiman, M.D., your vagina, like your gut, requires healthy bacteria to fight infections and maintain a normal pH. The bacteria in the gut, in turn, affects those in the vagina. To improve your gut health and your vaginal health, she advises eating prebiotic foods like garlic, onions, and raw leeks and probiotic foods like yogurt, kimchi, pickles, sauerkraut, tempeh, and kombucha tea. According to Brian A. Levine, M.D., consuming probiotics has actually been shown to help women with vaginitis—chronic vaginal discomfort that can lead to pain during sex. Prebiotic and probiotic supplements aren't great substitutes for these foods, Freiman says: "Lab formulations don't beat Mother Nature."
2. Enjoy nuts and other healthy fats.
Healthy fats like those found in nuts, olive oil, and avocados regulate your cholesterol, keeping your estrogen levels in balance, which in turn creates a healthy mucosal lining that can help ward off infection. Almonds and other types of nuts are especially good, says Levine, because they contain B vitamins and calcium that prevent vaginitis.
3. Avoid processed foods.
While prebiotic and probiotic foods add helpful bacteria to the gut and vagina, Freiman says processed foods depress your immune system, which can allow harmful bacteria to take over. This can lead to all sorts of problems down there, including bacterial vaginosis, yeast infections, dryness, pain during sex, and urinary tract infections.
4. Go easy on the sugar.
According to Burt Webb, M.D., too much sugar can damage or kill the important vaginal bacteria Lactobacilli, which can lead to yeast infections, soreness, and irritation—three things you really don't want to deal with.
5. Try to avoid artificial hormones.
Certain meats and dairy products contain xenoestrogens—artificial hormones that imitate estrogen. According to Webb, these can block estrogen from the vagina, preventing the mucosal lining from forming which again, can leave you open to infection.
6. Stay hydrated.

"The vagina is just like the inside of the mouth—when a woman is thirsty and parched, her vagina probably is too," says Levine. Hydration can also help prevent any unusual odors from surfacing down there, says Octavia Cannon, D.O.—just one more reason to gulp down those eight glasses a day.







The Shocking ThingS Janelle Monae Is Tweeting Concerning 'Menstrual Period Blood'



Despite the fact that half of the 7.5 billion people who inhabit this planet are female and spend a good portion of their lives menstruating, “period shaming” is an actual and totally absurd thing. To kick off Women’s History Month with a bang, Janelle Monae took to Twitter to point out how bloody ridiculous it is to make a woman feel ashamed for a common, natural and totally healthy monthly occurrence, opening up a much overdue dialogue about women’s health issues.
“Menstrual Period Blood. #WomensHistoryMonth,” she started out on Twitter. “It’s sad that there are prob folks more grossed out by and/or ashamed of menstrual period blood than they are the current administration. Never forget girls & women birthed the human race and hold the power to unbirth it. Y’all gone learn.”
After one of her followers negatively responded to her posts, using the word “gross” to describe blood (which Janelle pointed out is synonymous to “unpleasant, repulsive, disgusting”), the singer and actress schooled her fans about how period shaming works.

@Haredasmiles in this instance she did. She used the word "gross" (unpleasant, repulsive, disgusting) 2describe blood which in this instance
@Haredasmiles is a by product of the period (a natural and biological change that occurs in the female). When a person uses language like ..
“[Period blood] is a byproduct of the period (a natural and biological change that occurs in the female). When a person uses language like ‘gross,’ this causes the person on the receiving end to feel ashamed, embarrassed, humiliated, etc.,” she stated.
She also bluntly stated a birds-and-bees fact: “You wouldn’t be here w/out sumbodies bodily fluids. respect & celebrate everything that got yo ass here.”
The “Hidden Figures” star ended up sparking an important conversation on Twitter as well as in the international media, bringing attention to a taboo topic. While many women feel open talking women’s health topics related to weight loss, diet, fitness, pregnancy, childbirth, postpartum depression and cancer, it’s not so often they dish about “that time of the month” on a public level. Even though the symptoms related to periods can be debilitating, resulting in women having to call in sick to school or work, they are discouraged from “playing the period card” and often feel ashamed to be honest.
Just by opening up the dialogue, Monae is doing her part to normalize an integral part of every woman’s health — reminding us to be proud of the monthly shedding of our uterine lining. Other celebrities have also spoken out on the issue, including M.I.A. drummer Kiran Gandhi, who ran the London Marathon in 2015 without a tampon, bleeding during the race, to raise awareness around women’s access to menstrual products in developing countries.
Coincidentally — or maybe not so much — the official color of International Women’s Day is red, so there is no better day to spread Monae’s message than today.

What Do YOU Think?

Are agreeing with  Monae’s comments? Have you experienced period shaming? As a society, how can we normalize the act of menstruation?







When You're on Your Period: Here Is the Best Position to Sleep in



Sleeping can pose a few challenges when it's your time of month. First of all, hello, leaks. Then, there's the issue of cramps keeping you up. But you can keep these issues at bay, it turns out, just by making some simple adjustments to your position.






We asked a few experts about the best way to sleep when you're on your period, and they unanimously agreed on one position: the fetal position. "Sleeping in the fetal position takes pressure off the abdominal muscles," explains Lisa Lindley, M.D., board-certified gynecologist with Eisenhower Women's Health. Jennifer Wider, M.D., agrees. "Many women report that the fetal position can help relieve cramps," she says. In this configuration, the skeletal muscles around your abdomen relax, and less tension leads to fewer cramps and less pain, she explains.

According to the research team for the period-tracking app Clue, this position has an added benefit: your legs are squeezed together, which decreases the chances that blood could leak out.
 


One position you should probably avoid during that time of month is face-down. being on your stomach can squeeze the uterus so that more blood comes out, increasing your changes of leaks, says Dr. Wider.

Other ways to keep Aunt Flo from waking you up are taking ibuprofen or naproxen starting a few days before your period to reduce the pain, showering or bathing before bed, using lavender products, sleeping with a heating pad or hot water bottle, and stretching your abdomen before bedtime, says Dr. Lindley. If leaks are your issue, you can try using a menstrual cup, sleeping in period panties, or wearing tight underwear or shorts to keep your pad in place (Dr. Lindley doesn't recommend tampons because leaving them in overnight can cause infections).




With the right care, your period doesn't have to get in the way of your sleeping orwaking life.









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