
Um... so I take it that you don't know that the egg is different than the blood shed during a period.
So, fully formed eggs are released from the ovaries. Those eggs travel down the fallopian tube, either the left or right side depending on which ovary released the egg this time. The egg then enters the uterus and hangs out on the wall. This is called ovulation, which only lasts about 3 days. Only one of those 3 days is when fertilization can happen. Your body changes the consistency of your vaginal mucus to allow sperm in, normally this mucus would actually kill the sperm before ever getting to the cervix.
All month long, your body was gradually collecting blood to line the walls of your uterus. This was specifically for nutrition purposes for the potential baby. Your period starts when your body realizes that you did not get pregnant. It is suggested that women experience periods due to the real possibility that a fetus may need (by your body's choice not yours) to abort the pregnancy. Periods usually start 1-2 weeks after ovulation.
So, human eggs wouldn't be bloody. They would however be very small.

Dude, I know how woman's body work it's basic knowledge these days but still hen laying eggs and human period is basically the same thing which is getting waste out of the body. The "bloodshed" you are taking about is egg in uterus wall, so yeah, with blood and other cells are also human eggs. So don't "um, actually" me, if you just copy paste wiki or chat gbt as an answer to silly and scientifically accurate post xD

How did your knowledge get worse? OK, first, human eggs do not break down into blood. Second, the blood that is shed is the blood lining that was made to help the egg grow, and is called the endometrial lining. It is I have a period every month. Third, if we laid eggs, we wouldn't have this lining, because we wouldn't be incubating the eggs inside ourselves anymore, that would be a waste of blood. Fourth, if our eggs were exactly the way they are right now, we would have to lay them in water that matches our body temperature, or they would dry out and die.
And lastly, my original post is based on scientific knowledge that I have learned over a long period of time, and from knowledge acquired from reading medical textbooks and studies. Comment wasn't made on basic knowledge, but knowledge I had to seek out to learn more details.
So, um, actually...

So uh to add, human 'egg' aka ovum is a barely seen by the naked eye and is a very tiny cell, compared to the blood during period (aka the sheds of the uterine lining when no impregnation occur) that tends to clump and build up, making it something you can see. So to compare eggs to period would be false, because eggs have shell and doesn't contain blood inside of it (it have edible menbrane that even hen will eat with no hesitation mostly) meanwhile human period is just a clump of blood and vaginal discharge...

Also crazy of them to say that an unfertilized egg is waste material. Like, chickens will eat the eggs if they figure out that it isn't fertilized.
Also, my husband pointed this out, if we were to even try to make the comparison that periods and eggs are the same (which they fucking aren't) you would have to either wait until the egg rots to eat it, or you would need to wait until a pregnant woman was about to give birth, catch the amniotic fluid from the amniotic sac breaking, and take the placenta and then eat those. And even that isn't actually accurate. Eggs are more like mobile wombs. And shells? Those are made from the same kind of calcium as our bones. Meaning they make bone to cover a womb, before birthing it.
The more you know about these things, the easier it becomes to say, no, they aren't the same thing, not even by a long shot.
imagine helping someone give birth and the next morning those same babies are on the plate in front of you i would cry just like little a