It is common to have breakthrough bleeding in the first three cycles of pill use. It normally gets better with time.
If you don't bleed, you don't have a period. You can't have a period and not bleed.
Nothing, this is a perfectly normal withdrawal bleed from missing your pills.
It's very unlikely that you'd have a normal period the first month off birth control (I'm assuming by 'birth control' what you actually mean is the combination pill - please don't use these terms interchangeably, there are many forms of birth control!). Your first 'period' will be your withdrawal bleed as normal, but after that it may take a few months to get a real period again. It can also take up to 12 months for your cycles to regulate again once you stop using hormonal birth control.
This is normal because everyone adjusts to birth control differently. Some people will not bleed at all while others might bleed the whole time they are on the medication.
You will experience a withdrawal bleed within 7 days of stopping BC pills then your normal period will occur anytime after the withdrawal bleed
It is very normal for you to bleed after birth. Usually the only time you won't right away is if you are breast feeding. Once you start to bleed you are likely to bleed for 4-6 weeks straight.
PMS is a completely nonsense term that means nothing at all.On hormonal birth control you don't get a period, you skip your withdrawal bleed.If you skip your withdrawal bleed it should be the same as normal on active pills, there's no progesterone drop so no symptoms associated with a withdrawal bleed.
Hormonal birth control lightens the amount of flow and reduces the number of days that you bleed. Any amount of bleeding counts as a period if you're on hormonal birth control.
Yes, when you stop birth control pills, the hormone levels in your body drop. Then you have withdrawal bleeding.
yes
When you stop taking birth control you can now become pregnant. If you had an irregular period before birth control pills, your period will go back to irregular periods. Heavier and longer periods may occur as well. You may also experience withdrawal bleeding which your body's way of ridding the birth control hormones.
Yes it can be normal. But if it lasts more than that I suggest going to a doctor. Some women bleed more when they first start the pill. But then after taking it for a few months their period gets lighter.