Yes, a girl can miss, skip, and even bleed for longer than a week if she stops taking the pill. The pill is set in place to trick your body and after getting used to the tricks your body has to readjust to what it used to do. The switch can take any where from a week to an actual month. My suggestion is that when you first become concerned about Birth Control you should ask your doctor about EVERYTHING you'll need to know about starting AND STOPPING.
Your period will come naturally. Birth control does not help you get your period. Your body decides when you will get your period.
the birth control is probably it.
Continue taking your birth control pills as scheduled.
Yes
Most women will have their period within a week or two of stopping birth control pills, and may be fertile from the first day they stop taking it. If you have stopped taking birth control and have not had your regular period as expected, you need a pregnancy test to be sure whether you are pregnant or not.
You should continue taking the birth control pill daily as scheduled regardless of bleeding.
Yes, it is possible for your period to be late or stop completely from any hormonal birth control.
If you get your period while on birth control, you should continue using your birth control as scheduled. Bleeding does not change the schedule for taking your pill or changing your patch or ring.
Period can arrive anytime after the withdrawal bleed from 4 weeks to 8 weeks. Its different in every woman.
regular
depends on the birth control. if you're taking the regular pills, you'll still get your period, but, unlike mine, it wont be at wacky times.
If you start the birth control pill on the day your period starts, you'll have immediate protection.