Yet you said that office couldn’t handle it and specifically posted a warning not to flush, (therefore DID have a problem with it) which you ignored???
How can people can claim that because their tampon package says go ahead and flush, it’s fine, and they can ignore everyone else who says it’s not so based on experience? I suppose they also believe that Frosted Flakes are part of a balanced diet and sugar gives you energy and BP is looking out for your best interests. Even if it doesn’t clog the pipes in the home, it will end up clogging the municipal works, which has been confirmed by an engineer.
Good point - I forgot about that. Yes, my old office had to call the plumber about a clog, which were in part caused by tampons.
In a building with 8 women and only 4 toilets - which is a pretty high ratio. ( I have read that in city public places with 5 or more toilets, it can be safely assumed that the pipe diameter is sufficient to allow tampon flushing.)
Yeah, just yesterday, I was buying some tampons for the future and noticed that the box I picked up said in a big fancy looking thing on the front, “NOW WITH FLUSHABLE APPLICATOR!” Of course, when I looked closer, I saw it was just a stupid cardboard applicator (Dear sirs: I do not need anything going all limp and useless in my vagina. Thanks.). So, I got the plastic ones (which I do not flush, btw).
Why is their experience of it not working more valid than my experience of it working? They haven’t flushed tampons in *my *home or in *my *office skyscraper or apartment building or in *my *neighborhood.
Especially considering it starts to break down the minute you insert it into your vagina to do its job. What? Me? Angry at bad experiences with cardboard applicators? NEVER!
Oh, rest assured - my home bathroom has, as I have a mentioned, a lined trash can with a self-closing lid. Should you ever be in my home feel free to make use of it.
Just don’t flush anything other than bodily waste down my toilet.
My college used to have free tampons stocked in every bathroom on campus- which was great, especially for a poor college student who didn’t want to squander money on tampons each month. That said, they of course stocked the el cheapo cardboard tampons, which I would always forget. Then I’d have no choice and be filled with rage at the free product that was so kindly given to me.
Actually, given my profession, it’s more like ugly grandpa pants (I’ve yet to see Carhart in the women’s department), but when I’m not being a butch contractor I do sometimes wear skirts or dresses which, believe it or not, don’t show cameltoe or menstrual products through the fabric.
I use pads most of the time (because I’m uh…small, and tampons large enough to handle my flow are uncomfortable.) and I’ve never had “fat crotch”. I use a super thin overnight brand and I just put one on, put on my jeans, and inspected myself from all angles in the mirror. I couldn’t see it. And I tried.
Seriously, modern pads are so thin and unobtrusive that I forget I’m wearing them most of the time? Where on earth are you guys buying pads?
Well, of course a skirt doesn’t show camel toe. Are you actually suggesting some do? Shit, I do wear tight mini skirts on occasion and you can’t see much of my vulva at all, since the fabric doesn’t bunch of there on a skirt like it does on pants.
I don’t buy pads period (see what I did there? ;)). But I think “fat crotch” comes from women who are wearing those big giant super mega pads for protection. Or maybe I’m wrong. It’s just something I’ve noticed from time to time.
Uh, right - until a clog happens. There are a lot of words I’d used to describe a clogged or overflowing toilet. “Clean”, “hygienic”, and “efficient” are not among them. And a plumber charging hundreds of dollars to fix it isn’t trivial. Neither is the repair bill for any “collateral” damage caused by flooding from overflows, which can run into the thousands of dollars.
And of course, delicate YOU will not be the one doing all the fixing, right? Because if you can’t handle dealing with your own used tampon I sure as hell can’t see you plunging a toilet, cleaning up raw sewage, snaking a piper, or replacing a pipe.
Yes, Tampax cardboard applicators claim to be flushable. The instructions even say so. Put them in a bowl of water and they unwrap and dissolve over time, you can watch it happen.
Yeah, - difference between the “blob of cotton” and the “solid tube” is that the solid tube is the one that actually dissolves and the wad of cotton doesn’t. I’m sorry if that seizes up any gears, but reality is a strange place at times.