Originally Posted by
atomic sagebrush
I'm not seeing the original question here but for whoever asked, you cannot tell what side you ovualted from on the basis of O pains. You make eggs in both sides every month and the side that DOESN't ovulate can actually have worse O pain because it gets big and swollen and the pressure is not released when an egg pops.
You also cannot, cannot, cannot, to infinity and beyond cannot, tell where a tiny ball of cells the size of the period at the end of this sentence, lands in your uterus. If your uterus was that sensitive pregnancy and childbirth would be unbearably painful. When pregnancy occurs, the corpus luteum in your ovary where the egg originally came from starts churning out tons of hormones and this affects all sorts of things in your lower regions that increase blood flow, cause stretching and swelling, etc. Some sides stretch/swell faster than others and it also depends how your uterus is situated and even where your personal nerve endings are. This is the cause of those one sided pains, NOT where the baby has implanted.