This was so so helpful!!! I’ve never heard it explained this way and this in depth. Would you be able to cover if there are any supplements/vitamins that women should start taking when trying to conceive? Also, if there are any supplements that can help a woman to conceive if she is having trouble?
I’m so glad!! Great suggestion, I’ll put it on the list for sure. Off the top of my head, Optivite is a great place to start. You can find it on Amazon. If a woman is having trouble conceiving though, I would tell her to probably see a NaProTechnology doctor (see link in video description), and start charting her cycle so she can pinpoint when ovulation is occurring to focus intercourse during that time. If you want more info on that, let me know and I can send!
So if a woman has had a successful implantation, her cervical mucous should be dry until the day of the expected period date because of rise in progesterone? Am i right?
Great question! So no matter whether a woman gets pregnant or not, her progesterone should rise right after ovulation, drying up her cervical mucus until her next period. If she is pregnant, then progesterone will stay high. If she is not pregnant, her progesterone will drop about 2 weeks after ovulation resulting in her next period. My next video will be all about progesterone so stay tuned!
After ovulation the number one sign of pregnancy is your discharge with continue. For me it’s creamy discharge. I’ve had 3 planned pregnancy. If my discharge continues during the 2 week wait I know I’m pregnant way before getting a positive pregnancy test. Taking mucinex D will help produce more CM.
Thanks for the clarification! During pregnancy many women still have cervical mucus due to high levels of estrogen in addition to progesterone. However, that mucus will probably be very different than the kind she sees around ovulation (creamy rather than super stretchy, clear, and slippery). And yes, mucinex does help increase cervical mucus!
This was so so helpful!!! I’ve never heard it explained this way and this in depth. Would you be able to cover if there are any supplements/vitamins that women should start taking when trying to conceive? Also, if there are any supplements that can help a woman to conceive if she is having trouble?
I’m so glad!! Great suggestion, I’ll put it on the list for sure. Off the top of my head, Optivite is a great place to start. You can find it on Amazon. If a woman is having trouble conceiving though, I would tell her to probably see a NaProTechnology doctor (see link in video description), and start charting her cycle so she can pinpoint when ovulation is occurring to focus intercourse during that time. If you want more info on that, let me know and I can send!
@@TruthandFertility thank you so much! I would love more info!!
Great! You can email me at truthandfertility@gmail.com and I can send more info there.
Once again so educational. Thank you Haley for sharing your knowledge
So if a woman has had a successful implantation, her cervical mucous should be dry until the day of the expected period date because of rise in progesterone? Am i right?
Great question! So no matter whether a woman gets pregnant or not, her progesterone should rise right after ovulation, drying up her cervical mucus until her next period. If she is pregnant, then progesterone will stay high. If she is not pregnant, her progesterone will drop about 2 weeks after ovulation resulting in her next period.
My next video will be all about progesterone so stay tuned!
@@TruthandFertility Thank you. Looking forward to it.
After ovulation the number one sign of pregnancy is your discharge with continue. For me it’s creamy discharge. I’ve had 3 planned pregnancy. If my discharge continues during the 2 week wait I know I’m pregnant way before getting a positive pregnancy test. Taking mucinex D will help produce more CM.
@@PRETTYMSJAY23 thank you
Thanks for the clarification! During pregnancy many women still have cervical mucus due to high levels of estrogen in addition to progesterone. However, that mucus will probably be very different than the kind she sees around ovulation (creamy rather than super stretchy, clear, and slippery). And yes, mucinex does help increase cervical mucus!
♥️♥️