Intimate health company launches 'uterus-shaped' breakfast cereal – Period Crunch!
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It should come as no surprise that subjects such as menstruation and women's reproductive health are frequently regarded as taboo subjects.
Talking about these issues is seen as essential by many as a means of eradicating the associated social stigma. Periods and reproductive health are not things to be ashamed of, and both women and men should feel comfortable talking openly about them.
That is why, in a bid to "keep period conversations on the table", a feminine care company has launched a rather unique campaign.
Introducing 'Period Crunch' – a raspberry-flavoured, uterus-shaped cereal with the goal of encouraging families to discuss the topics of menstruation more openly during breakfast (or any time of the day, really).
Period Crunch aims to bring the topic of periods and reproductive health to the table. Credit: Intimina.
Although it is marketed as having the shape of a womb, the wheat-based cereal more closely resembles the female reproductive system as a whole. On top of all of that, it's also been dyed red to resemble the colour of blood. (As if that makes it more appetising…)
The box also includes conversation prompts and a diagram of the female reproductive system to help people recognise the uterus in the body. According to the brand's research, nearly 82 per cent of people cannot correctly identify the location of the uterus.
Intimina, the women's intimate health company that launched the product, eventually told consumers that Period Crunch is just a publicity stunt and won't actually be hitting the supermarket shelves. (However, people can get a free box by contacting them.)
Danela Zagar, the global brand manager at Intimina, claims that conversations about periods are not truly normalised, that is why they wanted to make a statement about the issue.
"Periods are normal and talking about periods should be normal. But because of the ongoing stigma around menstruation, period conversations remain difficult and embarrassing for people, even with loved ones," she said.
"There is no more common and accepted scene than the entire family sitting down at the kitchen table and conversing over a meal. And if period conversations were truly normalised then they wouldn't be off this table — or off any table for that matter."
What are your thoughts, folks? Do you think conversations about periods and reproductive health should be discussed at the dining table?