Know your ovulation period
You do not know when you ovulate? Read this...
The truth is that, there are a lot of women that do not know when they’re ovulating. They don’t know and never bothered to find out. They know every other thing about merriment but not their ovulation period. They know when they are expected to see blood during monthly cycle but are unaware of when they’re ovulating. This is why a lot of them often fall victim of unplanned pregnancy.
The day a woman sees blood begins the first day of monthly cycle. This is expected to last for some days (usually up to seven days), during this period, the woman is presumed to be infertile. The blood seen is due to desquamated cells of granulosa that are shed from the walls of the uterus.
Immediately after which ovulation takes place under the influence of hormones. During this period, the woman becomes fertile and the uterus is set for any incoming pregnancy, it lasts for more than ten days or less than two weeks. Following ovulation, a woman is expected to experience some changes in her body. These signs are:
- There’s always one degree rise in body temperature thus making it look as if she is sick but she’s not.
- A slight increase in the size of the mammary gland, thus making it becoming a little bit heavy and painful or tender.
- There’s an increase in libido, this is followed by being sexy and wanting to have sex by all means
- Abdominal bloating, not in all cases
- Increase sense of smell and visual acuity.
- Etc.
After ovulation, she enters into another infertile stage that lasts for about a week. If pregnancy occurs before that time, she progressed into the Corpus Graviditatis, or enters into the Corpus Albicans stage, where there’s another shedding of blood from the walls of the uterus and the cycle continues.
It is therefore a big crime for every woman not to know when she’s ovulating, this has got nothing to do with safe sex or prevention of unwanted pregnancy, alone, but has a lot to do with health and knowing why you often feel the way you feel every month. Sometimes, it could be useful in the hospital during administration of drugs or even during surgical procedures. It is not however, a sin to be devoid of an important information but it becomes a punishable offence not trying to know when you’re expected to be acquainted with what you ought to know.
#AlwaysBavic
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