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Just wonering how your cm is after o? I read conflicting statements on how it should be?
Thanks[/b]
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Well the reason the answers are conflicting is because there is a wide range of what it can be! Every woman is different, so every woman's CM patterns are different. To learn to interpret them is very simple, but it is most effectively done by taking a charting course.
The CM after ovulation should be substantially dri
er than is was before ovulation. Around ovulation, a woman should feel very wet and slippery and the CM may look cloudy, creamy, or clear. After ovulation, there can still be CM that looks clear, or creamy, or sticky, or anything at all - but it should feel substantially dri
er than it did around ovulation. It only makes sense in the context of the whole cycle, how the CM develops and changes over the entire cycle and that's how you can learn to interpret what it all means
for you. Unfortunately, it's difficult to know what's normal for you without a daily record of the CM changes to see the whole pattern.