What Every Woman Should Know: Detecting Ovulation

By Lea Anderson, published Sep 05, 2007
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Early on we are conditioned in school, by peers, and by our family to know that sex leads to pregnancy, and something must be done to keep pregnancy from happening. So, the reverse must be true, right? If we don't do anything about it and just have sex, pregnancy will happen? Not quite so. Less than 25% of women who are otherwise healthy and are not preventing pregnancy will actually conceive in any given month, with the majority of women taking 4-12 months to conceive a baby. In reality, there were quite a few things left out of your Jr High Sex Ed class, one of the most fascinating of which is the biological mechanisms associated with ovulation.

Ovulation starts months ahead of time, as an ovum matures within the ovary. Luteinizing hormone surges around the middle of your cycle, causing the egg to be released, and it travels down the fallopian tube to meet up with sperm, and create a baby. There are three main ways to detect luteinizing hormone surges and ovulation on your own, and time intercourse appropriately for the desired outcome.

The most notable ovulation detection indicator is your cervical mucus, found when you wipe or in your undies. Noting the consistency and color of the discharge in your undies is a good practice. You will find that towards the middle of your cycle it become copious, clear, and 'egg white' in consistency. This is 'fertile' mucus and is the most sure sign of ovulation.

The second indication of ovulation is seen by taking your temperature daily at the same time each day, before you get up in the morning. A person's average temperature (yours may be different) is 98.6, but then around ovulation it will raise up half to a whole degree and then drop back down after ovulation has occurred.

What Every Woman Should Know: Detecting Ovulation

What every woman should know

Credit: Self

Copyright: Self

Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 4 of 4
 
 
I'm gonna come back to this next time I start having periods after this one. I was never able to pinpoint O but I didn't try too hard either.

Posted on 09/11/2007 at 11:09:00 PM

 
Great work.

Posted on 09/08/2007 at 4:09:00 PM

 
Very good! BTW -- love the pic!

Posted on 09/05/2007 at 11:09:00 PM

 
Fantastic article! When I started trying to conceive, I found it so ironic that I had been taught how to prevent pregnancy, but not how to detect ovulation. I actually remember being taught that you could get pregnant any time of the month. I guess they do this to scare young people into using birth control - lol. I had a steep learning curve.

Posted on 09/05/2007 at 12:09:00 PM

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