Apparently, the chances of pregnancy are lower at the start of a woman's period and increase just after her periods. But there is no predictable time during the month when the risk of pregnancy is absent. So yes, it is possible to get pregnant during a period.
No. Once you're off the pill your period should normalise within a few months and then your chances of getting pregnant are back to where they would have been w/o the pill.
it is possible but chances are rare.
Greyson blood type is O+
Greyson blood type is O+
The womans body works in a mysterious way. She might be gettin bigger breast from her eating habbits and or its in her genes.
shot
Singular - yd (w/ or w/o period (.) Plural - yds (w/ or w/o period (.)
The chances of their being your parents are negligible.
She Has Her Period In The Middle Of Night At 10 O Clock
She Has Her Period In The Middle Of Night At 10 O Clock
:-O
It is the time line, as well as we know it, for Earth's evolution. Each period is defined by a major geological or biological event. The first geologic time scale was proposed by British geologist Arthur Holmes (1890-1965) in 1913 Precambrian time (4567 to 542 mya) · Hadean Eon (4567 to 3800 mya) · Archaeon Eon (3800 to 2500 mya) · Proterozoic Eon (2500 to 542 mya) Phanerozoic Eon (542 mya to present) · Paleozoic Era (542 mya to 251 mya) o Cambrian Period (542 to 488.3 mya) o Tommotion Stage (534 to 530 mya) o Ordovician Period (488.3 to 443.7 mya) o Silurian Period (443.7 to 416 mya) o Devonian Period (416 to 359.2 mya) o Carboniferous Period (359.2 to 299 mya) o Mississippian Epoch (359.2 to 318.1 mya) o Pennsylvanian Epoch (318.1 to 299 mya) o Permian Period (299 to 251 mya) · Mesozoic Era (251 to 65.5 mya) o Triassic Period (251 to 199.6 mya) o Jurassic Period (199.6 to 145.5 mya) o Cretaceous Period (145.5 to 65.5 mya) · Cenozoic Era (65.5 mya to today) o Paleogene Period (65.5 to 23. 03 mya) o Tertiary Period (65.5 to 2.58 mya) o Paleocene Epoch (65.5 to 54.8 mya) o Eocene Epoch (54.8 to 33.7 mya) o Oligocene Epoch (33.7 to 23.03 mya) · Neogene Period (23.03 mya to today) o Miocene Epoch (23.03 to 5.3 mya) o Pliocene Epoch (5.3 to 2.58 mya) o Quaternary Period (2.58 mya to today) o Pleistocent Epoch (2.58 mya to 11,400 yrs ago) o Holocene Epoch (11,400 yrs ago to today)