If by 'not safe' you mean the days that a woman could get pregnant, that would be ovulation and up to a week beforehand when fertile cervical mucus is produced. Typically this would be days 7-16 however unless using fertility awareness method as birth control you can't know when the 'unsafe' days or 'safe' days are - thus unless you want to get pregnant always use contraception.
The menstrual cycle starts with menstruation. The firswt day of your menstrual cycle is considered to be the first day of true bleeding during your menstrual phase.
The typical menstrual cycle in "text book" terms is considered to be anything between 21 to 32 day cycle. yes that's normal
A normal menstrual cycle is considered to be 28 days long, give or take a few days on either side. Therefore, a 60 day menstrual cycle is not considered to be normal for a 30 year old.
The first day of the menstrual cycle is the first day of the menstrual phase - aka first day of the period/menstruation. The menstrual cycle is called this (rather than ovulation cycle) because menstruation is the most noticeable external sign of the cycle.
A typical woman's menstrual cycle is around 28 days, but it can vary from 21 to 35 days. The first day of the cycle is considered to be the first day of menstrual bleeding.
Yes, a 45 day cycle is still considered normal. The average menstrual cycle is 28 days but everyone is different and as such a longer cycle is perfectly normal.
The first day of a womans menstrual cycle is also the first day of menstruation.
You can't have a two day menstrual cycle. A menstrual cycle is the entire reproductive cycle, including ovulation and menstruation, so you can't possibly have a two day menstrual cycle. You may experience two day menstruation, or mid-cycle spotting for two days.
Yes, anywhere from a 28-32 is considered normal.
The menstrual cycle is the whole reproductive cycle, I think maybe you mean the menstrual phase. The first day of menstruation is day one of your menstrual cycle, ovulation typically occurs around 14 days into the menstrual cycle - although everyone is different.
The menstrual cycle begins Day 1 of your period, about half way through the cycle you ovulate and the last day is the day before your next period starts. Day 1 begins the cycle all over again. The last day of your cycle tells you the length of your cycle, on average between 24 and 34 days, although longer and shorter cycles are still "normal".
The menstrual cycle begins with day 1 which is the first day of bleeding. The last day of the cycle is the day before the next period begins.