Simply because your paycheck stops, doesn’t imply your interval does.
That’s what Taylor DeBerry realized earlier this 12 months as she stood beneath the fluorescent lights of a Nevada greenback retailer, scanning the cabinets for necessities. Contemporary off a layoff and attempting to stretch each greenback, she stared down the female care aisle looking for comparable choices when an epiphany arose, “We shouldn’t have to purchase this like this.”
“I’m unemployed and nonetheless bleeding,” she stated. “If I’m going by way of this, there are such a lot of different ladies and different individuals who menstruate as nicely and are going by way of the identical factor.”
That second impressed Durations of Transition, a grassroots drive DeBerry launched to assist unemployed ladies and different menstruators entry the interval merchandise they want however typically can’t afford.
DeBerry sat down with theGrio not too long ago to debate how she turned her personal layoff right into a mission to fulfill an pressing, ignored want.
“That is only a blessing,” she stated. “I used to be not anticipating this could occur so quick, however I really feel like that’s simply what God positioned on me to do.”
By Durations of Transition, the title a play on each a menstrual cycle and being in transition after job loss, DeBerry distributes free, high-quality menstrual care kits stocked with natural pads and tampons from manufacturers. The trouble is powered by an Amazon wishlist and GoFundMe, and guided by her perception that dignity shouldn’t disappear when the paychecks do.
“Simply because we’re going by way of a interval of transition or a interval of feeling lower than, our merchandise that we use don’t must really feel that method too,” she stated.
In simply six weeks, DeBerry has raised over $6,500 and shipped 140 care packages, with one other 250 folks already on a waitlist. Her front room has change into a small warehouse as she and her mom pack and mail the bins themselves.
“Nobody needs to really feel alone,” she stated. “Layoffs, it’s not talked about, are very taboo, particularly for girls and Black ladies and coping with one thing [that is] only a regular bodily perform, it’s all taboo. Nobody needs to speak about it.”
The drive is addressing a rising disaster in actual time. In an period when interval poverty is already on the rise all over the world, there have been widespread layoffs this 12 months, and Black ladies have been disproportionately affected, with nicely over 300,000 having misplaced their jobs since February.
“I feel it’s much more than that,” DeBerry stated.
For most of the ladies looking for assist, the hardship has been felt instantly. Some have advised DeBerry they’ve postponed job interviews as a result of they couldn’t afford pads; others describe the anxiousness of utilizing bathroom paper as makeshift safety.
“I needed to cease studying [their stories] for a bit,” she admitted, including that the submissions would vary from ladies she might absolutely empathize with to tales she might solely think about, like these of moms and wives balancing household duty amid job loss.
“I’d lay down at night time and I’d simply be scrolling and crying … However that helps me perceive my why in all of this and why I’m doing this.”
With the primary spherical of care packages shipped, DeBerry is now making ready the subsequent batch and streamlining her course of for what she hopes will change into a nationwide motion. Individuals from throughout the nation have already reached out to ask how they will begin native chapters, and she or he’s wanting to associate with bigger organizations to achieve unhoused and incarcerated ladies subsequent.
“I’ve at all times wished to assist others and I really feel this specific neighborhood is so important to the financial system,” she defined.
She affectionately calls the ladies she serves her “Interval Posse.”
“They’re the face of the model,” she stated. “They’re the why. With out them, who would I be serving to?”





















