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What would the health consequences of this be?
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Thebige
If a women didn’t use b/c and spent 20 years either pregnant or nursing (usually both), without getting her period?
LTKNT101
Women don’t need to get periods in order to be healthy. In fact, periods are a negative side effect that occur do to an egg being left unfertilized. If women got pregnant every time they were ovulating there would be no such thing as the condition we call a “period.”

Birth control has its share of side effects such as weight gain. It’s something women technically don’t need to be putting in their bodies. If a woman stopped taking birth control she would actually be doing herself a favor.

Breastfeeding for a prolong time would have side effects such as sore nipples and discomfort from constantly being engorged.

Going through the pregnancy process and childbirth for 20 years without getting a substantial break for healing would be extremely taxing on a woman’s body. It would be something only women in excellent physical health could endure safely.
Liked by alexnj (Apr 8, 2024), Citizen3151 (Apr 8, 2024), Thebige (Apr 8, 2024)
auraman9005
(April 8, 2024, 11:09 am)Thebige If a women didn’t use b/c and spent 20 years either pregnant or nursing (usually both), without getting her period?
You mean like 20 years getting pregnant, giving birth, and getting pregnant again after giving birth? I'd say depends on the woman's physical constitution, their age when they started the streak, and their daily living conditions, but generally, not good, as the uterus of that woman didn't have the opportunity to heal the possible wounds and internal stretching that got going on inside of them after pregnancy. 

The effects include but not limited to: scarring at the genital area, possible incontinence in both bowels and bladders, a slight chance of uterine prolapse (not fun), increased chances of implantation of future pregnancies being in the wrong places like placental previa, increased risk for gestational diabetes, increased risk for puerperal fever after giving birth, preeclampsia, and if the mother's unlucky enough, death. Just all around nastiness, really.

Is it possible that a woman wouldn't have those issues during their constant 20-year pregnancy cycles? Yes, but very slim.
Liked by Thebige (Apr 8, 2024)
alexnj
(Edited)
(Edited)
I belive women are their most fertile right after giving birth.  All 5 times my wife went into labor was right after sex.  I remember them checking my wife's vaginal area for excess cum before the placenta came out.
Liked by Thebige (Apr 8, 2024)

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