The
best way for you to detect ovulation is to keep a daily record of your
basal body temperature (your temperature when you wake up in the morning)
and the texture of your cervical mucus. You need to chart your cycle for
a few months so you can recognise your pattern and have a better chance
of predicting your most fertile days.
How to
check your temperature:
Start keeping track of your temperature on the first day of your period
using a basal body thermometer, (you can buy one at all chemists) which
shows minute changes in your temperature. Take your basal body temperature
at the same time every morning if you can. When you have done this mark
it on a chart (shown below).
It's helpful
to chart your temperature for a few months so you can see whether there's
a pattern to your cycle. If you're sick or fail to take your temperature
immediately upon awakening, any pattern you find may be inaccurate.
Thermometers that remember the last reading are helpful if you tend
to go back to sleep after taking your temperature.
How
to check your cervical mucus:
It sounds foul but it`s got to be done. There are 3 ways you can do
this: using toilet paper or your fingers across the opening of your
vagina, wearing a panty liner (which is sometimes hard to detect) or
inserting your finger into your vagina. Note its consistency. You may
also want to monitor its texture throughout the day. Read more on monitoring
your cervical mucus
The
two together:
You should notice a rise in your temperature signaling that you have
ovulated at the same time your mucus will look and feel like egg white.
When the two coincide this is your time to start making babies.
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