You have your period a fixed 14 days after you ovulate. So if a woman has her period every 21 days, she ovulates on 21-14=7...the 7th day after the 1st day of her period.
you would ovulate normally. Starting your period is what starts a new cycle, so you would expect to ovulate mid-cycle as usual. ~pawsalmighty
Periods are supposed to occur every 28 days. if yours occurs every 14 days, I would see a gynocologist.
Yes, you can ovulate right after your period if your cycle is short.A typical menstrual cycle is 28 days, which would mean ovulation would be around day 14, but if your cycle is shorter than that you'd likely ovulate earlier too.
Yes, that would be step one in her cycle.
every women ovulates at a differeent time. but generally there is a 48 hour period in the middle of your cycle. so if you always have your period at the beginning of the month then you would ovulate in the middle of the month.
The lining of the uterus breaks down as it normally would and she has her period
Yes, you should still ovulate around the same time. http://wish2conceive.com Yes
A late period could be due to late Ovulation or simply cause by irregular period.
Yes, in fact that is often when women ovulate. During a typical 28 day cycle a woman will likely ovulate on day 14 of her cycle - so if a woman menstruates for 6 days, that would mean she would ovulate 8 days after her period. Unless a woman uses something such as fertility awareness method she cannot know for sure when she is fertile or ovulating - remember cycles change.
you are supposed to have your period every single month to shed the layer that would have protected your baby in the womb. When it is no longer needed it leaves through the vagina and the same will happen next month. So you should have your period every single month (unless on a medication that changes your cycle). If you don't have your period every month i would suggest seeing a doctor to talk about it.
Most women ovulate 14 days before their period. So you would ovulate day 19-21. But that is not always true, it depends on your hormone levels. Are you trying to get pregnant to trying to prevent it??
Bodies aren't clockwork, they miss a beat every now and then for not always identifiable reasons.