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Washing

(55 Posts)
Georgesgran Mon 26-Jun-23 13:31:55

A clout is a Geordie expression for a rag or dishcloth. Probably a cloot in Scots is the same?

Esmay Mon 26-Jun-23 11:38:34

My grandma came from a huge family of girls was one remembered the buckets of bloodied strips kept in an outhouse -only this was not revealed to me until I was an adult .

My mother had sanitary towels .

They were kept in the airing cupboard .

I was in denial about starting my periods for about three months ( I just had a slight brown discharge at first ) until I realised what was happening and then used the sts kept in the cupboard .

No comment was made .
No acknowledgement .
The towels were replaced magically monthly .

I'd been given a booklet from some missionary neighbours about the importance of hygiene with no real reference to the biology .

I only recall lectures about boys not touching you .

Years later , I met women , who still have to make sanitary towels from strips of cloth and their mothers suffer even more from trying to keep themselves clean and fragrant when they have urinary incontinence .

We are so fortunate in this country .

boheminan Mon 26-Jun-23 10:47:24

henetha, my mum used torn up sheets, left in a bucket of bloodied salted water under the sink, it was a remaining horror to have discovered the bucket when I was around 7yrs old. Mum's name for these strips was 'clout' a word that has brought up interesting conversations on GN previously. For some reason they were never added to the weekly (Monday) wash, though bloodied knickers were.

henetha Mon 26-Jun-23 10:22:07

I was one of those who used strips of old sheets for periods, from when I started at age 13 until I left school and started work at 15 so I could afford then to buy proper protection. And they were put to soak in a bucket with a lid and then I had to wash them and put them out on the line in the back garden. Oh the humiliation.
Times sure have changed.

ExDancer Mon 26-Jun-23 10:16:46

I was sorting my washing ready to load up and couldn't help smiling at the number of knickers that went into the white wash. When my Mum was a young girl she was only allowed one pair a WEEK will you believe? With 4 girls in the family plus mother, if they'd wanted a clean pair every day that would have been 35 sets to wash every week, not mentioning any extras for periods accidents etc.
And mentioning periods, they used strips torn from old sheets as pads and pinned to their underwear to soak up the bleeding
Aren't we lucky?