When I first “cracked the code” on stabilizing and reversing prolapse, and wrote and published Saving the Whole Woman, I set up this forum. While I had finally gotten my own severe uterine prolapse under control with the knowledge I had gained, I didn’t actually know if I could teach other women to do for themselves what I had done for my condition.
So I just started teaching women on this forum. Within weeks, the women started writing back, “It’s working! I can feel the difference!”
From that moment on, the forum became the hub of the Whole Woman Community. Unfortunately, spammers also discovered the forum, along with the thousands of women we had been helping. The level of spamming became so intolerable and time-consuming, we regretfully took the forum down.
Technology never sleeps, however, and we have better tools today for controlling spam than we did just a few years ago. So I am very excited and pleased to bring the forum back online.
If you are already a registered user you may now log in and post. If you have lost your password, just click the request new password tab and follow the directions.
Please review and agree to the disclaimer and the forum rules. Our moderators will remove any posts that are promotional or otherwise fail to meet our guidelines and will block repeat offenders.
Remember, the forum is here for two reasons. First, to get your questions answered by other women who have knowledge and experience to share. Second, it is the place to share your results and successes. Your stories will help other women learn that Whole Woman is what they need.
Whether you’re an old friend or a new acquaintance, welcome! The Whole Woman forum is a place where you can make a difference in your own life and the lives of thousands of women around the world!
Best wishes,
Christine Kent
Founder
Whole Woman
Aussie Mum
April 19, 2010 - 2:44am
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Femininity
I found pregnancy made me feel the most feminine I ever have! And I have been wanting to wear skirts and dresses - not that I have gone and purchased any yet! I have an urge to dress more feminine in general. I used to be a jeans and t-shirt girl, or tight gym clothing. When I was younger I did a lot of exercise and the focus was to be slim and toned and super fit, and even up till the early stages of pregnancy I was working out a couple of times per week. Now I can hardly do any physical activity so that has changed my focus too. I know in the future I will be able to do more but for now, just the WW when I can fit it in!
Interesting topic Louise, when you have to really think about parts of your femaleness which are not quite right, and then doing the WW posture and exercise which is all about enhancing your feminine shape so you can't help but have more awareness about it. I actually am loving not tucking my butt under anymore - I have lost so much weight I don't actually have much of a butt, and am actually wishing it was a bit bigger!!! So not sure if POP has influenced me much (other than wishing it would go away) , but pregancy and being a mother certainly has.
I am curious how many women on here were full on exercise freaks before their POP...
bad_mirror
April 23, 2010 - 10:03pm
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crowning glory
Isn't that what they say about a woman's hair? I've always been a girly-girl on the outside, and a bit of what my DH refers to as "alpha-female" on the inside. I have always described myself as feminine, chosen very typical female jobs, dressed as such. And yet this femininity has indeed experienced a change. How do I explain?
There's an R&B song called Grown Woman. That is what I think has happened to my femininity since having a baby and having POP. It's grown up. I would say that now that the panic, the sadness, the fear has left, that I do feel more in touch with how I am a woman. I feel very in tune with my body, very appreciative of it, and very sexy.
I'm 32. Like you, I want to have long hair again. I want crowning glory, damn it! I want to turn 40 with long, shiny, healthy hair. At 90, I want to be a little old lady with a bun. :-)
louiseds
April 24, 2010 - 10:24am
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Little old lady with a bun.
Yeah, little old ladies with a bun rock! My Mum just turned 98, and now has difficulty on some days getting her now thinning hair into its little french roll, because she forgets how to do it. Sad.
She started growing her hair probably after my Dad died in 1968. Maybe growing your hair is something women do in response to a loss, like it is putting yourself on the map again. Maybe my Mum finally gave up the battle of the perm because it was all too hard. No, I think not. She went from curly perm to concrete beehive, and still needed a perm, and had it washed and set every week by the hairdresser, so it probably wasn't any easier long than shorter.
But it might have been an outward sign of her new start. She was about my age, come to think of it.
Anyway, the carers at her Home periodically suggest that she have it cut short, but I think it would be hard for her to adapt to a new style. I think a woman having to have her hair cut because it is easier for those looking after her is pretty tough. Now she is becoming incontinent, and losing her memory and her ability to converse intelligently, her hair is an important part of her dignity. What do you do to a woman to demoralise her and take away any power she has? You cut her hair, that's what! Not my Mum. She has precious little left of herself now, except her soft, fine, grey, wispy crowning glory. It is like fairy hair, but old. Why should she lose more of herself than old age takes away? I hope I still have long hair at her age.
Louise
Christine
April 24, 2010 - 11:17pm
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braids
I have the skinniest braids in the world, but I want to grow them all the way down to the floor....
aza
April 24, 2010 - 11:48pm
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silver manes
I was at the shops today and passed a coffeeshop and was totally struck by a much older woman sitting at a table (pushing 80 I would guess), laughing gaily with her friends, absolutely stunning in her physical and energetic forms in the bright, fresh sunlight. Her hair was shining sliver and curly down her back. She was utterly regal. She was captivating and I was very curious about what they were all finding so funny. I thought of this thread immediately (which is mildly disturbing in and of itself, I find it bizarre when cyberworld and the real world blend!).
I decided I wanted to have hair like hers when I get old.
Then for the next few hours of running errands, I saw many other older women with various shades and style of the same sort of gorgeous hair. No one was even near her age yet none of them were even remotely mesmerising either, not even half the energy as she had. Eyes downcast, tired and sloppy gait, dull skin, sad energy. Don't they know they are royalty? They've lived, they are THERE now. This must be such an incredible time of life, so freeing in so many ways compared to most of us who feel like we are chasing our own tails.
That incredible lightness of being in the curly headed woman...now THAT is what I want, and if I get silver curly hair too, that would be great. But I want that magnetism at being a matriarch at 80 that draws the attention of maiden 34 yr olds when you are simply having coffee on a lazy Sunday morning.
Sorta off topic but had to share :)
bad_mirror
April 25, 2010 - 1:23am
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hair as dignity
Oh Louise, your Mum sounds precious, not sad. A french roll will be my alternate hairstyle :-). As a nursing student, I have spent many hours working with residents of Homes such as your Mum. I am sorry to hear that her carers suggest a haircut! I have been honored to have been trained by some such workers who realize that dignity is found in such things as hair. A real "moment" for me was watching one of these staff members immaculately braid the hair of a woman who was both blind and stuporous, and probably unaware of anything. Seeing that small but important aspect of dignity preserved was amazing. Not sure where this tangent is going, but you inspired me to share . . . and the thought of having fairy hair is lovely. May we all be so lucky to live to 98 with fairy hair.
Oceanblue
April 25, 2010 - 10:25am
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Hair
As a child, my Mother always was after me with the scissors, and kept my hair short, much to my dismay.
To this day, I have long hair, keep it trimmed, but now it's longer than ever, because I live in the country. Sometimes my hair is up in a bun, other times, in braids, other times to one side in a long twist, and the very odd time (only inside my housey) it's free and I startle my other half to such an extent, that he suggests that I go to the city to get a proper haircut. Do I comply? No way!
I am grateful that I have hair, and happily style it as I please :)
Ribbit
April 25, 2010 - 10:41am
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What a beautiful thread this is.
The same thing has happened to me. I was quite the tomboy growing up with two older brothers, and you'd rarely find me in anything other than the rattiest t-shirt and jeans I could find. After all, I was always in the woods or in the garden, so why look nice? Even at school it was a challenge for me to dress well and keep my hair done.
Since the prolapse, I have had to become more feminine in my dress. I've been looking for longer, flowing, softer fabrics. I still haven't figured out how to make hiking boots work with a skirt, but I'll keep thinkin' on it. ;)
I have a new goal. Instead of having people think of me as "strong" or "hard-working", I now prefer to have them think of me as "lovely". Here's to long hair. :)
kiwigirl
April 26, 2010 - 5:51am
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Little Old Lady with a bun
Thanks Louise for this insight .You inspired me to at last log on to this new site......we shared a few comments via email while the site was down.think we must be similar age and likeminded lol I too have longhair and its better than when I was younger.So hooray to us !!!and all the other lovely ladies here. PS don't have long waves tho just straight blondey gray lol
kiwigirl
April 26, 2010 - 6:06am
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Femininity
I was a full on exercise freak before POP.Had partial prolapse after my 3rd baby , 3 days after his birth and didn't realise I mght be aggravating the problem when I started aerobics some time later for 5 years, in between front and backpacking him for over 2years- up and down our hills.That is only a portion of my life of exercise, having done ballet for 10years growing up.And now do 2 other types of dancing.....oh dear.... I shall just have to persevere with WW exercises.
louiseds
April 26, 2010 - 8:56am
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Dance is another aspect of expressing femininity
Hi Kiwigirl.
So glad you decided to join us. Dance has become very important to me as well. I finally coopted DH to come and learn latin and ballroom for a couple of years. Then we stopped for some reason, my work I think, and haven't gotten back to it.
... Until last night, when we attended a wedding and got out on the floor for a foxtrot, and some jive and cha-cha and samba. Abba is such dreadful dancing music, but you just gotta roll with the punches when the host picks the DJ! I also do bellydance, which is my woman's dance. But it was just fantastic to get the old man up there with me for the other dance!!!
Kiwigirl, as a trained ballet dancer, how do you find the Wholewoman Workout?
Thanks to all you other wonderful contributions to this thread. It is giving me such a thrill to think there are others out there who are reassessing their femininity and starting to really enjoy their bodies.
Woo-hoo!!
Louise