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"Hotline Bling" is a pop [5] [6] and R&B [7] song written by Drake and Nineteen85, the latter of whom also produced the song.The song was composed in D minor with a tempo of 135 beats per minute in common time with a chord progression of Bbmaj7 – Am7. [8]
"The Song That Doesn't End" (also referred to as "The Song That Never Ends") is a self-referential and infinitely iterative children's song. The song appears in an album by puppeteer Shari Lewis titled Lamb Chop's Sing-Along, Play-Along , released through a 1988 home video.
“Your period doesn’t slow down or stop in water — it just may not flow outside the vagina because of the counter pressure of the water,” Dr. Nucatola explains. “When you’re in the ...
Here's everything you should know about how water impacts your period, from swimming to showering.
Even if a woman doesn’t have immediate health concerns and isn’t worried about getting pregnant, monitoring periods can help establish a baseline that may be useful later.
"The L&N Don't Stop Here Anymore" is a ballad written and released by Jean Ritchie in 1965. Though Jean Ritchie typically eschewed controversial topics, the subject of impoverishing coal miners was touchy enough for the musician that she originally released "L&N" [ 1 ] in 1965 under her maternal grandfather's name, Than Hall.
Basically, it’s totally normal if, in the year or two after getting your first period, your body doesn’t immediately fall into a regular cycle. 4. You’re Breastfeeding.
Menstrual synchrony, also called the McClintock effect, [1] or the Wellesley effect, [2] is a contested process whereby women who begin living together in close proximity would experience their menstrual cycle onsets (the onset of menstruation or menses) becoming more synchronized together in time than when previously living apart.