Ovulation will typically occur two weeks prior to menstruation - or day 14 during the average 28 day cycle - however unless you use a Birth Control method such as Fertility Awareness Method to track your fertility day-to-day you have no way of accurately determining when you are ovulating.
on the 14th day for a women who is having 28 days cycle.
Ovulation occurs at the middle of the cycle. So, if your cycle is 28 days you would ovulate approximately day 13 to day 15. If your cycle is other than 28 days your ovulation would change.
You can also cramp during ovulation.
Follicle stage -> ovulation -> corpus luteum -> menstruation
Follicle stage -> ovulation -> corpus luteum -> menstruation
if u get it every month maybe its ovulation spotting
yes
For the majority of women, ovulation starts every 23 to 35 days but this can be delayed due to environmental factors such as stress. Ovulation pain is one of the common symptoms of ovulation and is felt as a pain around the lower abdomen. A drop in body temperature is also noticed during ovulation and a normal increase is faced after ovulation. The cervical mucus will also be watery like a raw egg-white during this period, these symptoms are all normal symptoms to face during the period of ovulation.
Yes. That is normal actully. You can have menstrual pains up to 7 days. :)
Yes, you can have cramping during ovulation.
when you ovulate has nothing to do with when you have sex, unprotected or otherwise. to get a clearer picture of the times ovulation occurs during the woman's reproductive cycle go to the link below. (The Menstrual cycle).
A normal ovulation is when your LH phase is between 10-16 days long. This phase can not be counted from the 1st day of your period rather is is counted from you ovulation date to your period. This shows that the uterus has a healthy environment for immplantation. To determine when you ovulate you must temp or use OPK (Ovulation prediction kits)
There are no herbs that would stop menstrual bleeding. Menstruation is a normal healthy function, you should not be seeking to stop this process.
Menstrual cramps are common but they are not a normal part of healthy menstruation at all. Some people may have underlying health conditions to cause menstrual cramps, but most people can prevent menstrual cramps all together - so don't think they're something you have to just tolerate.