One Redditor thought she was living in a fairly reasonable share-house—until her male roommate decided to declare showering during menstruation a household health hazard. His reasoning? Unless she uses a tampon (which she medically cannot), her period “contaminates” the shared bathroom.
So when she laughed—because, honestly, what else do you do when someone says something that absurd?—he doubled down. Now she’s fielding passive-aggressive comments, being asked to bleach the bathroom, and wondering if she’s the unreasonable one.
What started as a basic hygiene routine turned into a full-blown housemate hygiene horror show. Let’s unpack the mess.
One woman’s routine shower sparked a share-house storm when her housemate demanded she skip it during her period, leading to laughter and a heated standoff














I have to admit—this one made me do a double take. A grown man thinking a woman can’t shower on her period without a tampon? In this economy? The sheer audacity paired with scientific illiteracy was honestly impressive.
Laughing might have been the kindest response. Because if someone told me I was “banned” from cleaning myself while bleeding, I wouldn’t be reaching for the bleach—I’d be reaching for a lease termination clause. But, what do experts say about this case?
Let’s be clear: period blood is not hazardous waste. According to Dr. Jennifer Gunter, OB/GYN and author of The Vagina Bible, menstrual blood is not dirty or unhygienic. In fact, “Menstruation is a normal bodily function, and there is no medical reason to avoid bathing or showering during a period.”
She even goes further to say that cleaning yourself is encouraged during menstruation to reduce odor, prevent irritation, and promote general hygiene. So Jack’s suggestion? Not just unscientific—it’s actively bad advice.
There’s also the issue of controlling behavior in shared living spaces. According to Therapist and conflict resolution expert Nedra Glover Tawwab, roommates setting unilateral rules about someone’s private body functions is a sign of a lack of respect and boundary overreach.
“A healthy shared space means honoring the autonomy of others while maintaining shared cleanliness. Weaponizing ‘hygiene’ to control others is a red flag,” she notes.
In the comment section, many Redditors mocked Jack’s period ignorance, noting showers are hygienic and his ban is baseless, especially since no mess was left








These Redditors urged OP to hold firm, suggesting Jack clean the shower himself if he’s so concerned, as her routine isn’t the issue







These Redditors called out Jack’s demands as rooted in misogyny, warning his control could escalate to other unreasonable rules



At the end of the day, this isn’t about blood—it’s about boundaries, bodily autonomy, and basic logic. Jack wasn’t being “concerned.” He was being controlling. And when someone tries to police your shower schedule because of your period, the only thing you should be cleaning is… them out of your life.
Was she wrong to laugh—or was it the only rational reaction to irrational nonsense? How would you handle a roommate who thinks he can rewrite biology with bleach? Sound off below.









