Ads Top

Women to revert to exclusive reproductive work

What makes the topic pertinent is the global scenario under which this subject must be scrutinized. It is worth observing how conservative wind sweeping across the world is going to affect gender relation.It all started with Muslim fundamentalists forcing women to revert to exclusive reproductive work overtly and rest of religions doing the same privately. Cases of abducting girl school children for imposing sharia law and making them reproductive machines at a tender age has started coming in the news.
In Asia, their own kin in the name of honor killings slayed women. Inter-caste marriage between Dalits and higher castes has led them to be hunted and killed in South Asia.In the USA pro-life activists have started bombing women’s health centers. Already the USA has begun to stop funding family planning agencies around the world. Instead it has started funding disproportionately on armament sector.Compared to above observations women in Nepal seem to have achieved some result: we have at present women as President, Speaker and Chief Justice. We have the presence of 29 percent women as legislature members. The female reproductive system is all the parts of your body that help you reproduce, or have babies. And it is quite amazing! Consider these two fabulous facts:

    Your body likely has hundreds of thousands of eggs that could grow into a baby. And you have them from the time you’re born.
    Right inside you is a perfect place for those eggs to meet with sperm and grow a whole human being!What’s inside the female reproductive system? top

The ovaries are two small organs. Before puberty, it’s as if the ovaries are asleep. During puberty, they “wake up.” The ovaries start making more estrogen and other hormones, which cause body changes. One important body change is that these hormones cause you to start getting your period, which is called menstruating. (Learn more about how your reproductive system works during your period.)

Once a month, the ovaries release one egg (ovum). This is called ovulation.

The fallopian tubes connect the ovaries to the uterus. The released egg moves along a fallopian tube.

The uterus — or womb — is where a baby would grow. It takes several days for the egg to get to the uterus.

As the egg travels, estrogen makes the lining of the uterus (called the endometrium) thick with blood and fluid. This makes the uterus a good place for a baby to grow. You can get pregnant if you have sex with a male without birth control and his sperm joins the egg (called fertilization) on its way to your uterus.

If the egg doesn’t get fertilized, it will be shed along with the lining of your uterus during your next period. But don’t look for the egg — it’s too small to see!

The blood and fluid that leave your body during your period passes through your cervix and vagina.

The cervix is the narrow entryway in between the vagina and uterus. The cervix is flexible so it can expand to let a baby pass through during childbirth.

The vagina is like a tube that can grow wider to deliver a baby that has finished growing inside the uterus.

The hymen covers the opening of the vagina. It is a thin piece of tissue that has one or more holes in it. Sometimes a hymen may be stretched or torn when you use a tampon or during a first sexual experience. If it does tear, it may bleed a little bit.

No comments:

Powered by Blogger.