Historically, menstruation has been constructed as a Tabú and has been associated with social exclusion of women and girls, as their rights has been affected. For that reason, the objective of this investigation it’s to explore the menstruation experiences of homeless women in the streets of Bogotá; beginning from the Menstruation itself, the "Imaginaries" and the Political will around it. The investigation has a qualitative approach, and it’s associated to the Hermeneutical paradigm. It’s built in three parts: The first one it’s an historical contextualization of the menstruation from the religious field, the hygiene, the privacy, and the media. Followed by semi-structured interviews, workshops, and body cartography from environments as the streets and step homes. The Imaginaries will be exposed from the voice of the women, their methods to manage Menstruation from products and spaces, the influence of psychoactive substances' consumption, the shame, the symptoms, and sensations drawn by their menstrual experience in the street. And finally, according to the Political Will, it will be exposed the set of tools proposed by the mayoralty (district) (en caso de que alcaldía aplique, deja mayoralty), and the different entities, with the purpose of doing an analysis of the strategies built that answers the judgment T 389/19.