Yes you will have great chances of becoming pregnant now. It usually takes 3-7 days after stopping birth control to be able to become pregnant.
No, the point of birth control is so that your body will not ovulate so that you will not get pregnant. Your period is withdrawal bleeding, which is not the same as regular periods.
A couple of months.
Are you sure you're not pregnant?
yes my sister had baby and she was having regular periods for three months in fourth month she start having movement she went to the Doctor and found her self pregnant
if you are pregnant it can cause you to miss some periods
When your pregnant you miss 10 months of periods but as soon as you give birth you are back to odd premenstrals again. Hope this helps
There is nothing wrong and you are not pregnant (if you have not been having intercourse). It is common for a female to not have regular periods until she is older. It may take a while before your period regulates and you have them monthly. Some girls will have one or two periods and not have a period for a year after they start their period.
Yes, if you have not received an injection in 6 months or more and you did not have regular periods while taking the injection. The depo-provera shot suppresses ovulation. Once you begin having regular periods again, then your body should have returned to normal. However, many women still have periods, even when on this type of birth control, so after being off of the injection for several months and once you begin regular periods again, you need to check for ovulation using an ovulation predictor kit, just to make sure. However, realize that it may take as long as 18 months after the last depo-provera shot for periods to return to normal.
Your periods stop and then 9 months later a baby appears.
From when you get your period it can take up to 2 years before you become regular so yes, it can skip several months.
Yes! This can be very normal. It's all in what kind of bc you were using. I used depo for about a year and didn't get a period for a little over a year after stopping. Hello there. Yes this is quite a common occurance in a lot of women after stopping birth control pills. Some lucky women go on to have regular monthly periods while the majority of women, experience irregular periods for a few months after stopping birth control. It generally takes around three months for birth control to be out of your system so by the fourth or fifth month of stopping the pills, your periods should be becomming more regular.