Could you be pregnant? Sometimes in early pregnancy when a women is due for her period she will have implantation bleeding, much lighter (light pink or brown spotting usually) and only lasts for a day or two. Unless you are trying to get pregnant a women doesn't think nothing of it except that it was lighter this month. Your doctor should have explained that when taking the Birth Control pill it also changes your hormone levels to a degree. It is quite normal for your periods to be irregular when you first start taking the birth control pill and it could take a year before you level out. WARNING: Birth control pills or patches are not good for women and smoking while on birth control is a no-no. The medical facts have birth control linked to Breast cancer, blood clots, and in some cases stroke or heart attacks. Please do your homework on the net! Go onto www.Google.com and ask: Are birth control pills good for you. It will be up to you to become knowledgeable on this subject and make your own decision.
No. Some forms of birth control pills actually cause you to not get your period for months.
the birth control is probably it.
By using hormonal Birth Control Pills you can safely go months without a period.
Yes. Some birth control methods stops a women from getting a period for up to 15-18 months at times. Especially if you are using the Depo-provera birth control shot.
The birth control pill will not stimulate or jump start your period. Talk to your health care provider if your period is more than three months late.
You did not get your period while you were taking your sugar pills you either could possibly be pregnant, or your birth control is making you have light or no period at all. You should take a pregnancy test or visit a physician to take a pregnancy test to know your answer at your convenience. Or if you have been on birth control for over 3 months, and take you take your birth control everyday and at the same time, your birth control may have even given you a gift of not getting a period at all. Choose which answer based on have you been taken your pills properly to determine if you may be pregnant or not.
If you take the BCP everyday as directed you are 99.5% protected from pregnancy.
It's very unlikely that you'd have a normal period the first month off birth control (I'm assuming by 'birth control' what you actually mean is the combination pill - please don't use these terms interchangeably, there are many forms of birth control!). Your first 'period' will be your withdrawal bleed as normal, but after that it may take a few months to get a real period again. It can also take up to 12 months for your cycles to regulate again once you stop using hormonal birth control.
After stopping birth control, your period is likely to return to its previous pattern. If you were irregular prior to starting the pill, you're likely to be irregular after you stop.
yes, you can, especially after 3 or 4 months on the pill
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.
Very soon