How can a woman bleed for seven days and not bleed to death?!


Question: It's blood that is held in an enclosed system, it has few connections to the main vains and arteries that control a woman's circulatory system.

The blood that is released during menstration is not blood from her circulatory system, but blood that was held in its own little balloon of tissue. A growing fetus requires its own micro-cosm to exist, because if it was connected to the rest of a woman's body, her immune system would force her body to abort the "invading parasite" that a fetus resembles.


Answers: It's blood that is held in an enclosed system, it has few connections to the main vains and arteries that control a woman's circulatory system.

The blood that is released during menstration is not blood from her circulatory system, but blood that was held in its own little balloon of tissue. A growing fetus requires its own micro-cosm to exist, because if it was connected to the rest of a woman's body, her immune system would force her body to abort the "invading parasite" that a fetus resembles.

because its not vane blood. its the lining getting flushed out. x

because for most it is a very small amount of blood leaving the blody at one time. the heart has time to make up for the loss of blood. some women actually do become anemic when on their period because of how much blood they loose.

Because it's not blood from a vein, and in actuality it's about the same ammount of blood over the course of a week than they take in one shot at a blood donation. Your body can replace the lost blood, so it's no big deal.

Because that blood was going to be there to protect a baby. And when it leaves it is old blood and there is no point to it.

cos we have a lot of blood.

This is because our bodies are cleansing and getting rid of what might have been a new baby. If it didn't happen, everytime we ovulated we would put on 2 stone. Clever isn't it.

You're not really bleeding in the traditional sense of the word. After your period, your uterus begins to coat it's walls with blood and tissue for the egg to implant in if it is fertilized. Then your ovaries bursts an egg out. It goes down the fallopian tube, and into your uterus, which is prepared to begin holding a baby as it grows. If it's not impregnated, the uterus lining is shed, and you have your period again. Your body is designed to do this.
peace

During the entire period of menstruation, women typically do not lose more than 1.7 oz of blood- not that much. The average blood donation is 1 pint- about 16 ounces. Menstruation rarely causes enough blood loss to be a problem, and when it does, it's typically just lowering the woman's iron levels a little.

isnt this a quote from south park lol? technically its not blood as u no it its not an open vein thats bleeding but a build up of a sort of membrane in the wall of the womb, if we got fertillised the egg would stick in the membrane and grow into a baby but if it doesnt the body doesnt need it and so flushes it out. x





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