This is the best answer. There's a reason that subway maps are often not an accurate representation of where stops actually are on a map, but instead are condensed and made easier to read in a way that loosely shows where the stops are and also makes each stop easy to read along with other key info that's relevant. When you're on a train, you don't need accurate maps of where stop are, you just need to know where your stop is, how many stops away, or connecting trains.
Not that female anatomy is akin to a train system... Or is it?
Next stop: Pregnancy. Exit here for sleepness nights, a new member of the family and kind of a lot of responsibility. Mind the gap between exit and birth!
Most illustrations of ovaries don't even include that lower connection to the uterus. I was wondering how the body doesn't enter menopause in situations where the fallopian tubes are removed but the ovaries are left in. Now I know.
Wait am I understansing the diagrams right, is that literally just a giant blob of fat behind the intestines that take up like 2/3s of our torso's lower half?
These were probably originally drawn from organs pulled out of cadavers and sketched or drawn while laid out on a table.
When we think of organs we think of them all separate like we see in books instead of the truth that they are all jammed together with no open space to see.