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- Moon Gift Set
Moon Gift Set
SKU:
£29.00
£29.00
Unavailable
per item
Get that fresh out of the spa feeling.
Comforting, relaxing and relieving.
The Moon Collection comes wrapped in recycled tissue paper and in a luxury gift box. Each box helps plant a tree.
10% of sales of the Moon Collection are donated to The Homeless Period Belfast* to help fight period poverty.
Comforting, relaxing and relieving.
The Moon Collection comes wrapped in recycled tissue paper and in a luxury gift box. Each box helps plant a tree.
10% of sales of the Moon Collection are donated to The Homeless Period Belfast* to help fight period poverty.
What's Inside
Moon Bath Salts (300g) - Prepare to turn your bathroom into a spa! The Moon bath salts have been carefully blended with Clary Sage, Lavender, Rose & Cypress essential oils, Black Lava salt, Epsom Salts, Pink Himalayan salts & botanicals.
Moon Bath Bomb -A period shouldn’t stop anything but a sentence. This bath bomb has been carefully blended with clary sage, lavender, rose & cypress essential oils. These are known to help with those deflating period pains and give you that little treat when you need it most.
Moon Body Oil (30ml)- Looking for that fresh out of the spa vibe? Connect to La Luna with our Moon Oil & leave your skin feeling simply magical!
Packaging
The Moon gift set is 100% natural, vegan & eco-friendly. The bath bomb is wrapped in home compostable NatureFlex. The card is recycled & recyclable.
The set comes wrapped in recycled tissue paper, padded with crinkled kraft paper & in a sustainable kraft gift box. All our gift boxes are sustainably sourced and are forest positive - meaning more trees are planted than it takes to make them!
We offer a gift note option so just pop your message in the box above :)
Please note all products in this set contain sweet almond oil and are made in an environment that handles all essential oils. Suitable for vegans. We do not test on animals, just consenting humans.
The set comes wrapped in recycled tissue paper, padded with crinkled kraft paper & in a sustainable kraft gift box. All our gift boxes are sustainably sourced and are forest positive - meaning more trees are planted than it takes to make them!
We offer a gift note option so just pop your message in the box above :)
Please note all products in this set contain sweet almond oil and are made in an environment that handles all essential oils. Suitable for vegans. We do not test on animals, just consenting humans.
The Homeless Period Belfast*
Founded in 2016, The Homeless Period Belfast was initially started up to provide period packs to mainly rough sleepers and homeless people, Homeless Period Belfast learnt very quickly how prevalent period poverty was, extending to disadvantaged school girls, refugees & asylum seekers, women seeking refuge, teenagers in care, survivors of human trafficking, women who depend on foodbanks, drug & alcohol addiction groups, low income single parents and women leaving prison who are now all among the groups we support with period packs.
The taboo surrounding periods and the issue of period poverty are inextricably linked. Periods are very much still stigmatised; silenced at any mention and we are made to feel embarrassed and often ashamed. As a result, we do not talk openly about periods and therefore we do not think of period poverty being an issue for many disadvantaged and vulnerable women. Rough sleepers have felt too uncomfortable to ask passers-by to go to a shop and buy them the products, women at food banks have been too embarrassed to request tampons, young girls have missed school so they didn’t have to put pressure on their low-income parents to buy sanitary towels. The HPB work to change this by striving for a cultural shift in attitudes towards menstruation. They aim to end the taboo and reshape the conversation on periods by holding workshops, panels and meetings, while also sharing resources and information on our online social media platforms.
In the UK, 1 in 10 girls have missed school because of a lack of menstrual products and in Ireland 2019, 61% of girls reportedly missed school because of their period. Aware of these statistics and of those for various other groups, the HPB launched our #MenstruationMatters campaign in 2019 calling for all toilets in public and private buildings to provide free period products.
The founder Katrina comments: ‘It doesn’t take long for the penny to drop when you realise free essential hygiene items such as, toilet roll, soap, hand towels and sanitary waste disposal bins are already being provided and that there is absolutely no reason for period products not to be added to that list, unless of course it’s because men don’t need them? Any toilet that requires toilet roll, requires period products in exactly the same way.’
_________________________________________________________________________________
In November 2020, the HPB met with the NI Assembly Education Committee and presented a petition with over 5000 signatures, along with evidence from surveys of school students and school teachers throughout NI exposing how a lack of essential period products at school has been disrupting their teaching and education. The key findings were:
74% of school girls had left school early or missed a day entirely because of a lack of period products at school
87% said that a lack of period products has negatively impacted their attention in class and/or school attendance
91% have had to use toilet roll as a temporary measure
84% of teachers said that they have witnessed how the ongoing pandemic has exacerbated the need period products in schools.
60% of teachers have had to buy period products out of their own wages.
The Education Minister in Northern Ireland, Peter Weir, backed the campaign call and requested approval from the whole NI Executive which successfully resulted in a decision to provide all schools in NI, primary, post primary and special schools, with free period products by September 2021.
If every public toilet can provide free toilet roll, soap, and hand towels for bodily functions we have no control over, how does having a period, another bodily function we have no control over, make it any different? Any toilet that requires toilet roll, requires period products in exactly the same way!
The vision of the campaign is not only to eradicate period poverty - making the need for our initiative redundant as the aim is not to grow; it is to cease to exist – but it is also to consider the needs of all women and girls who are caught out when menstruating outside of the home unexpectedly without these essential items at reach. Being caught out and consequently having to turn to layered toilet roll as a temporary and risky replacement, leads to discomfort and worry and should never be the circumstance for anyone, especially not for those in education.
The taboo surrounding periods and the issue of period poverty are inextricably linked. Periods are very much still stigmatised; silenced at any mention and we are made to feel embarrassed and often ashamed. As a result, we do not talk openly about periods and therefore we do not think of period poverty being an issue for many disadvantaged and vulnerable women. Rough sleepers have felt too uncomfortable to ask passers-by to go to a shop and buy them the products, women at food banks have been too embarrassed to request tampons, young girls have missed school so they didn’t have to put pressure on their low-income parents to buy sanitary towels. The HPB work to change this by striving for a cultural shift in attitudes towards menstruation. They aim to end the taboo and reshape the conversation on periods by holding workshops, panels and meetings, while also sharing resources and information on our online social media platforms.
In the UK, 1 in 10 girls have missed school because of a lack of menstrual products and in Ireland 2019, 61% of girls reportedly missed school because of their period. Aware of these statistics and of those for various other groups, the HPB launched our #MenstruationMatters campaign in 2019 calling for all toilets in public and private buildings to provide free period products.
The founder Katrina comments: ‘It doesn’t take long for the penny to drop when you realise free essential hygiene items such as, toilet roll, soap, hand towels and sanitary waste disposal bins are already being provided and that there is absolutely no reason for period products not to be added to that list, unless of course it’s because men don’t need them? Any toilet that requires toilet roll, requires period products in exactly the same way.’
_________________________________________________________________________________
In November 2020, the HPB met with the NI Assembly Education Committee and presented a petition with over 5000 signatures, along with evidence from surveys of school students and school teachers throughout NI exposing how a lack of essential period products at school has been disrupting their teaching and education. The key findings were:
74% of school girls had left school early or missed a day entirely because of a lack of period products at school
87% said that a lack of period products has negatively impacted their attention in class and/or school attendance
91% have had to use toilet roll as a temporary measure
84% of teachers said that they have witnessed how the ongoing pandemic has exacerbated the need period products in schools.
60% of teachers have had to buy period products out of their own wages.
The Education Minister in Northern Ireland, Peter Weir, backed the campaign call and requested approval from the whole NI Executive which successfully resulted in a decision to provide all schools in NI, primary, post primary and special schools, with free period products by September 2021.
If every public toilet can provide free toilet roll, soap, and hand towels for bodily functions we have no control over, how does having a period, another bodily function we have no control over, make it any different? Any toilet that requires toilet roll, requires period products in exactly the same way!
The vision of the campaign is not only to eradicate period poverty - making the need for our initiative redundant as the aim is not to grow; it is to cease to exist – but it is also to consider the needs of all women and girls who are caught out when menstruating outside of the home unexpectedly without these essential items at reach. Being caught out and consequently having to turn to layered toilet roll as a temporary and risky replacement, leads to discomfort and worry and should never be the circumstance for anyone, especially not for those in education.