At twenty-one, caught between youth and the brink of adulthood, she found herself trapped in a toxic dynamic with a classmate whose ignorance and cruelty pierced her fragile state. What should have been a simple group project turned into an emotional battlefield, where his relentless mockery collided with her vulnerable reality, exposing the raw pain beneath the surface.
In the midst of her struggle, weakened and fighting through the chaos of her body’s natural cycle, his callous jabs weren’t just words—they were a reminder of the deep misunderstanding and dismissal women face daily. Her fury wasn’t just at him, but at the world that trivializes and ridicules a pain only she could truly bear.

AITA for telling my classmate about periods?













As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a clear violation of professional and personal boundaries established by the male classmate (M) when he chose to mock the OP’s stated physical discomfort with sexist cliches. The OP’s initial, direct request for him to stop was a reasonable boundary setting attempt. However, her subsequent decision to deliver what she termed a “TED talk” shifted the dynamic from boundary enforcement to aggressive confrontation.
M’s behavior, rooted in ignorance or deliberate provocation, warranted a response, but the nature of the response is key. By launching into an exhaustive list of symptoms, the OP effectively weaponized her private medical experience as a counter-attack. While this successfully educated M and silenced him (and perhaps galvanized her female friends), it may have validated M’s implied narrative that menstruation is inherently dramatic or over-shared, even if the intent was the opposite. This pattern of escalating conflict rather than de-escalating with firm, concise communication often burns bridges in professional settings.
The OP’s actions were understandable given the sexist provocation, but perhaps not entirely appropriate for a collegiate project setting where maintaining a functional working relationship is necessary. A more constructive approach would have involved clearly stating that the sexist jokes were unacceptable and demanding they cease immediately, followed by ending the discussion on that topic or threatening to report the behavior to the instructor if it continued. Directly addressing the boundary violation firmly and concisely is generally more effective than overwhelming the antagonist with excessive detail.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.



























The original poster experienced significant frustration after a male classmate made sexist and mocking comments about her period during a group meeting. In response, she delivered an extensive explanation detailing the physical and financial realities of menstruation, which led to a strong reaction from the classmate and subsequent mixed feedback from female peers about the intensity of her reaction.
Given that the initial offense was a deliberate, sexist joke, was the OP’s lengthy, detailed response an appropriate defense of her physical reality, or did her extensive explanation cross a line into unnecessary confrontation and embarrassment for the classmate?







