She manages her menstrual cycle with care, using a menstrual cup and period underwear, navigating the intimate and often unspoken realities of womanhood. Yet, this simple, personal routine becomes a quiet battleground when her husband voices discomfort over the presence of her underwear in their shared space, revealing the delicate tension between understanding and misunderstanding in their relationship.
His insistence on moving her soaking underwear out of the sink, despite the practicality and hygiene of her methods, uncovers a deeper discomfort with the visible traces of her cycle. This clash isn’t just about sanitation; it’s about confronting the raw, often stigmatized truths of the female body, challenging both their perceptions and the silent barriers between them.

AITA for soaking my underwear in my sink











As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” In this scenario, the conflict is less about objective sanitation and more about differing perceptions of ‘clean’ versus ‘unclean’ bodily functions and established personal boundaries within a shared space, even if the physical spaces are separate.
The husband’s argument comparing period underwear to fecal matter, despite the OP’s clarification that the items are rinsed and not soiled with feces, suggests a deep-seated cultural discomfort or disgust response related to menstrual blood. This reaction is common but is being used here to enforce a demand that overrides the OP’s established routine. The OP, by contrast, operates from a place of logic (separate sinks, personal cleaning responsibility) but escalates the conversation by engaging in a counter-comparison (the mouth/vagina analogy) which ultimately shut down constructive dialogue.
The OP’s actions of soaking items in their own sink, given they handle the cleaning duties, are appropriate within their established personal hygiene routine. However, the communication broke down. A constructive recommendation would be for the OP to re-initiate the conversation by validating the husband’s feeling of discomfort—without agreeing with the logic—and proposing a clear boundary solution, such as using a dedicated, covered soaking container in the OP’s designated sink area, thereby physically removing the visible item while acknowledging the shared space dynamic.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.
























The core issue revolves around a disagreement regarding perceived hygiene standards for personal items during menstruation. The Original Poster (OP) feels their method of soaking used period underwear in their dedicated sink is practical and not inherently unsanitary, especially since they clean the bathroom, while the husband views the presence of blood-soaked items in the sink as unacceptable and unsanitary.
Is the OP justified in using their own sink for soaking menstrual items when the husband objects based on a subjective ‘unsanitary’ feeling, or should the OP accommodate their husband’s discomfort by moving the soaking process to a different location, even if it seems less practical?







