Rav Huna teaches us that women can create a regular cycle. One example involves jumping - if a woman can perform a physical action that leads her to menstruate three months in a row, she has created a predictable cycle. Rashi suggests that other actions like carrying something heavy or suffering from an illness might create a regular cycle as well.
The Ritva, Rashi and other rishonim suggest that when a woman may create a veset, a predictable cycle, she has to expect her period and become a niddah every time that she does that action. The Rashba, Tosafot and others teach that a woman must have another factor involved to create a veset for a physical action. For example, if she jumps three times on a specific day of the week and she menstruates each time, the women will establish a veset for jumping on that day. If she jumps on different days she need not expect menstruation.
The rabbis seem to be balancing a number of factors: the need to understand menstruation, the need to understand women's control over menstruation, the need to connect their system of ritual purity with women's menstrual cycles, among other items.
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