Cycle Savvy: The Smart Teen's Guide to the Mysteries of Her Body

Should I be concerned if my cycles are rarely 28 days?
Why do I often feel so emotional before my period?
And how can I know when my period's really going to start?!

If you're a teenage girl, you've probably asked yourself these questions and many more. Now Cycle Savvy has the answers that will help you understand what is really happening with your body on a day-to-day basis. It's the first book specifically designed to teach young women about the practical benefits of charting their cycles. Explore the fascinating world of ovulation, fertility, and why you even have periods at all! And learn all about the body signals, mood changes, and other signs that accompany your cycle. With charming illustrations, fun brainteasers, confidence builders, sample charts, and first-person tales of experiences that every girl can relate to, Cycle Savvy takes the mystery out of your amazing body.

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Cycle Savvy: The Smart Teen's Guide to the Mysteries of Her Body

Should I be concerned if my cycles are rarely 28 days?
Why do I often feel so emotional before my period?
And how can I know when my period's really going to start?!

If you're a teenage girl, you've probably asked yourself these questions and many more. Now Cycle Savvy has the answers that will help you understand what is really happening with your body on a day-to-day basis. It's the first book specifically designed to teach young women about the practical benefits of charting their cycles. Explore the fascinating world of ovulation, fertility, and why you even have periods at all! And learn all about the body signals, mood changes, and other signs that accompany your cycle. With charming illustrations, fun brainteasers, confidence builders, sample charts, and first-person tales of experiences that every girl can relate to, Cycle Savvy takes the mystery out of your amazing body.

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Cycle Savvy: The Smart Teen's Guide to the Mysteries of Her Body

Cycle Savvy: The Smart Teen's Guide to the Mysteries of Her Body

by Toni Weschler
Cycle Savvy: The Smart Teen's Guide to the Mysteries of Her Body

Cycle Savvy: The Smart Teen's Guide to the Mysteries of Her Body

by Toni Weschler

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Overview

Should I be concerned if my cycles are rarely 28 days?
Why do I often feel so emotional before my period?
And how can I know when my period's really going to start?!

If you're a teenage girl, you've probably asked yourself these questions and many more. Now Cycle Savvy has the answers that will help you understand what is really happening with your body on a day-to-day basis. It's the first book specifically designed to teach young women about the practical benefits of charting their cycles. Explore the fascinating world of ovulation, fertility, and why you even have periods at all! And learn all about the body signals, mood changes, and other signs that accompany your cycle. With charming illustrations, fun brainteasers, confidence builders, sample charts, and first-person tales of experiences that every girl can relate to, Cycle Savvy takes the mystery out of your amazing body.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780060829643
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 10/31/2006
Pages: 240
Sales rank: 139,936
Product dimensions: 7.30(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 14 - 17 Years

About the Author

Toni Weschler, MPH, has a master's degree in public health and is a nationally respected women's health educator and speaker. She is also the author of Cycle Savvy, a book for teenage girls about their bodies. A frequent guest on television and radio shows, she lives in Seattle, Washington.

Read an Excerpt

Cycle Savvy

The Smart Teen's Guide to the Mysteries of Her Body
By Toni Weschler

HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2006 Toni Weschler
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0060829648

Chapter One

Your Amazing and Awesome Body

do you realize that you actually started your life inside your grandmother? Huh? How is that possible? Well, the very egg that eventually became you was originally inside your mother's ovaries when she was but a fetus inside her own pregnant mother! Another way of saying this is that every woman who is pregnant with a female fetus is carrying a part of her potential grandchildren in her body. What? Keep reading.

Let's go back to when your mom was just a fetus. Female fetuses already contain all the eggs that they will ever have. Practically speaking, that means that when your mother was a fetus inside her mother, she had already developed one of the eggs that eventually became you. So if she was 35 years old when she had you, and you are now 16, the cells inside of you today that were once part of the egg that became you would be about 51! The best way to help you grasp this fascinating concept is to simply fill in the lines next to the illustration on the following page with the appropriate names.

One of the major differences between male and female anatomy has to do with when the sex cells (or gametes) are developed. As you just read, girls are born with all the eggs they will ever have. Yet the eggs don't mature until puberty, when about one egg percycle is released. This continues all the way through menopause (the time when a woman stops having periods altogether). Boys, on the other hand, don't develop sperm until adolescence, but then continually produce sperm every day until they die.

your External Reproductive Anatomy

If you have a brother close in age to you, you may remember taking baths with him as a toddler and being perplexed as to why he had this "thing" on the outside that you didn't have. He might have even gleefully pointed down there while boasting about it. Even from a very young age, boys in our society are usually socialized to believe they possess a treasure in which to take pride, whereas girls tend to grow up embarrassed about what they have "down there." Well, that's got to change, here and now.

As you know, you have a vagina while boys have a penis. No big surprise there. But what you probably didn't know is that, in terms of pleasure, your vagina is actually not the female counterpart of his penis--your clitoris is (my what is?).

As you'll see, your clitoris (pronounced kli-'tor-s) is your "special thing." So even though your vagina is one of the things that makes you a girl, your clitoris makes being a girl, well, more fun! There will be more on this a bit later (in Chapter 6), but for now, it's back to your vagina, which should be a healthy pink color, like the inside of your cheek. It has three distinct functions: It's a passageway for the flow of menstrual blood, a flexible muscle that surrounds a penis when a woman has intercourse with a man, and a birth canal for an emerging baby during childbirth.

What protects your vagina are your vaginal lips. They vary in size, shape, and color. Books always refer to two sets--the inner lips, or labia minora, and the outer lips, or labia majora. But in reality, the only ones that are truly protective and even remotely resemble lips are the inner ones. The outer lips are really not lips at all, but more of a soft hair-covered padding.

The first time I caught a glimpse of vaginal lips was when I was maybe three or four years old. I remember squatting on the floor in the bathroom while my mom peed, and being completely confused by what I saw between her legs as she stood up from the toilet. From that angle, they looked really strange.

--Brie, 19

You can imagine how a toddler might find many things in her young life confusing or frightening if she has never seen them before. Luckily, as children get older, things that were once scary can often become really intriguing and beautiful with familiarity. So it is with vaginal lips.

Now, you wouldn't wear a dress to the prom without viewing it from every angle, would you? Yet, in a certain way, you wear your external anatomy every day. Aren't you just a tad curious? The only way you are going to know what I've been talking about these last few pages is if you actually look down there yourself! I realize that sounds pretty extreme, maybe even a little intimidating, but consider this: a boy sees and touches his penis every time he goes to the bathroom. Perhaps that's why boys seem more comfortable with their bodies and sexuality. Why can't you, a girl, feel the same? Now you can!

You can build respect for your body by becoming more familiar with all its important parts, including those below your belly. So read the next three pages, then find a private place, and grab that mirror. It's time you get to know your own body as well as boys know theirs!

Exploring Down There

Take Out That Mirror and Get to Know Yourself

Find some time after a shower or bath when you are clean, have complete privacy and enough time to relax, and explore what makes you, you. Did you know that the external appearance of your sexual anatomy is as unique as your face? It's true. So the sooner you become familiar with your body, the easier it will be for you to develop a real sense of wonder about it.

Use whatever type of mirror is most comfortable: a handheld or even a wall mirror, as long as it allows you to see yourself in bright light while you are seated in a comfortable position, legs open and bent at the knees.



Continues...

Excerpted from Cycle Savvy by Toni Weschler Copyright © 2006 by Toni Weschler. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Reading Group Guide

Introduction

Cycle Savvy is the first book specifically designed to teach teenage girls about the eminently practical benefits of charting their menstrual cycles. Bestselling author Toni Weschler, helps readers understand what is really happening with their bodies on a day-to-day basis, and answers questions that most girls (and even women) don't know the answers to, such as: If my cycles are never 28 days, is that normal? Will worrying about a late period only delay it?

Cycle Savvy includes charming illustrations, engaging brain teasers, easy-to-use sample charts, and first-person vignettes of moments every girl can relate to.

Questions for Discussion

1. What are some of the advantages of becoming familiar with your body, especially your reproductive anatomy?

2. Why is ovulation—and not menstruation—considered the "main event" of menstrual cycles?

3. Why do you think that many women consider their periods a "curse," or nuisance, rather than a biological wonder, and how would you characterize your feelings about menstruation?

4. What roles do reproductive hormones play in the physical changes many girls undergo during their teenage years?

5. Why might a girl who has no desire to be sexually active or to become pregnant want to keep track of her fertility signs?

6. What are the two primary fertility signs?

7. What is the fertility sign that indicates that you are about to ovulate? And what is the fertility sign that confirms that ovulation has occurred?

8. How might recording daily waking temperatures and cervical fluid enable a girl to better plan herschedule?

9. To what extent do the symptoms of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) described in Cycle Savvy correspond with your experience of them, or with the experiences of those you know?

10. Why is respect an essential ingredient in any kind of romantic or sexual activity?

11. Why should any decisions about sexual activity be considered in light of one's life goals and personal values and beliefs?

12. What are some of the dangers associated with sexual activity, and how can those who choose to be sexually active lessen those risks?

13. Why do men and women experience sexual orgasm differently, and how can the timing of ovulation impact women's experiences of sex?

14. What was the most surprising or interesting aspect of female fertility that you learned about in Cycle Savvy?

15. Why does the author compare fertility cycles to fingerprints? To what extent do you agree with her analogy?

16. Of all of the personal vignettes in Cycle Savvy, which did you find you could most relate to and why?

17. How does the fertility information in Cycle Savvy make you think differently about the female body?

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