Womb Wound

Sep 28, 2009 6 Comments by Katy

I consider myself a very “healthy” person.  I eat well and walk and stretch every day.  I challenge my balance to make sure I still can.  I look both ways before crossing the street.  But even with this preventative mindset, I still manage to end up wounded every month like clockwork.  Don’t worry, it’s nothing my body isn’t designed to handle, and it is a wound borne by half of the people on the planet at about the same frequency.

Still haven’t guessed yet?

The term “menstruation” comes from the Latin term “mensis” – which means “month”.  The word “mensis” was itself derived from the Greek word for moon, “mene”.  Why were these lunar/calender terms selected?  Maybe it was due to the typical menstrual cycle of 28 days being equal to the moon’s orbit around the Earth (about 28 days), or perhaps it was reference to the animal species whose menstrual or estrous cycles coordinated with the cycle of the moon.

“What’s all this nonsense about the moon!?” you ask.

I didn’t make it up, really.  If you are reading this on the Internet, then you are part of a “nightlighting” culture.  Nightlighting means we use artificial light in order to stay up far beyond the hours of the sun and in doing so, have to bear the effects.

“Exposure to light at night can inhibit the pineal gland’s production of melatonin. The pineal gland directs your body’s rhythmic activities–including sleep, appetite, and the onset of puberty–through its production of melatonin. This hormone is primarily secreted at night, and it requires darkness to be produced. Bright light suppresses melatonin secretion. (2)

Data collected on non-nightlighting cultures as well as research designed to measure the affect of nightlighting on the hormonal cycles of mice have shown that perhaps your menstrual cycle could be more in line with that of the moon if you didn’t have so much exposure to light.  That’s pretty cool!

Getting back to my womb wound.

It turns out that the monthly shed of the endometrium from the inner lining of the uterus is just like falling and skinning your knees.  Similar to any skin wound, there is usually blood and then these tissues need time and rest to heal.

Last month Jacqueline Maybin won the Max Perutz science writing prize with her essay Secrets of the Womb.  It is fabulous, much more well-written than THIS blog, and I strongly suggest you read it.  Maybin is a PhD student at the University of Edinburgh and has discovered a link between the quantity of “healing proteins” (HIF factor) a woman secretes and the quantity of blood flow she will experience during her cycle.  Maybin also points out that the health of your other tissues dictates how well your uterus heals.

So what does this mean for you at home?  If you are constantly stressing your tissues through alcohol, caffeine, or nicotine intake, garbage food, caffeine, excessive exposure to environmental toxins, overly vigorous exercise, under exercise, caffeine, extreme stress, lack of sleep, or caffeine, you may have a tough period because you will not be able to heal as quickly.  Catch my drift?

I wanted to compare these “new facts” about the menstrual process with my trusty 1950’s Modern Medical Counselor.  Oh Boy!

Dysmenorrhea (Painful or Difficult Menstruation)

1.  Two days before the expected time for the flow to begin, reduce the amount of work done and increase the amount of rest.  Take a warm tub bath each evening for thirty minutes.

2.  When the flow starts, go to bed and keep hot-water bottles to the feet and lower abdomen.

6.  To help prevent future attacks of dysmenorrhea give attention to the following:

a.  Regular habits of eating, sleeping, and exercise.

b.  A wholesome diet, free from spices, condiments, greasy or fried food, tea and coffee, with little or no flesh food.

c.  Avoid tight clothing, and see that the limbs, neck, and chest are prevented from chilling.

d.  Correct constipation, if present.

“Many cases of dysmenorrhea can be partly or wholly relieved without calling a doctor.  Correct health habits will do much toward making the female organs function properly.  Taking cold, constipation, sitting in the same position for excessive amounts of time, mental stress, late hours, and dissipation are frequent causes of pain at menstrual periods.”

Once again, I am impressed with the “back to the basics” information we have here.  And while I know it isn’t possible for us to get out of work on such a regular basis, you can cut way back on stimulants, make better food choices, and replace the vigorous cardio work-out for a nice long walk with relaxing music.  If your menstrual experience isn’t what you would like it to be, or even what it used to be, check in on your over-all lifestyle habits and see if they could be contributing.  Be good to yourselves!

Which brings me to a joke* I love:

Q:  Why do they call it PMS?

A:  Because Mad Cow disease was already taken.

*I strongly suggest that all men refrain from telling this joke.  Just trust me on this one.

Some additional reading:

1. Cohen, Sari (February-March 2005). “Melatonin, menstruation, and the moon“. Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0ISW/is_259-260/ai_n10299307/pg_1. Retrieved 2008-09-21.

2. Singer, Katie. “Fertility Awareness, Food, and Night-Lighting“. Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts, Spring 2004. See section on Night-Lighting.

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6 Responses to “Womb Wound”

  1. Debi says:

    I appreciate your article. I am 56 and I started going through menopause at 41. I had such horrible, painful periods – hemorrhaging, eye migrains, back pain…on and on. Then one day during a bad period, my husband reached over and started massaging my lower abdomen. His big warm hands and fingers could rub deeper than I could myself. After having two kids, I learned that my period was actually my uterus having a muscle spasm, trying to push the rich unused blood out that it had built up getting ready to hold a precious baby. I never had a bad period after that. I just asked my husband to massage me and the pain disappeared until the next month. What are your thoughts on this?
    Sincerely, Debi

  2. Katy says:

    My thoughts are:
    1) Your husband is an angel.
    2) Most menstrual issues are musculoskeletal in nature – whether it be a pelvic floor issue, a uterus that is tipped due to mal-alignment of the pelvic structure, or a deeper issue – such as the one you experienced.

    There are many therapists (massage and physical therapists) who are specifically trained in fascial/muscle release of the psoas, lower belly, vaginal wall, and indirectly, the uterus. Before attempting more invasive procedures like surgery, I always recommend discussing massage treatments, heat, and perhaps just TLC to this area with your doctor!

  3. Sandy says:

    Thanks Katy, very interesting everyone should be better educated about what a mestrual cycle is and what effects it.I have PCO and it has always been an issue for me, but through education I have been able to handle it much better.

  4. Womb Wound: Basic Ways to Cope with Menstruation - Gaiam Blog says:

    [...] original post at Katysays.com. This excerpt republished with permission. tweetmeme_url = [...]

  5. Meredith says:

    Fantastic article at the Weston Price Foundation. I guess that explains why my cycles have always been so regular – I have always slept with only a light curtain for privacy in the bedroom, but one that lets the sunlight through in the mornings – but it also lets the moonlight (or lack thereof) fall directly on my pillow!

  6. Yvonne says:

    Regarding the light thing.. Where I live.. during this time of year, it doesn’t get dark for much more than 3 hours or so, and it’s a darkness that still has some light to it.

    So if I followed that, well, I could be at the computer almost all the time. Instead, i close heavy curtains, turn on soft lights, and try to make things calmer between 7 and 8 pm.

    However, the opposite holds for winter when we only have 4-6 hours of light. I still close the heavy curtains, but I turn on bright lights until 1pm, and gradually decrease throughout the day until bedtime.

    And resting has always been key for me to have reduced and pain-free menses.

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