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No. Speak to your doctor. This pill might not be for you but there are others. Or maybe the injection would work better.
Yes you can go to military.com to check out their Fitness plans with step by step guides to help you plan a good Fitness plan that will work for you and help you succeed in your Fitness plan.
If your periods are irregular then you should talk to your doctor about investigating the cause - although if you're in your teens this is normal as it takes time for your body to regulate. You can't force your periods to start when they are not due, your periods will only start once you've gone through a menstrual cycle: i.e. after ovulation.The birth control pill can't make your periods come, nor can the morning after pill - the birth control pill suppresses your cycles (bleeding on the pill is a withdrawal bleed, not menstruation) so has the opposite effect of regulating your cycles, and the morning after pill prevents ovulation.
Plan B (when plan A didn't work) is a massive dose of levonorgestrel. It stops pregnancy by preventing the implantation of the fertilized egg.
Antibiotics don't delay periods but if you are on the pill you risk pregnancy since the antibiotics makes the pills not work.
Andy Willoughby's 3 Step Plan is a multilevel marketing plan for selling Xango juice. Most of the people involved work from home turning leads into sales over the phone.
I personally like Lowestrin21. Your less likely to gain weight on lowestrin21. It can also help your acne. Also your periods become lighter. And you may even skip a few periods. I had no bad side effects at all.
You have to go slowly. Step by step, go accordingly to a mapped out plan. And you must always keep your cool. Other than that, just be yourself!
No it doesn't make the pill work faster.
no
No, won't work. Your body determines this. If you want to have less periods you can take a new pill that will allow that, but it is too late now for you. It also takes a month before the pill is effective. Buck up, mother nature calls, my dear.
No, it will not. Acyclovir is an anti-viral, not an antibiotic, and it will therefore not interfere with your birth control pill.