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Butterfly123778
5 months ago

No – that’s not normal at all. Underweight, nutrient deficiencies, unhealthy lifestyles can help. These are also exactly the things you can influence and change, they should apply to you.

lynnmary1987
5 months ago

In your history with nutrient deficiency, drinking and smoking weekly and already at 16… yes, it can be assumed that the body also delivers a receipt.

So it’s to be expected.

NORMAL is still not.

Please look more at you and listen to yourself now.

Allyluna
5 months ago

No.

But it can happen. And there are various factors that play a role. Some lay themselves (e.g., if you are still very young and don’t have the period), but in some you should go to Cause Research – either because there is something in need of treatment behind it and/or because you may be left behind. later has a child’s request, which is correspondingly more difficult to implement with an irregular cycle.

Blindi56
5 months ago

What do you mean “really overdue”? Cycles can be different long, from 28 to 42 days everything is normal. Cycle fluctuations can also be normal. But if a whole period often fails, it is not normal.

Blindi56
5 months ago
Reply to  Maja1900

How often does that happen? You were pregnant and had a very early miscarriage. Have you done a test yet?

Kugelflitz
5 months ago

If this happens more often, you have either a longer cycle than you think or it is irregular. You can let both know, but no one forces you. If it doesn’t bother you or cause you other health problems, you can keep it going. There’s nothing going on.

Wiesel
5 months ago

For example, if underweight occurs.

Even if the period only recently started, it may not be left without the direct existence of a life-threatening condition.

Noeru
5 months ago

It’s definitely a reason to ask the female doctor for advice.