Yes, that's fine and does not increase the risk of pregnancy. Just make sure you don't go more than 7 days without an active pill.
You will experience a withdrawal bleed within 7 days of stopping BC pills then your normal period will occur anytime after the withdrawal bleed
If you're using the combination pill then you don't get a period, instead you experience a withdrawal bleed as a result of a drop in synthetic hormones when going from your active to inactive pills. If you skipped your last withdrawal bleed this doesn't effect your next withdrawal bleed, you will get it as normal during your next placebo week.
Yes, when you stop birth control pills, the hormone levels in your body drop. Then you have withdrawal bleeding.
Period can arrive anytime after the withdrawal bleed from 4 weeks to 8 weeks. Its different in every woman.
Nothing, this is a perfectly normal withdrawal bleed from missing your pills.
You will probably get a withdrawal bleed a few days later. If you have been taking birth control pills regularly you should not BE ovulating. It's possible to use some birth control pills as emergency contraception; perhaps that's what you were attempting. For more information, see the link to the related question, below.
PMS is a completely nonsense term that means nothing at all.On hormonal birth control you don't get a period, you skip your withdrawal bleed.If you skip your withdrawal bleed it should be the same as normal on active pills, there's no progesterone drop so no symptoms associated with a withdrawal bleed.
No bleeding that you have on birth control pills is an "actual period." Instead, it's withdrawal bleeding brought on by the drop in hormones when you miss pills or when you have your normally scheduled placebo week.
Try making a question out of what you would like to know. A lot of people treat this site as a search engine, I think, and they expect information to appear just because they submit key words. The contributors here are all people, and it is sometimes hard to turn words into questions. My guess is that you want to know if a person can experience withdrawal after being on sugar pills (placebos). No, not unless the person psychologically induces withdrawal-like symptoms, which is not impossible. I'm not sure about the 'bleed' part.
When you stop taking birth control you can now become pregnant. If you had an irregular period before birth control pills, your period will go back to irregular periods. Heavier and longer periods may occur as well. You may also experience withdrawal bleeding which your body's way of ridding the birth control hormones.
This can happen yes. The spotting is your withdrawal bleed & is nothing to do with Ovulation. If you had conceived you wouldn't be Ovulating but perform a pregnancy test to be on the safe side.
NO. The green pills are just so you continue to take a pill every day. It is not a 'period' you have while on them just a 'withdrawal' bleed so if you want to skip it for a holiday or something, miss them out and go straight to the next pack.