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SailGP's Liv Mackay on managing periods in male-dominated sport - Go with the Flow, part two

SailGP's Liv Mackay on managing periods in male-dominated sport - Go with the Flow, part two

NZ Heralda day ago
Experienced sportswomen are calling for a shift in attitudes - breaking the bias and normalising discussions around menstruation in sport.​ In the second of a four-part series, Bonnie Jansen speaks with sailor Liv Mackay about navigating the challenges of being the sole female on her team and how she manages her period while spending long hours at sea.
For Liv Mackay, using the bathroom at sea isn't as simple as it is for her male SailGP teammates.
There's no discreet way to pee overboard, and changing a tampon mid-race is nearly impossible.
So she strategises her bathroom breaks as carefully as she does her sailing maneuvers - because if she doesn't, she'll be forced to bleed freely into her wetsuit.
'I personally go for the [menstrual] cup,' Mackay told the Herald.
'Because you can leave it in for up to 8 hours, and I find that really good.'
At 27, Mackay is the sole woman and strategist on New Zealand's Black Foils' F50 catamaran, competing in a global sailing league.
The series spans 12 cities, with events held at temporary waterfront venues - where a portable toilet is often the only bathroom available.
Liv Mackay (left) strategises her bathroom breaks as carefully as she does her sailing maneuvers - because if she doesn't, she'll be forced to bleed freely into her wetsuit. Photo / Supplied
She said the reusable menstrual cup is her preferred sanitary item because not only does it hold the most amount of blood for those long hours spent at sea, but it also means she can avoid changing a tampon, using an unsanitary bathroom.
'The tech site is great - but we have portaloos generally or nice versions of portaloos, so I don't really like spending a lot of time in there.'
It's always been difficult for Mackay to express these types of challenges she faces managing her period as a professional sailor - given that it's such a male-dominated sport.
'[Growing up] sailing, I was always with all men. All my coaches were men, so I've never had a single memory of discussing [my period] at sailing.
'I always have a memory of hiding it.'
It's a contrast to what she experienced outside of sport when attending Woodford House for seven years – a boarding school for girls in Havelock North.
'I remember getting my first period there and being in an environment where I could talk about it very openly at school, which was, I guess, quite fortunate,' she said.
In addition to planning and managing her period to avoid leakage or discomfort while sailing, Mackay also battles with the physical symptoms of menstruation.
'I personally struggle a lot with cramps, which is quite hard, and nausea.'
She said this escalates even more when she's stressed or nervous about racing.
Mackay said the reusable menstrual cup is her preferred sanitary item because it holds the most amount of blood for those long hours spent at sea. Photo / Supplied
Thankfully for Mackay, she's not completely isolated, as there's at least one woman sailor on each team.
Mackay said she'll use opportunities between races to confide in the fellow female athletes, where they discuss shared experiences.
She said due to the stress of constant travel and competition, many athletes experience irregular cycles, which can lead to unexpected periods while out on the water - which often prompts last-minute bathroom scrambles and sharing of products.
'I'll be in the bathroom with friends at SailGP and they would have got their [period] on the water.'
'That doesn't really go away.'
Mackay said it's not always easy to discuss these issues during Shark Week with her Black Foils teammates, helmsman Peter Burling and wing trimmer Blair Tuke.
'I wouldn't say I have conversations openly...It definitely never comes up in conversation. I think there's a time and a place. But I definitely feel comfortable to have conversations if I feel like I'm struggling with something.
'I 100% feel like they're very supportive.'
She explained that there are moments when the team is preparing to head out, and she urgently needs to use the bathroom.
'There are often times when we're starting to go, and I really need to go to the bathroom, and I'll tell Pete or Blair, and they know it's the priority for me to leave.
'Everyone's super respectful.'
Mackay said Burling has shown genuine concern and support regarding her limited access to bathroom facilities while on the water.
Mackay said Peter Burling has shown genuine concern and support regarding her limited access to bathroom facilities while on the water. Photo / SailGP
'[The boys pee] about 12 times every time we sail,' Mackay laughed.
'It's honestly a huge challenge [for women] in sailing, and I'd say Pete's been the one to be the biggest supporter to really push me to find solutions. He's like, 'it's a basic human need and we've got to figure this out'.'
'There's no silver bullet, but yeah, it's really interesting; they are very supportive.'
Conversations with her male teammates have started to pop up around weigh-ins before each event. Because teams must stay under a combined weight limit, Mackay said it's harder for her to maintain a consistent weight compared to the men, due to hormonal fluctuations.
'I'm learning more about myself. I think as I do that, then I will be able to communicate and share more and get [the boys] to understand more.'
'I've never spent enough time reflecting on myself, but it obviously directly affects performance. So I think that's really important.'
High Performance Sport New Zealand (HPSNZ) health women in performance sport lead, Sue Robson told the Herald they're working to create safer environments in male dominated codes.
'Creating environments that support safety, voice and choice for female athletes in what remains a male dominated HP coaching environment is essential and another identified priority for us from our early engagement.
'Ensuring knowledge and training for all coaches of female athletes (male and female) that covers all of the female-specific health and performance areas is essential.
'[Coaches] have such a big influence on athletes' lives...One comment here and there can have a big influence on female athletes.' Photo / Corey Fleming
'HPSNZ's core knowledge courses have, to date, covered some of the most critical female-specific health topics around low energy availability and safeguarding,' Robson said.
'Healthy Women in Performance Sport has this year been working with coaches to identify their needs specific to coaching female athletes.'
Mackay is grateful that these conversations are becoming more normal and encourages young female sailors to find outlets so they don't feel isolated in their struggles.
'My advice would be really to find someone that you feel comfortable having a conversation with, if that's your parents, hopefully it's your coach as well, your friends - and really lean into that.
'All those different people would really change how you feel - if you don't feel good one day, or they'll support if you're on the water, if you need to go in or anything like that.
'There's no judgment or shame around what you're experiencing.'
'There's no judgment or shame around what you're experiencing,' Mackay said. Photo / SailGP
To the men in the sailing, Mackay is calling for them to educate themselves on menstruation, where they can.
'If you have a partner, wife or anyone, I think that would be a great place to start.
Each female is unique, so you can't just learn a blueprint for all, but, really, being curious - maybe listening to a podcast - I think it's really important, especially if you're a coach.
'You have such a big influence on athletes' lives...One comment here and there can have a big influence on female athletes.'
Tuesday: Irene van Dyk on her silent struggle playing netball while menstruating, hiding the reality and avoiding conversations.
Wednesday: Sailor Liv Mackay on navigating the challenges of being the sole female on her team and how she manages her period while spending long hours at sea.
Thursday: Aimee Didierjean on the stigma in gymnastics, competing in tight uniforms while navigating pads and tampons, and how intense training led to her period arriving late. ​
Friday: Ultra-marathon runner Shannon-Leigh Litt on embracing her flow and how she adapts her training to align with her cycle.
Bonnie Jansen is a multimedia journalist in the NZME sports team. She was named New Zealand's Best Up and Coming journalist in 2025. She's a football commentator and co-host of the Football Fever podcast and was part of the Te Rito cadetship scheme before becoming a fulltime journalist.
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Gymnast Aimee Didierjean: Breaking silence on periods and RED-S - Go with the Flow, part three
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Experienced sportswomen are calling for a shift in attitudes - breaking the bias and normalising discussions around menstruation in sport.​ In the third of a four-part series, Bonnie Jansen speaks with gymnast Aimee Didierjean on the stigma in her sport, competing in tight uniforms while navigating pads and tampons, and how intense training led to her period arriving late. ​ Aimee Didierjean once saw her delayed period as a badge of honour. 'I was chuffed with myself, to be fair,' she told the Herald, reflecting on how she was one of the only teenage gymnasts in her team yet to start menstruating. 'I thought I was I know I wasn't.' Years later, she learned it was a warning sign of a deeper issue affecting many young gymnasts. In high-performance sport, silence around menstruation has long been the norm. For Didierjean, that silence masked a serious condition - Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S). At just 13, she was training in artistic gymnastics 27 hours a week. By 16, she still hadn't had her period. Aimee Didierjean, former New Zealand artistic gymnast. Photo / Joe Allison She said this extreme overtraining was what led to her later diagnosis, RED-S - the condition where the functioning of multiple body systems is impaired. Though the condition was attacking multiple systems in her body, Didierjean, now 22, felt relieved that she could compete in artistic gymnastics more freely than her competitors and teammates. When Didierjean was growing up, she said her teammates would tell her, 'You're so lucky, you don't want your period, it's just such a burden.' She said they were always 'very scared' of leaking through the leotard. '[Having your period] definitely was a big deterrent for [them] competing, especially because at that time, we weren't allowed to wear shorts when we were competing. '[You could only wear] tampons, because you can't really hide a pad - those are too bulky. 'That's quite invasive, especially if you're quite young as well. 'And the undies as well - if they start to show, there was always that fear that you'd get deducted points taken off for having undies show.' 'So in that stage, some girls would compete, some girls wouldn't compete.' The former New Zealand representative said it wasn't just her menstruation that was affected by RED-S, but she was also constantly injured and once suffered a fractured femur. 'It was only after a couple of injuries that my physio was actually, like, 'that's not normal' and did a few other investigations.' Body image pressures, under-eating, and athletes being weighed were also prevalent when Didierjean was growing up as these too played into her diagnosis of RED-S and the eventual delay of her period. Now, having taken up a role as an athlete adviser on the Gymnastics New Zealand technical committee, she said it's so refreshing that the stigma around the sport has started to change. 'There's so many different body types out there, and they're all young and different ages, and they're just comfortable and they're confident and they're chatting and they're having fun. 'I think social media definitely had a big change in strong is got your own powers and your own strengths, and to embrace them. 'It's really cool to see that - especially in this sport where it used to be, 'oh you need to be stick and ballerina type'.' Thanks to an overhaul of Gymnastics New Zealand's attire rules last year, gymnasts in all codes are allowed to wear shorts or leggings over their leotards, and won't be penalised for visible underwear when they compete in New Zealand. 'That opens up that avenue,' Didierjean said. 'Where girls might have dropped out before because they couldn't wear a pad when they competed.' Affinity Gymnastics Academy head coach, Angela Meier, said she has also noticed a change in the stigma. 'I've got a very open relationship with all my gymnasts, and they normally come to me about anything like that,' she said. 'If they've got [their period], if they need something, if they need support with anything.' Angela Meier, head coach at Affinity Gymnastics Academy in Christchurch. Photo / Joe Allison. Competing in gymnastics in the 1980s and 1990s, Meier said leaking through their leotard was a constant fear. 'That's what you had in the back of your mind, is 'what's gonna happen, is things gonna happen that I can't control.' You didn't have these things like these period undies or you weren't allowed to wear shorts, you just had to be in a leotard.' Coaching now for 30 years, Meier reflects on the positive change, given that periods were once frowned upon in the sport. 'My day was a little bit different. Gymnasts probably didn't get [their period] as early. If you got it, you're deemed as, 'oh, you're developing.' 'Pads could be used, but you're very self-conscious of that. You didn't want to wear a leotard because you could see everything.' Meier is encouraging more normalised discussions: 'It's just knowing your gymnast, knowing that these girls at the end of the day are just human beings. 'They're gonna grow up. 'Just supporting it along the way and be open to getting to know them and what they're like, how it's affecting [them] a little bit, because that may affect their training as well.' When Didierjean finally experienced what most women dread – and endured it once a month – she found it didn't affect her in the same way it did many others. The difference, she said, came down to the way she trained in her sport, causing her that RED-S diagnosis. 'My periods were so light, they never really affected me in the aspect of cramps and mood swings,' she said. Still, as every woman knows, navigating your period always requires some adjustments. 'It was more just making sure that I didn't bleed through anything. Just making sure I had everything to be prepared for in training because trainings were four hours long, so just making sure that everything was right. 'If you've got a white floor, it's a little bit iffy every time you take a seat, you might get blood on it.' For her, Didierjean hopes conversations on the topic remain open. 'It's something that's so normal, and it should be normalised, and that conversation is so important. 'RED-S is out there. So if you don't have a period, there's a strong component that it could be RED-S having a wee play in it as well.' Tuesday: Irene van Dyk on her silent struggle playing netball while menstruating, hiding the reality and avoiding conversations. Wednesday: Sailor Liv Mackay on navigating the challenges of being the sole female on her team and how she manages her period while spending long hours at sea. Thursday: Aimee Didierjean on the stigma in gymnastics, competing in tight uniforms while navigating pads and tampons, and how intense training led to her period arriving late. ​ Friday: Ultra-marathon runner Shannon-Leigh Litt on embracing her flow and how she adapts her training to align with her cycle. Bonnie Jansen is a multimedia journalist in the NZME sports team. She was named New Zealand's Best Up and Coming journalist in 2025. She's a football commentator and co-host of the Football Fever podcast and was part of the Te Rito cadetship scheme before becoming a fulltime journalist.

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SailGP's Liv Mackay on managing periods in male-dominated sport - Go with the Flow, part two
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NZ Herald

timea day ago

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SailGP's Liv Mackay on managing periods in male-dominated sport - Go with the Flow, part two

Experienced sportswomen are calling for a shift in attitudes - breaking the bias and normalising discussions around menstruation in sport.​ In the second of a four-part series, Bonnie Jansen speaks with sailor Liv Mackay about navigating the challenges of being the sole female on her team and how she manages her period while spending long hours at sea. For Liv Mackay, using the bathroom at sea isn't as simple as it is for her male SailGP teammates. There's no discreet way to pee overboard, and changing a tampon mid-race is nearly impossible. So she strategises her bathroom breaks as carefully as she does her sailing maneuvers - because if she doesn't, she'll be forced to bleed freely into her wetsuit. 'I personally go for the [menstrual] cup,' Mackay told the Herald. 'Because you can leave it in for up to 8 hours, and I find that really good.' At 27, Mackay is the sole woman and strategist on New Zealand's Black Foils' F50 catamaran, competing in a global sailing league. The series spans 12 cities, with events held at temporary waterfront venues - where a portable toilet is often the only bathroom available. Liv Mackay (left) strategises her bathroom breaks as carefully as she does her sailing maneuvers - because if she doesn't, she'll be forced to bleed freely into her wetsuit. Photo / Supplied She said the reusable menstrual cup is her preferred sanitary item because not only does it hold the most amount of blood for those long hours spent at sea, but it also means she can avoid changing a tampon, using an unsanitary bathroom. 'The tech site is great - but we have portaloos generally or nice versions of portaloos, so I don't really like spending a lot of time in there.' It's always been difficult for Mackay to express these types of challenges she faces managing her period as a professional sailor - given that it's such a male-dominated sport. '[Growing up] sailing, I was always with all men. All my coaches were men, so I've never had a single memory of discussing [my period] at sailing. 'I always have a memory of hiding it.' It's a contrast to what she experienced outside of sport when attending Woodford House for seven years – a boarding school for girls in Havelock North. 'I remember getting my first period there and being in an environment where I could talk about it very openly at school, which was, I guess, quite fortunate,' she said. In addition to planning and managing her period to avoid leakage or discomfort while sailing, Mackay also battles with the physical symptoms of menstruation. 'I personally struggle a lot with cramps, which is quite hard, and nausea.' She said this escalates even more when she's stressed or nervous about racing. Mackay said the reusable menstrual cup is her preferred sanitary item because it holds the most amount of blood for those long hours spent at sea. Photo / Supplied Thankfully for Mackay, she's not completely isolated, as there's at least one woman sailor on each team. Mackay said she'll use opportunities between races to confide in the fellow female athletes, where they discuss shared experiences. She said due to the stress of constant travel and competition, many athletes experience irregular cycles, which can lead to unexpected periods while out on the water - which often prompts last-minute bathroom scrambles and sharing of products. 'I'll be in the bathroom with friends at SailGP and they would have got their [period] on the water.' 'That doesn't really go away.' Mackay said it's not always easy to discuss these issues during Shark Week with her Black Foils teammates, helmsman Peter Burling and wing trimmer Blair Tuke. 'I wouldn't say I have conversations definitely never comes up in conversation. I think there's a time and a place. But I definitely feel comfortable to have conversations if I feel like I'm struggling with something. 'I 100% feel like they're very supportive.' She explained that there are moments when the team is preparing to head out, and she urgently needs to use the bathroom. 'There are often times when we're starting to go, and I really need to go to the bathroom, and I'll tell Pete or Blair, and they know it's the priority for me to leave. 'Everyone's super respectful.' Mackay said Burling has shown genuine concern and support regarding her limited access to bathroom facilities while on the water. Mackay said Peter Burling has shown genuine concern and support regarding her limited access to bathroom facilities while on the water. Photo / SailGP '[The boys pee] about 12 times every time we sail,' Mackay laughed. 'It's honestly a huge challenge [for women] in sailing, and I'd say Pete's been the one to be the biggest supporter to really push me to find solutions. He's like, 'it's a basic human need and we've got to figure this out'.' 'There's no silver bullet, but yeah, it's really interesting; they are very supportive.' Conversations with her male teammates have started to pop up around weigh-ins before each event. Because teams must stay under a combined weight limit, Mackay said it's harder for her to maintain a consistent weight compared to the men, due to hormonal fluctuations. 'I'm learning more about myself. I think as I do that, then I will be able to communicate and share more and get [the boys] to understand more.' 'I've never spent enough time reflecting on myself, but it obviously directly affects performance. So I think that's really important.' High Performance Sport New Zealand (HPSNZ) health women in performance sport lead, Sue Robson told the Herald they're working to create safer environments in male dominated codes. 'Creating environments that support safety, voice and choice for female athletes in what remains a male dominated HP coaching environment is essential and another identified priority for us from our early engagement. 'Ensuring knowledge and training for all coaches of female athletes (male and female) that covers all of the female-specific health and performance areas is essential. '[Coaches] have such a big influence on athletes' comment here and there can have a big influence on female athletes.' Photo / Corey Fleming 'HPSNZ's core knowledge courses have, to date, covered some of the most critical female-specific health topics around low energy availability and safeguarding,' Robson said. 'Healthy Women in Performance Sport has this year been working with coaches to identify their needs specific to coaching female athletes.' Mackay is grateful that these conversations are becoming more normal and encourages young female sailors to find outlets so they don't feel isolated in their struggles. 'My advice would be really to find someone that you feel comfortable having a conversation with, if that's your parents, hopefully it's your coach as well, your friends - and really lean into that. 'All those different people would really change how you feel - if you don't feel good one day, or they'll support if you're on the water, if you need to go in or anything like that. 'There's no judgment or shame around what you're experiencing.' 'There's no judgment or shame around what you're experiencing,' Mackay said. Photo / SailGP To the men in the sailing, Mackay is calling for them to educate themselves on menstruation, where they can. 'If you have a partner, wife or anyone, I think that would be a great place to start. Each female is unique, so you can't just learn a blueprint for all, but, really, being curious - maybe listening to a podcast - I think it's really important, especially if you're a coach. 'You have such a big influence on athletes' comment here and there can have a big influence on female athletes.' Tuesday: Irene van Dyk on her silent struggle playing netball while menstruating, hiding the reality and avoiding conversations. Wednesday: Sailor Liv Mackay on navigating the challenges of being the sole female on her team and how she manages her period while spending long hours at sea. Thursday: Aimee Didierjean on the stigma in gymnastics, competing in tight uniforms while navigating pads and tampons, and how intense training led to her period arriving late. ​ Friday: Ultra-marathon runner Shannon-Leigh Litt on embracing her flow and how she adapts her training to align with her cycle. Bonnie Jansen is a multimedia journalist in the NZME sports team. She was named New Zealand's Best Up and Coming journalist in 2025. She's a football commentator and co-host of the Football Fever podcast and was part of the Te Rito cadetship scheme before becoming a fulltime journalist.

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