When does a woman get her period every month?

When does a woman get her period every month?

Menstruation is a physiological reaction for women that arrives on time every month, but occasionally it may come early or late. The time of menstruation is different for almost every woman and needs to be determined based on individual circumstances. Similarly, not every month's menstruation arrives on time and it is affected by many factors, which also needs to be determined based on individual circumstances.

This question is different for everyone. It depends on your personal menstrual cycle. A complete menstrual cycle starts from the first day of menstruation to the first day of the next menstruation.

Generally, this cycle is calculated as one month, but in fact it varies from person to person. Here, I will explain the safe period theoretically, so calculate it based on one month. During this menstrual cycle, there are generally the following situations: First, the menstrual period, which is generally about a week. Pay attention to the two words "about". The length of the menstrual period also varies from person to person and does not have to be a week. After the menstrual period ends, a normal period without bleeding will begin. About a week later, ovulation occurs. Ovulation is a physiological phenomenon that occurs every month in normal women of childbearing age, preparing for pregnancy and reproduction. The ovulation period is the day in the menstrual cycle when it is easiest to get pregnant, which is also what many people call the most dangerous day.

Ovulation is actually just a moment, but the activity of the egg cell in the body is relatively slow, so it may survive in the female body for about 2 days before it dies and is absorbed, so pregnancy is possible during these days of ovulation. If the egg is not fertilized, it dies and is absorbed by the body. About 2 weeks later, the next menstrual period will come again, making it exactly 4 weeks, which is a menstrual cycle. So, except for the ovulation period and the menstrual period, theoretically, you can have unprotected sex without getting pregnant at other times. This is the so-called safe period, but it is purely theoretical.

Many people simplify it to one week before and after menstruation, or 2 or 3 days before and 2 or 3 days after. Unfortunately, in real life, various factors change the menstrual cycle and ovulation, so the safe period is definitely not safe: First of all, the menstrual cycle. The menstrual cycle of many women is not necessarily very accurate, which makes it difficult to calculate the ovulation period. Although we can roughly rely on "14 days before the next menstruation" to calculate, there are further factors that make this calculation unreliable, that is: ovulation is too complicated, and there are too many factors that affect it. Weather changes, environmental changes, changes in residence, mood changes, work changes, etc. will all affect ovulation. Some women may ovulate when they are very excited, so ovulation is unpredictable. It is the uncertainty of ovulation that causes the unsafety of the safe period, because you don’t know when you will ovulate. Perhaps just when you think it is safe, your sexual partner ovulates due to some very minor factors. This can even happen right after your period or when it’s about to end. So once again, I emphasize: the safe period is absolutely not safe

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