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Here's an anecdote I always assumed was apocryphal: Sally Ride was going to space, the first American woman to do so. Down on Earth, the NASA engineers in charge of equipment wondered about a possible scenario — what if Ride got her period while on the Challenger?
So they came to her with a question: Would 100 tampons be the right number to pack?
No, she told them. It would not be the right number.
If you're a menstruating woman you see the absurdity already, and if you're a man you can pause now to engage in some educational Googling. Either way, I recently called up Brian Odom, NASA's chief historian, expecting he'd tell me that I'd heard it wrong — that of course the top scientific minds of 1983 knew better than to send a hilariously large number of feminine hygiene products for a six-day mission.
"Ah, no," Odom said ruefully. "That actually did happen."
You could give NASA the benefit of the doubt. Maybe engineers were behaving cautiously because nobody knew what would happen to a uterus in zero gravity. But historians I talked to seemed to think that the answer was simpler: NASA just hadn't thought that much about women. The organization was operating with the most cutting-edge technology of the time but was stymied by rudimentary biology; they could do the math to put a man on the moon but couldn't do the math to put tampons on a rocket.