From the past to the present, women have long faced the stigma of menstruation, and it is difficult for them to find widespread support and understanding in society, and it is even difficult for women to directly discuss the psychology and experience of menstrual stigma with each other.
This work is rooted in a personal experience in my childhood that shaped my understanding of personal privacy. At the age of 11, an incident of forced scrutiny over my personal belongings left me feeling exposed and powerless. My parents' rejection of the idea that a child could have privacy—accompanied by their intrusive actions—turned a moment of sharing into one of emotional violation.
In the near future, the world's land resources are becoming increasingly scarce, traditional funerals are gradually becoming history, and funeral methods based on electronic information are emerging. In order to alleviate resource pressure, I established a hypothetical worldview: through the transformation of digital platforms, funerals are more accessible to the general public, it is a more affordable and more visual ritual of life. Based on this hypothesis, I derived the idea of building a platform with the theme of electronic funerals.
PERISE is a website that mainly supports women. We want to explore the menstrual poverty problem that exists in reality. We hope to donate affordable menstrual products to underdeveloped areas through our public welfare donation project, break the menstrual stigma, and promote the development of women's rights.