Counting your period days might be a little hard with all the different times it comes up. If you have an IPhone, iPod, or IPad you can get an app called period tracker. This only works for people who have a normal consistent period. If you have problems with your period like blood flow problems, you should go see a doctor to keep control of that. If you do not have any of those, than an idea is that usually, you would get your period every month or so. The next two times you get your period, keep track of how long you get it for and then estimate around the time your period will start and end.
Yes. Counting days is very unreliable as a means of contraception.
Usually 28 days counting from the day you start. Not exactly but somewhere around there.
Counting days is a prediction, not truth. Your body isn't clockwork perfect, things like that will happen. This is part of the reason why counting days and "safe" periods is so unreliable as a means of avoiding pregnancy.
When you start your period if you have brown, old blood first you count those days as the first day of your 28 day menstrual cycle. You do not have to start counting day one when the blood is red.
you could just be having an irregular period even if you dont usually try counting to 28 days from when it ends and that is usually the day you are due to have a period.
Count the Days was created in 1994.
Craig B. Smith is the author of Counting the Days
Counting Days - film - was created in 2000.
There's really no hard answer to that, as counting days and rhythm methods are notoriously unreliable.
A normal pregnancy can last from 245 to 270 days from conception to delivery, the average being 266 days. If you are counting from the last period add 14 days to these numbers.
No. There are 40 days in Lent, not counting Sundays.
Yes. Bodies aren't clockwork, and relying on rhythm methods and counting days is notoriousl unreliable.