No woman without dignity: how Zentissa builds a world where hygiene is not a privilege!
Introduction
In a world where everything seems visible, one bloodcurdling reality often remains hidden: thousands of women who have to choose between basic necessities and menstrual products every month. What is taken for granted by many is a silent struggle for others. Zentissa wants to change this.
The story
Menstruation is a part of life. No choice. No detail. For years, a constant in the lives of millions of women. And yet, even in Belgium, there is a significant group of girls and women who have to improvise every month. With toilet paper. With old rags. With whatever they can spare. With whatever is affordable at the moment.
Zentissa was born from a simple yet powerful idea: to extend Merani's sustainable values to something that recurs for many women monthly. From the choice of consciously affordable and sustainable products with more meaning, the question arose: why shouldn't we do that for something so closely connected to life? From that thought, Zentissa began to search for sustainable solutions that make menstrual care less burdensome.
Every woman deserves understanding, comfort, and solutions! Reusable panties, cups, and pads that are not only sustainable but also bring peace of mind.
The action
To make that difference, we as a startup consciously keep our prices fairly low. Not because the value of our products is low, but because menstrual care should remain accessible to as many women as possible! But honest also means transparent: behind every product there are also costs, taxes, packaging, and shipping. Every purchase helps us grow and makes it possible to support more women step by step.
Because menstrual care should not be a luxury, we are temporarily opening a small initiative where 30 women casually a FREE SLIP can receive.
Would that make a difference for you?
Feel free to send us an email at [].
No purchase necessary.
No spam. Discreetly handled. Shipping within Belgium.
No marketing stunt. But a beginning. An invitation—to open up the conversation. To break taboos.
And to show that small gestures can have a big impact.