Thank you for reaching out to us.
Skipping some months is typical as a woman approaches menopause.
Blood of a
niddah color found on a tampon makes a woman
niddah, even if it is a small amount and even if there is no subsequent bleeding, because it is inserted internally. For this reason, we generally recommend that a woman
not insert a tampon (or anything else internally) unless she is already certain of her
niddah status.
All that being said, if the bleeding you experienced was heavy enough to be considered a bloodflow, then it would have made you
niddah in any event.
As a rule of thumb, we generally say that bleeding that can be easily contained by a light pantiliner is subject to the leniencies of stains. Heavier bleeding makes a woman
niddah, even if the duration is quite short. Please see our article on
Stains, and our video
here, for further discussion.
For the future, we recommend taking precautions to avoid becoming
niddah from staining until it becomes clear that the bleeding is heavy enough to be considered a bloodflow that makes you
niddah. Learn more
here.
We also recommend abstaining from relations during staining, until about 24 hours after staining has subsided. This is a precaution to avoid a situation of finding blood immediately
after relations. It is not a halachic requirement.
Note that when a woman of your age experiences a ninety-day interval without bleeding, she is generally released from the obligation to observe any
veset days. (However, if she later menstruates anew three times in a row at intervals shorter than ninety days, or if she establishes over three times a consistent interval that is longer than ninety days, she would have further requirements.) Learn more
here.
Please get back to us with any further questions, and please don’t hesitate to reach out again in the future with any questions about your status.
This response was updated on 30 May, 2024.