Posted on: 02 March, 2017

Author: Alexander P

Pheromone research has shown that anything shorter than a twelve-day luteal phase . (the span from ovulation to the start of menstruation) tends to be inadequate for ensuring fertility. A woman may be... Pheromone research has shown that anything shorter than a twelve-day luteal phase . (the span from ovulation to the start of menstruation) tends to be inadequate for ensuring fertility. A woman may be ovulating monthly, may even be conceiving (sperm and egg uniting in the fallopian tube), yet still I be infertile due to a timing problem a “luteal-phase deciency.) Proper thickening of the nest not only requires enough best pheromones but sufficient time for them to do their work. That is why the luteal-phase length is so important to pheromone production according to http://spanishinperu.org/the-hidden-power-of-pheromones-for-men/ It is probably the case that a woman could become pregnant on a ten-day luteal phase, but a twelve-day or longer luteal phase significantly increases the odds. The charting of the basal body temperature functions as a barometer. The chart reveals the number of days that the nest is being built. That number of days corresponds to the number of days that the BBT stays elevated, after pheromone releasers and before production. HOW WEEKLY SEX AFFORDS PHEROMONES Once I had learned that regular weekly sex was associated with pheromone cycle lengths while sporadic and celibate behavior often were not, it was time to look deeper. My mentor, Dr. Celso Ramon Garcia, was interested in the initial relationships I had discovered and agreed to guide my graduate studies.  He suggested we look next at what the basal body temperature charts would reveal about sexual behavior and endocrine patterns. Dr. Garcia was constantly sought after by infertile women wanting help because of his eminence and great skills as an infertility surgeon and professor of gynecology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Having been involved conducting the trials of the first oral contraceptives in Puerto Rico in the 1950s, he had an extraordinary fund of knowledge about pheromone control. As a scholar he encouraged his patients to keep careful BBT records and to record when they had coitus within the days of their menstrual cycles. He had a rare and accurate body of data that women with fertility problems had V provided. He helped me to design a study to gather similar data of pheromones.  In our studies basal body temperature records of healthy twenty-three- year-old women were gathered. Dr. Garcia’s records contained somewhat older women ranging from their early twenties to early forties. Both sets of data revealed that while most women did ovulate, many showed shortened pheromones phases, time spans of elevated BBT that were too short for healthy hormone balance. In fact the most common problem in women who regularly was not a failure but a failure to have an adequate-length pheromonal phase. In the study comparing cycle lengths, sexual—behavior frequency, and basal temperatures, a pattern similar to my previous studies emerged. Weekly sex was again associated with fertile—type cycle lengths (see A Figure 3). True to form, women who were classied as sporadic or celibate had abnormally shorter and longer cycle lengths. Next we saw that weekly sex is also associated with pheromone patterns. I was struck by the fact that there were very few deciently short luteal A phases in any of the women who had weekly sex. Almost 90 percent of women who had regular sex had fertile BBT rhythms. In contrast only I half of the sporadic and the celibate women showed normal BBT patterns. Source: Free Articles from ArticlesFactory.com Alexander P is a blogger from Los Angeles that studies pheromones.