There is a lot of individual variation in ovulation. People used to think that in a 28- day period, women ovulate on their 14th day, but now, we are starting to think that some women ovulate earlier, and some later. Even if you get ovulation pains, those don't come directly from ovulating, and can start a day after you ovulate. Not much help at all, since your egg only lasts about 24 hours! The best thing to do if you're really concerned would be to get a fertility monitor, or use a basal temp thermometer.
Don't be worried yet, though, because it takes a lot of women nearly a year before they can get pregnant. Three months is not that long to try.
As for staying wet - if you mean the type that lasts for a few days - that depends on the part of your cycle you are in, too. When the normal secretion thins, you would notice more wetness, because it is more "drippy". But when it is thicker, it just stays inside, so you wouldn't notice it. No one seems to have a definitive answer on what this is, though (Really odd, I've actually seen this question asked so many times, and experts always dodge it, like the women must have *meant* something else). The thicker, waxy stuff is from the Bartholin's glands, near the entrance of the vagina, the thinner stuff may be normal tissue fluid. The waxy stuff seems to contain pheromones - the good stuff. Alas, LOL, if men had it, maybe we would really know... ;-)
2006-12-22 13:13:12
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answer #1
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answered by Fanafofana 3
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