Whoever posted this originally didn't do their homework, obviously.
Musta been a woman - or maybe some tranny who thinks they think
like a woman, but all of us guys know better.
"PMS HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH MOOD SWINGS."
This statement is inaccurate. Premenstrual Syndrome (PMS) is a common condition that can cause a range of physical and emotional symptoms, including mood swings, irritability, anxiety, and depression, typically occurring in the week or two before menstruation.
Mood swings are a recognized and common symptom of PMS. In addition to mood changes, PMS can also cause physical symptoms such as bloating, breast tenderness, fatigue, and headaches.
The exact cause of PMS is not fully understood, but it is believed to be related to hormonal fluctuations during the menstrual cycle and chemical changes in the brain. Soprry to burst your bubble, whoever you are/were...
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if you think PMS is bad, try menopause, it's PMS 24/7/365 for years. they get over it in time if you can just hold on and stay away from them long enough. fishing camps in the summer and hunting camps in the fall and winter has kept me from suicide. in-between a lawn mower or tracktor will drown out the cacophony.
ReplyDeleteHoot! I'm sorry, whoever you are, for what your wife went through, but I have to tell young men Out There that that's not the way nature intended menopause to be. After two or three irregular, heavy, debilitating "periods" I found myself feeling more energetic, and also more patient, and also less distracted by sex, all the time. It's been great.
DeletePris cilla King
so you're saying they're like that all the time, eh?
ReplyDeleteWRONG!
ReplyDeleteA transgender does NOT get PMS, that's all the proof the left needs.
Finally, something we all can agree on. The mood swings and irrationality are constant, PMS only magnifies the condition.
ReplyDeleteExactly. If people who habitually show their moods, and/or are irrational, happen to be menstruating women they *are* all but guaranteed to be moodier or less rational during times of predictable hormone imbalance. Most women feel the hormone imbalance but are not disabled or deranged by it; if anything learning to think through hormone fluctuations is the way people mature emotionally. (It is said that in some cultures men tried to replicate the experience by discussing things once while drunk and once while sober.) Some women have serious long-term disease conditions, and menstruation aggravates those. Unfortunately all they're likely to get from doctors will be painkillers, birth control pills, or maybe SSRIs (which may aggravate emotional disorders even more, to the point of homicide-suicide), so they and their families just have to suffer through years when they really ought to go into quarantine every month.
DeleteIt would, however, help if men avoided talking about "that time of the month," for the same reasons men think it's helpful if women avoid talking about "E.D." We don't know how the other person feels but we should at least be able to tell when it's time to back off and give the person some space.
There are also people who don't believe that crazies get crazier during a full moon.
ReplyDeleteAnd there are professional people who don't believe people with severe damage to their bodies can't predict weather.
PMS is very real and yes mood swings are a part of it. They are not pleasant for anyone. No one wants to talk about PMS but make nasty jokes about it. Men should be thankful they do not have to deal with having a period because its bluntly awful. In general for everyone no jokes, kindness is better but as my spouse states "I may not have one but have to deal with it too". Yes, he's still breathing.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your patience.
DeletePK