Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But, but, but she discussed this at length in her college class. Obviously, they didn't duscuss the average age of menopause...
And there was overwhelming consensus in the class! Because having a bunch of 20 year olds agree totally makes it true!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually did a research paper for my English #101 course a few years back on this very topic.
In the U.S., it has NEVER been documented of a women 45 and over, conceiving a child naturally using her own fertilized eggs, carrying a child to term and giving birth to a healthy baby. Never.
So even if you did get pregnant OP, your chances of miscarrying the child are already at 50 per cent. Then your odds drop at actually carrying it to term.
I wouldn't waste any money on buying Plan B. The Morning After Pill makes you nauseous as heck plus at your age it wouldn't make sense.
+1 this is true. I did some similar research. There are no documented cases for women over 45. Many of you have anecdotes regarding a 43 year old grandmother. this is not the same.
We also discussed this at great length in one of my classes at college. There was an overwhelming consensus in the class about this subject.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually did a research paper for my English #101 course a few years back on this very topic.
In the U.S., it has NEVER been documented of a women 45 and over, conceiving a child naturally using her own fertilized eggs, carrying a child to term and giving birth to a healthy baby. Never.
So even if you did get pregnant OP, your chances of miscarrying the child are already at 50 per cent. Then your odds drop at actually carrying it to term.
I wouldn't waste any money on buying Plan B. The Morning After Pill makes you nauseous as heck plus at your age it wouldn't make sense.
+1 this is true. I did some similar research. There are no documented cases for women over 45. Many of you have anecdotes regarding a 43 year old grandmother. this is not the same.
We also discussed this at great length in one of my classes at college. There was an overwhelming consensus in the class about this subject.
Did you fail the class where you learned to "research" things?
Honestly!
My grandmother's youngest was born when she was 49yrs and 3 months old.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/16947000/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/8828432/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually did a research paper for my English #101 course a few years back on this very topic.
In the U.S., it has NEVER been documented of a women 45 and over, conceiving a child naturally using her own fertilized eggs, carrying a child to term and giving birth to a healthy baby. Never.
So even if you did get pregnant OP, your chances of miscarrying the child are already at 50 per cent. Then your odds drop at actually carrying it to term.
I wouldn't waste any money on buying Plan B. The Morning After Pill makes you nauseous as heck plus at your age it wouldn't make sense.
+1 this is true. I did some similar research. There are no documented cases for women over 45. Many of you have anecdotes regarding a 43 year old grandmother. this is not the same.
We also discussed this at great length in one of my classes at college. There was an overwhelming consensus in the class about this subject.

Anonymous wrote:But, but, but she discussed this at length in her college class. Obviously, they didn't duscuss the average age of menopause...
. Oh forete's sake. Why do you think it needs to be documented? Personally, I know of more than 1 mid-40's whoops baby and 1 from a 50 year old.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually did a research paper for my English #101 course a few years back on this very topic.
In the U.S., it has NEVER been documented of a women 45 and over, conceiving a child naturally using her own fertilized eggs, carrying a child to term and giving birth to a healthy baby. Never.
So even if you did get pregnant OP, your chances of miscarrying the child are already at 50 per cent. Then your odds drop at actually carrying it to term.
I wouldn't waste any money on buying Plan B. The Morning After Pill makes you nauseous as heck plus at your age it wouldn't make sense.
Never? Are you insane? What kind of "research" did you do? Did you actually get a passing grade on that nonsense?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually did a research paper for my English #101 course a few years back on this very topic.
In the U.S., it has NEVER been documented of a women 45 and over, conceiving a child naturally using her own fertilized eggs, carrying a child to term and giving birth to a healthy baby. Never.
So even if you did get pregnant OP, your chances of miscarrying the child are already at 50 per cent. Then your odds drop at actually carrying it to term.
I wouldn't waste any money on buying Plan B. The Morning After Pill makes you nauseous as heck plus at your age it wouldn't make sense.
+1 this is true. I did some similar research. There are no documented cases for women over 45. Many of you have anecdotes regarding a 43 year old grandmother. this is not the same.
We also discussed this at great length in one of my classes at college. There was an overwhelming consensus in the class about this subject.
Omg. This is the dumbest thing I have ever heard. OP - if you haven't gone through menopause, then yes, there is a chance you could get pregnant, although the chance is very slight given your age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually did a research paper for my English #101 course a few years back on this very topic.
In the U.S., it has NEVER been documented of a women 45 and over, conceiving a child naturally using her own fertilized eggs, carrying a child to term and giving birth to a healthy baby. Never.
So even if you did get pregnant OP, your chances of miscarrying the child are already at 50 per cent. Then your odds drop at actually carrying it to term.
I wouldn't waste any money on buying Plan B. The Morning After Pill makes you nauseous as heck plus at your age it wouldn't make sense.
+1 this is true. I did some similar research. There are no documented cases for women over 45. Many of you have anecdotes regarding a 43 year old grandmother. this is not the same.
We also discussed this at great length in one of my classes at college. There was an overwhelming consensus in the class about this subject.
Anonymous wrote:My grandmother got pregnant at 46. Naturally obviously.