The textbook defines menarche as the onset of menstruation (Miller, 73). The first picture was taken earlier in the week in my dorm room. It is a picture of some of the essentials a woman may need when she is on her period. The boxes include supplies used during a period, and the chocolate is an essential resource to get through one's period. The reason I chose to do Menarche, and menstruation as a whole, is because of the stigma of talking about menstruation and the fact that it is a taboo topic. Many girls reach menarche in their early teens and experience it until they are around 51 years old, when they reach menopause. When working in the field, an anthropologist may want to analyze the stigma behind menarche and menstruation in different cultures, and the rights of women to the resources they need during menstruation. The textbook also discusses how girls in high-income countries usually reached menarche earlier than girls in low-income countries, and an anthropologist could research the reasons behind this.
The second picture was also taken in my dorm room during the week, and it can be used to describe cultural competence. Cultural competence is defined, among Western-trained health professionals, as awareness of and respect for beliefs and practices that differ from those of Western medicine (Miller,78). The book in the picture, The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, is about the lack of cultural competence in Minnesota of Hmong healing traditions. Lia, a Hmong child, develops epilepsy, and the story follows her and her parents' interactions with a US hospital compared to their traditions in healing. For example, the hospital would prescribe medicine for Lia, but the Hmong parents didn’t believe that the medicine helped (and they couldn’t read the instructions) so they didn’t give it to her. They also thought that she had the disease because a dab (evil spirit) stole her soul, not because of a biological reason. The American doctors didn’t understand why they wouldn’t give her the medicine, so they called child protective services because they considered it child abuse. Because of this situation with Lia, doctors at the hospital started to become more culturally competent, so much so that they now employ Shamans for Hmong in the hospital so that they can perform traditional healing ceremonies alongside western ceremonies.










