Yes. Your cervical mucus will change over the course of your cycle. This has everything to do with ovulation. Try tracking your cervical mucus and it will tell you when you are ovulating, and when your period is about to start. You will find that after your period finishes, you have little cervial mucus. You will feel "dry" when you touch your vagina and any mucus you have will be white or yellowish and feel either creamy or sticky. This mucus is actually very acid and is poison to sperm, it will kill them. As you approach ovulation your mucus will change, it will become clear and very slippery - very much like raw egg whites. And there will be a lot of it. Your vagina will feel wet or damp. This is the natural lubricant for sex and the cervical mucus actually helps sperm live longer and move through the vagina. Once you start to see this mucus, you know you are about to ovulate and are "fertile". This will usually last about 2-4 days. Once ovulation is over, the mucus will once again become sticky and no longer be clear. If you count 14 days from the middle of your "clear & slippery" cycle, you will find what day your period will come on. The mucus will remain sticky right up until your period starts.
In my opinion it feels most like Jello Pudding and tastes like pastachios
thick white cream
Here is advice and input: * That is normal for a woman's body, it doesn't mean you are pregnant. * It is possible. Some women continue to have a large amount of discharge after they ovulate, clear up through the date that the period is due. Others are dry. If you notice something that is abnormal from the way you are each month, it is always possible you are pregnant. Just wait until you are late for your period and take a HPT. Hello. This could simply be left over ovulation discharge. But it could also be pregnancy discharge. Personally I would go with it being ovulation discharge. But if the discharges increases a lot....significantly increases...then see your doctor for a pregnancy blood test.
Like cake glaze
Creamy with. A mixer of blood
The snot like mucus is called the cervical mucus. If a woman has a 28 day cycle, then her period will normal start 14 days after the cervical mucus appears.
Yes, it's possible to have cervical mucus present at various points in your menstrual cycle. While cervical mucus changes consistency leading up to and during ovulation, it can also be present at other times due to hormonal fluctuations. It's important to not solely rely on cervical mucus as an indicator of ovulation and consider other fertility signs as well.
I was wondering the same thing. I've been on otrtho tricylen for 2yrs. I think it is possible because I have "normal" or "common" changes in my cervical mucus as well. During the second week after my period it is very thin and clear but a couple days before my period it gets thicker. I believe I am ovulating on the pill. If this is anything like what you've experienced I think it's possible. . If you're taking a combination pill which consists of estrogen and progesterone, it can thicken the cervical mucus, further preventing your chances of pregnancy.
Yes. I had the same problem. You have hostile Cervical mucus if around ovulation your mucus becomes very thick and pasty. Sperm cannot survive in that type of mucus. Your mucus should be wet or look like eggwhites. I hope this sit helps http://www.fertilityuk.org/nfps401.html
When you are ovulating, the consistency of your cervical mucus may seem like a raw egg white. It looks clear and slippery, as well. The volume of the mucus increases during ovulation.
The ferning test is a method used to assess the consistency of cervical mucus to determine a woman's fertility status. It involves observing the formation of fern-like patterns in dried cervical mucus under a microscope, indicating the presence of estrogen and increased chances of ovulation.
Urine. Ammonia. The smell of urine does not change in early pregnancy. Or late pregnancy.