Some family vacations bring home sunburns and seashells. This one ended with a clogged toilet and a very red-faced dad. A woman shared on Reddit how, during a beach trip in high school, her best friend’s father decided her period hygiene was “too disgusting” for his household. His brilliant solution? Flush tampons or “just hold it in” until dinner.
Spoiler alert: the plumbing did not cooperate. What started as an uncomfortable conversation about bathroom etiquette turned into a messy showdown between biology, ignorance, and porcelain. And of course, Reddit had plenty to say about it. Curious how this family learned about periods the hard way? Let’s dive into the story.
One teenager on a Florida getaway faces off against her host’s wild period protocols, turning a simple trash toss into a tidal wave of teachable plumbing turmoil



Even today, menstrual shame remains widespread. A 2021 report from UNICEF found that in some countries, nearly half of adolescent girls believe periods are something to hide, and stigma contributes to poor health outcomes worldwide.
Psychologists argue that this discomfort stems from learned cultural silence.
Dr. Jennifer Weiss-Wolf, author of Periods Gone Public, explains: “The stigma of menstruation is deeply ingrained. By teaching shame, we strip menstruators of dignity and reinforce gender inequities.” Her point resonates with this story, the father turned a teaching moment about respect into an order to literally hide biology.
From a practical side, flushing tampons is a nightmare for plumbing systems.
The Environmental Protection Agency warns that non-flushable items like tampons can cause sewer blockages and overflows, costing thousands in repairs and environmental damage. Asking a teenager to flush them “so no one sees” isn’t just ignorant, it’s a recipe for property damage.
A healthier response would have been empathy and education. Instead of protecting his son from the sight of a wrapped tampon in a lidded bin, the dad could have explained that periods are natural, not shameful.
Experts at VeryWell Health note that normalizing menstruation in family conversations helps dismantle taboos and fosters respect across genders.
Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:
These Reddit users pointed out the absurdity of expecting anyone to “hold it in” or be ashamed of biology


This group backed this up with plumbing horror stories, reminding readers that flushed tampons don’t just disappear, they create costly blockages

One commenter shared a hilarious personal story of mistaking his girlfriend’s tampon for a “present,” showing that misunderstanding is common but can be approached with humor

Another offered the dad lesson 101: being a supportive father means buying supplies, teaching empathy, and never labeling periods “disgusting.”

These Redditors wondered why the stepbrother was even digging in the bathroom trash instead of minding his own business


What started as a teenager politely wrapping her tampons ended as a plumbing disaster and a lesson in respect. If one takeaway stands out, it’s this: treating menstruation as “disgusting” only breeds ignorance and sometimes toilet floods.
Would you have gone along with the dad’s bizarre request, or would you have staged your own quiet rebellion? And what’s the strangest “guest etiquette” demand you’ve ever faced? Share your stories in the comments below!








