Pee Safe Reusable Menstrual Cup for Women | Medium Size with Pouch

Expair Date :

(15 customer reviews)

Original price was: 1,200.00৳.Current price is: 900.00৳.

Out of stock

Out of stock

Specification

Scent Name

Steam Sterilizer

,

Large Cup (Pack Of 1)

,

Small Cup (Pack Of 1)

,

Medium Cup (Pack Of 1)

Brand

PEESAFE

Best Sellers Rank

#615 in Health & Personal Care (See Top 100 in Health & Personal Care) #2 in Menstrual Cups

ASIN

B07WZP3NPQ

Item Nype Name

Reusable Menstrual Disc

Included Components

Menstrual Cup

Material

Silicone

Material Type Free

Toxic Free, Rubber Free, BPA Free, Plastic Free, Chemical Free

Colour

Pink

Brand

Feature

RASH-FREE PERIOD – Pee Safe Menstrual Cup Gives You A Rash-Free Period Experience As It Is Inserted In Your Vagina, Freeing You From All The Rashes, Redness & Irritation.

Country of Origin

India

Description

Pee Safe Reusable Menstrual Cup (Medium) – আরামদায়ক ও নিরাপদ পিরিয়ডের জন্য আধুনিক সমাধান

পিরিয়ডের দিনগুলোতে আরও বেশি স্বাধীনতা ও স্বস্তির অভিজ্ঞতা নিন Pee Safe Reusable Menstrual Cup-এর সাথে। এটি একটি আধুনিক, পরিবেশবান্ধব এবং স্বাস্থ্যকর বিকল্প যা স্যানিটারি প্যাড বা ট্যাম্পনের অস্বস্তি থেকে মুক্তি দেয়। এই মিডিয়াম সাইজের কাপটি বিশেষভাবে ডিজাইন করা হয়েছে নারীদের সর্বোচ্চ আরাম এবং দীর্ঘ সময় পর্যন্ত লিকেজ-প্রুফ সুরক্ষা দেওয়ার জন্য।

কেন Pee Safe মেনস্ট্রুয়াল কাপ বেছে নেবেন?

Pee Safe মেনস্ট্রুয়াল কাপ আপনার পিরিয়ডকালীন অভিজ্ঞতায় এক নতুন মাত্রা যোগ করতে পারে। এর অসংখ্য সুবিধার মধ্যে উল্লেখযোগ্য কয়েকটি হলো:

  • সম্পূর্ণ নিরাপদ ও স্বাস্থ্যকর: এটি উন্নত মানের সিলিকন দিয়ে তৈরি, যা খুবই নরম ও নমনীয়। এটি ত্বকের জন্য নিরাপদ এবং র‍্যাশ, চুলকানি বা অস্বস্তির কারণ হয় না।

  • দীর্ঘ সময় সুরক্ষা: এই কাপটি সঠিকভাবে ব্যবহার করলে ১২ ঘণ্টা পর্যন্ত সুরক্ষা দেয়। ফলে আপনাকে বারবার পরিবর্তনের ঝামেলায় যেতে হয় না এবং সারাদিন ও রাত নিশ্চিন্তে থাকা যায়।

  • দীর্ঘস্থায়ী ও সাশ্রয়ী: এটি একটি দীর্ঘস্থায়ী সমাধান, যা আপনাকে প্রতি মাসে প্যাড বা ট্যাম্পন কেনার খরচ থেকে বাঁচায়।

  • পরিবেশবান্ধব: এটি পুনরায় ব্যবহারযোগ্য হওয়ায় পরিবেশের উপর প্লাস্টিক বর্জ্যের ক্ষতিকর প্রভাব কমে আসে।

  • আরামদায়ক ও স্বস্তিদায়ক: এর নরম ও নমনীয় ডিজাইন ব্যবহারের সময় কোনো অস্বস্তি তৈরি করে না। আপনি সাঁতার, খেলাধুলা বা যেকোনো কাজ অনায়াসে করতে পারবেন।

  • সহজে বহনযোগ্য: এর সাথে একটি সুন্দর পাউচ দেওয়া থাকে, যা ভ্রমণ বা বাইরে যাওয়ার সময় কাপটি স্বাস্থ্যসম্মতভাবে সংরক্ষণে সাহায্য করে।

প্রোডাক্টের বৈশিষ্ট্য:

  • উপাদান: উচ্চ মানের নরম সিলিকন

  • সাইজ: মিডিয়াম

  • সুরক্ষার সময়: প্রায় ১২ ঘণ্টা

  • বৈশিষ্ট্য: নরম, নমনীয়, র‍্যাশ-মুক্ত, গন্ধহীন, পুনরায় ব্যবহারযোগ্য

  • সাথে যা থাকছে: ১টি মিডিয়াম সাইজের মেনস্ট্রুয়াল কাপ এবং ১টি স্টোরেজ পাউচ

কাদের জন্য এই মিডিয়াম সাইজ?

যাদের বয়স ১৮ থেকে ৩০ বছরের মধ্যে এবং যারা স্বাভাবিক শিশুর জন্ম দেননি, তাদের জন্য এই মিডিয়াম সাইজের কাপটি বিশেষভাবে উপযুক্ত।

ব্যবহারবিধি:

১. ভাঁজ করুন: আপনার সুবিধা অনুযায়ী ‘C’ বা ‘7’ আকারে কাপটি ভাঁজ করুন।
২. প্রবেশ করান: ভাজ করে যোনিপথে প্রবেশ করান এবং এটি নিজে থেকেই খুলে গিয়ে একটি সীল তৈরি করবে।
৩. ব্যবহার করুন: দীর্ঘ সময় পর্যন্ত নিশ্চিন্তে থাকুন।
৪. বের করুন ও পরিষ্কার করুন: ব্যবহারের পর কাপটি বের করে হালকা গরম পানি ও সাবান দিয়ে পরিষ্কার করে নিন এবং পরবর্তী ব্যবহারের জন্য প্রস্তুত রাখুন।

আপনার পিরিয়ডের দিনগুলোকে আরও সহজ ও পরিবেশবান্ধব করে তুলতে আজই বেছে নিন Pee Safe Reusable Menstrual Cup

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4.4
Based on 15 reviews
5 star
66
66%
4 star
20
20%
3 star
7
7%
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1 star
7
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1-5 of 15 reviews
  1. A
    5.0 out of 5 stars

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.I’m 22, a virgin and a lifelong sanitary pad user. But I hate using pads because my skin is extremely sensitive and I always end up with rashes at the end of my 3rd day of a 6 day long cycle. Which is as horrible as it sounds. I have tried dozens of different pads of different companies and nothing works. And on top of that I have very minimal period etiquette. Which is to say, I have none. So even 10 years since my first cycle, I still end up staining my clothes.I’ve been trying to convince my mom to allow me to use a menstrual cup for years since I first saw the first Moon Cup advertisement in 2015, and its only now that she’s finally allowed me. So mind you, I was quite determined to get it to work.Armed with the knowledge of hundreds of articles about what to do and what not to do, I go into the washroom on my first day of bleeding.And.I won’t lie. It wasn’t easy. I was in the bathroom for 45 minutes, hot shower running to calm myself and another attempt just piling upon the previous attempts.7 tries.The first one I tried with a C fold, but it was too big for my vaginal opening, and the second attempt was made with a 7 fold whose tip made it inside before I got too uncomfortable and pulled out. The third attempt was with a punch down fold, which was just the ideal size, but again, my opening was too small. By the fourth time my muscles had clamped up and nothing was going inside. 5th try was a throw away, before I was giving up for the day. So I stop. Stand under the shower and somehow I’ve decided that tomorrow just sounds like a good idea. It would be my second day and that means more blood and more lubrication and an easier time to get it inside. The 6th try was just another attempt because my muscles had relaxed and I decided to surprise my vagina. And it kind of worked. I read an article where they said to push the cup towards your back and not up, so the 7th try was supposed to be just another try, that WORKED! The cup was in!The next 7 hours were heavenly. I constantly checked on myself to see if I was leaking or not, because I have just never felt like this on my periods. Ever. Before. But I did not. Leak that is.So now it was 7 hours past, and I have to remove it and empty it. I did what the pamphlet of the cup told me to do- push with my muscles and grab hold of the bottom of the cup and pinch it to pull out. Did it work? Hell no. The pinching worked in the most vaguest definition of working. It released a miniscule amount of pressure but the suction still existed. By the time I’d pulled about a third of it out, my vagina hated me, and the suction felt like I was going to die. But the key is to not panic. I shoved two fingers inside and just pressed the body of the cup and with a hiss the suction died and the cup was out! I was having a major wtf moment, but I did wash up and try to push the cup back in. And it did go inside in the very first attempt, now that I had THAT technique down pat. But I could feel the cup inside me. Clearly I had bruised my inner walls with my horrendous removal technique.So I do what all women in such a situation does- I went to r\menstrualcup.There I was told by a fellow netizen that a certain “bun in hotdog” method should work. If I knew who that person was, I’d send them flowers because work it did! My second attempt happened within seconds! I pushed with my vaginal muscles until the stem was out and then relaxed and wiggled my middle fingers in along the walls of the cup, pressing them towards its center. The moment I reached the rim of the cup, I just pushed it inside itself, and voila! The suction is gone and then you just push with your muscles and the cup doth escape the cave!I’m on my 4th day of the first cycle as of writing this review, and the last three days have been the best periods of my life. I’m officially converted and am never going back to sanitary pads. Ever.EDIT: It is my second cycle, and the cup is being very stubborn. It refuses to open easily inside me, and so I’ve leaked. I will have to see if this is something that persists. Also, I’m beginning to find the bottom design of the cup incredibly annoying as the little round of the stem is not as spherical as advertised, instead is a hollow bowl shape that keeps on pinching me, as my cervix has dropped a few millimeters, and is incredibly uncomfortable. The design team should take a look at that, because I don’t think sacrificing the comfort of the customer in lieu of cutting costs at the production is a smart idea.

    339 people found this helpful

  2. A
    5.0 out of 5 stars

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.I’m 22, a virgin and a lifelong sanitary pad user. But I hate using pads because my skin is extremely sensitive and I always end up with rashes at the end of my 3rd day of a 6 day long cycle. Which is as horrible as it sounds. I have tried dozens of different pads of different companies and nothing works. And on top of that I have very minimal period etiquette. Which is to say, I have none. So even 10 years since my first cycle, I still end up staining my clothes.I’ve been trying to convince my mom to allow me to use a menstrual cup for years since I first saw the first Moon Cup advertisement in 2015, and its only now that she’s finally allowed me. So mind you, I was quite determined to get it to work.Armed with the knowledge of hundreds of articles about what to do and what not to do, I go into the washroom on my first day of bleeding.And.I won’t lie. It wasn’t easy. I was in the bathroom for 45 minutes, hot shower running to calm myself and another attempt just piling upon the previous attempts.7 tries.The first one I tried with a C fold, but it was too big for my vaginal opening, and the second attempt was made with a 7 fold whose tip made it inside before I got too uncomfortable and pulled out. The third attempt was with a punch down fold, which was just the ideal size, but again, my opening was too small. By the fourth time my muscles had clamped up and nothing was going inside. 5th try was a throw away, before I was giving up for the day. So I stop. Stand under the shower and somehow I’ve decided that tomorrow just sounds like a good idea. It would be my second day and that means more blood and more lubrication and an easier time to get it inside. The 6th try was just another attempt because my muscles had relaxed and I decided to surprise my vagina. And it kind of worked. I read an article where they said to push the cup towards your back and not up, so the 7th try was supposed to be just another try, that WORKED! The cup was in!The next 7 hours were heavenly. I constantly checked on myself to see if I was leaking or not, because I have just never felt like this on my periods. Ever. Before. But I did not. Leak that is.So now it was 7 hours past, and I have to remove it and empty it. I did what the pamphlet of the cup told me to do- push with my muscles and grab hold of the bottom of the cup and pinch it to pull out. Did it work? Hell no. The pinching worked in the most vaguest definition of working. It released a miniscule amount of pressure but the suction still existed. By the time I’d pulled about a third of it out, my vagina hated me, and the suction felt like I was going to die. But the key is to not panic. I shoved two fingers inside and just pressed the body of the cup and with a hiss the suction died and the cup was out! I was having a major wtf moment, but I did wash up and try to push the cup back in. And it did go inside in the very first attempt, now that I had THAT technique down pat. But I could feel the cup inside me. Clearly I had bruised my inner walls with my horrendous removal technique.So I do what all women in such a situation does- I went to r\menstrualcup.There I was told by a fellow netizen that a certain “bun in hotdog” method should work. If I knew who that person was, I’d send them flowers because work it did! My second attempt happened within seconds! I pushed with my vaginal muscles until the stem was out and then relaxed and wiggled my middle fingers in along the walls of the cup, pressing them towards its center. The moment I reached the rim of the cup, I just pushed it inside itself, and voila! The suction is gone and then you just push with your muscles and the cup doth escape the cave!I’m on my 4th day of the first cycle as of writing this review, and the last three days have been the best periods of my life. I’m officially converted and am never going back to sanitary pads. Ever.EDIT: It is my second cycle, and the cup is being very stubborn. It refuses to open easily inside me, and so I’ve leaked. I will have to see if this is something that persists. Also, I’m beginning to find the bottom design of the cup incredibly annoying as the little round of the stem is not as spherical as advertised, instead is a hollow bowl shape that keeps on pinching me, as my cervix has dropped a few millimeters, and is incredibly uncomfortable. The design team should take a look at that, because I don’t think sacrificing the comfort of the customer in lieu of cutting costs at the production is a smart idea.

    339 people found this helpful

  3. A
    5.0 out of 5 stars

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.I’m 22, a virgin and a lifelong sanitary pad user. But I hate using pads because my skin is extremely sensitive and I always end up with rashes at the end of my 3rd day of a 6 day long cycle. Which is as horrible as it sounds. I have tried dozens of different pads of different companies and nothing works. And on top of that I have very minimal period etiquette. Which is to say, I have none. So even 10 years since my first cycle, I still end up staining my clothes.I’ve been trying to convince my mom to allow me to use a menstrual cup for years since I first saw the first Moon Cup advertisement in 2015, and its only now that she’s finally allowed me. So mind you, I was quite determined to get it to work.Armed with the knowledge of hundreds of articles about what to do and what not to do, I go into the washroom on my first day of bleeding.And.I won’t lie. It wasn’t easy. I was in the bathroom for 45 minutes, hot shower running to calm myself and another attempt just piling upon the previous attempts.7 tries.The first one I tried with a C fold, but it was too big for my vaginal opening, and the second attempt was made with a 7 fold whose tip made it inside before I got too uncomfortable and pulled out. The third attempt was with a punch down fold, which was just the ideal size, but again, my opening was too small. By the fourth time my muscles had clamped up and nothing was going inside. 5th try was a throw away, before I was giving up for the day. So I stop. Stand under the shower and somehow I’ve decided that tomorrow just sounds like a good idea. It would be my second day and that means more blood and more lubrication and an easier time to get it inside. The 6th try was just another attempt because my muscles had relaxed and I decided to surprise my vagina. And it kind of worked. I read an article where they said to push the cup towards your back and not up, so the 7th try was supposed to be just another try, that WORKED! The cup was in!The next 7 hours were heavenly. I constantly checked on myself to see if I was leaking or not, because I have just never felt like this on my periods. Ever. Before. But I did not. Leak that is.So now it was 7 hours past, and I have to remove it and empty it. I did what the pamphlet of the cup told me to do- push with my muscles and grab hold of the bottom of the cup and pinch it to pull out. Did it work? Hell no. The pinching worked in the most vaguest definition of working. It released a miniscule amount of pressure but the suction still existed. By the time I’d pulled about a third of it out, my vagina hated me, and the suction felt like I was going to die. But the key is to not panic. I shoved two fingers inside and just pressed the body of the cup and with a hiss the suction died and the cup was out! I was having a major wtf moment, but I did wash up and try to push the cup back in. And it did go inside in the very first attempt, now that I had THAT technique down pat. But I could feel the cup inside me. Clearly I had bruised my inner walls with my horrendous removal technique.So I do what all women in such a situation does- I went to r\menstrualcup.There I was told by a fellow netizen that a certain “bun in hotdog” method should work. If I knew who that person was, I’d send them flowers because work it did! My second attempt happened within seconds! I pushed with my vaginal muscles until the stem was out and then relaxed and wiggled my middle fingers in along the walls of the cup, pressing them towards its center. The moment I reached the rim of the cup, I just pushed it inside itself, and voila! The suction is gone and then you just push with your muscles and the cup doth escape the cave!I’m on my 4th day of the first cycle as of writing this review, and the last three days have been the best periods of my life. I’m officially converted and am never going back to sanitary pads. Ever.EDIT: It is my second cycle, and the cup is being very stubborn. It refuses to open easily inside me, and so I’ve leaked. I will have to see if this is something that persists. Also, I’m beginning to find the bottom design of the cup incredibly annoying as the little round of the stem is not as spherical as advertised, instead is a hollow bowl shape that keeps on pinching me, as my cervix has dropped a few millimeters, and is incredibly uncomfortable. The design team should take a look at that, because I don’t think sacrificing the comfort of the customer in lieu of cutting costs at the production is a smart idea.

    339 people found this helpful

  4. A
    5.0 out of 5 stars

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.I’m 22, a virgin and a lifelong sanitary pad user. But I hate using pads because my skin is extremely sensitive and I always end up with rashes at the end of my 3rd day of a 6 day long cycle. Which is as horrible as it sounds. I have tried dozens of different pads of different companies and nothing works. And on top of that I have very minimal period etiquette. Which is to say, I have none. So even 10 years since my first cycle, I still end up staining my clothes.I’ve been trying to convince my mom to allow me to use a menstrual cup for years since I first saw the first Moon Cup advertisement in 2015, and its only now that she’s finally allowed me. So mind you, I was quite determined to get it to work.Armed with the knowledge of hundreds of articles about what to do and what not to do, I go into the washroom on my first day of bleeding.And.I won’t lie. It wasn’t easy. I was in the bathroom for 45 minutes, hot shower running to calm myself and another attempt just piling upon the previous attempts.7 tries.The first one I tried with a C fold, but it was too big for my vaginal opening, and the second attempt was made with a 7 fold whose tip made it inside before I got too uncomfortable and pulled out. The third attempt was with a punch down fold, which was just the ideal size, but again, my opening was too small. By the fourth time my muscles had clamped up and nothing was going inside. 5th try was a throw away, before I was giving up for the day. So I stop. Stand under the shower and somehow I’ve decided that tomorrow just sounds like a good idea. It would be my second day and that means more blood and more lubrication and an easier time to get it inside. The 6th try was just another attempt because my muscles had relaxed and I decided to surprise my vagina. And it kind of worked. I read an article where they said to push the cup towards your back and not up, so the 7th try was supposed to be just another try, that WORKED! The cup was in!The next 7 hours were heavenly. I constantly checked on myself to see if I was leaking or not, because I have just never felt like this on my periods. Ever. Before. But I did not. Leak that is.So now it was 7 hours past, and I have to remove it and empty it. I did what the pamphlet of the cup told me to do- push with my muscles and grab hold of the bottom of the cup and pinch it to pull out. Did it work? Hell no. The pinching worked in the most vaguest definition of working. It released a miniscule amount of pressure but the suction still existed. By the time I’d pulled about a third of it out, my vagina hated me, and the suction felt like I was going to die. But the key is to not panic. I shoved two fingers inside and just pressed the body of the cup and with a hiss the suction died and the cup was out! I was having a major wtf moment, but I did wash up and try to push the cup back in. And it did go inside in the very first attempt, now that I had THAT technique down pat. But I could feel the cup inside me. Clearly I had bruised my inner walls with my horrendous removal technique.So I do what all women in such a situation does- I went to r\menstrualcup.There I was told by a fellow netizen that a certain “bun in hotdog” method should work. If I knew who that person was, I’d send them flowers because work it did! My second attempt happened within seconds! I pushed with my vaginal muscles until the stem was out and then relaxed and wiggled my middle fingers in along the walls of the cup, pressing them towards its center. The moment I reached the rim of the cup, I just pushed it inside itself, and voila! The suction is gone and then you just push with your muscles and the cup doth escape the cave!I’m on my 4th day of the first cycle as of writing this review, and the last three days have been the best periods of my life. I’m officially converted and am never going back to sanitary pads. Ever.EDIT: It is my second cycle, and the cup is being very stubborn. It refuses to open easily inside me, and so I’ve leaked. I will have to see if this is something that persists. Also, I’m beginning to find the bottom design of the cup incredibly annoying as the little round of the stem is not as spherical as advertised, instead is a hollow bowl shape that keeps on pinching me, as my cervix has dropped a few millimeters, and is incredibly uncomfortable. The design team should take a look at that, because I don’t think sacrificing the comfort of the customer in lieu of cutting costs at the production is a smart idea.

    339 people found this helpful

  5. A
    5.0 out of 5 stars

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.

    This was my first time using a cup and it has changed my life.I’m 22, a virgin and a lifelong sanitary pad user. But I hate using pads because my skin is extremely sensitive and I always end up with rashes at the end of my 3rd day of a 6 day long cycle. Which is as horrible as it sounds. I have tried dozens of different pads of different companies and nothing works. And on top of that I have very minimal period etiquette. Which is to say, I have none. So even 10 years since my first cycle, I still end up staining my clothes.I’ve been trying to convince my mom to allow me to use a menstrual cup for years since I first saw the first Moon Cup advertisement in 2015, and its only now that she’s finally allowed me. So mind you, I was quite determined to get it to work.Armed with the knowledge of hundreds of articles about what to do and what not to do, I go into the washroom on my first day of bleeding.And.I won’t lie. It wasn’t easy. I was in the bathroom for 45 minutes, hot shower running to calm myself and another attempt just piling upon the previous attempts.7 tries.The first one I tried with a C fold, but it was too big for my vaginal opening, and the second attempt was made with a 7 fold whose tip made it inside before I got too uncomfortable and pulled out. The third attempt was with a punch down fold, which was just the ideal size, but again, my opening was too small. By the fourth time my muscles had clamped up and nothing was going inside. 5th try was a throw away, before I was giving up for the day. So I stop. Stand under the shower and somehow I’ve decided that tomorrow just sounds like a good idea. It would be my second day and that means more blood and more lubrication and an easier time to get it inside. The 6th try was just another attempt because my muscles had relaxed and I decided to surprise my vagina. And it kind of worked. I read an article where they said to push the cup towards your back and not up, so the 7th try was supposed to be just another try, that WORKED! The cup was in!The next 7 hours were heavenly. I constantly checked on myself to see if I was leaking or not, because I have just never felt like this on my periods. Ever. Before. But I did not. Leak that is.So now it was 7 hours past, and I have to remove it and empty it. I did what the pamphlet of the cup told me to do- push with my muscles and grab hold of the bottom of the cup and pinch it to pull out. Did it work? Hell no. The pinching worked in the most vaguest definition of working. It released a miniscule amount of pressure but the suction still existed. By the time I’d pulled about a third of it out, my vagina hated me, and the suction felt like I was going to die. But the key is to not panic. I shoved two fingers inside and just pressed the body of the cup and with a hiss the suction died and the cup was out! I was having a major wtf moment, but I did wash up and try to push the cup back in. And it did go inside in the very first attempt, now that I had THAT technique down pat. But I could feel the cup inside me. Clearly I had bruised my inner walls with my horrendous removal technique.So I do what all women in such a situation does- I went to r\menstrualcup.There I was told by a fellow netizen that a certain “bun in hotdog” method should work. If I knew who that person was, I’d send them flowers because work it did! My second attempt happened within seconds! I pushed with my vaginal muscles until the stem was out and then relaxed and wiggled my middle fingers in along the walls of the cup, pressing them towards its center. The moment I reached the rim of the cup, I just pushed it inside itself, and voila! The suction is gone and then you just push with your muscles and the cup doth escape the cave!I’m on my 4th day of the first cycle as of writing this review, and the last three days have been the best periods of my life. I’m officially converted and am never going back to sanitary pads. Ever.EDIT: It is my second cycle, and the cup is being very stubborn. It refuses to open easily inside me, and so I’ve leaked. I will have to see if this is something that persists. Also, I’m beginning to find the bottom design of the cup incredibly annoying as the little round of the stem is not as spherical as advertised, instead is a hollow bowl shape that keeps on pinching me, as my cervix has dropped a few millimeters, and is incredibly uncomfortable. The design team should take a look at that, because I don’t think sacrificing the comfort of the customer in lieu of cutting costs at the production is a smart idea.

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