If you know someone is having trouble conceiving, do not ask them if they're pregnant every goddamn time you see them.
EXPECTATIONS
Show & Tell
Cosmic Funnies

No title available
todays bird
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Origami Around
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Discoholic 🪩
Mike Driver
Peter Solarz

izzy's playlists!

Kiana Khansmith

PR's Tumblrdome
Cosimo Galluzzi
trying on a metaphor
untitled

titsay
official daine visual archive
macklin celebrini has autism

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Italy

seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from TĂĽrkiye

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Italy

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from Greece

seen from Singapore
seen from TĂĽrkiye
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
@justanotherinfertilityblogger
If you know someone is having trouble conceiving, do not ask them if they're pregnant every goddamn time you see them.
We are not even exaggerating. Have you downloaded Glow yet?Â
Things that aren’t okay;
1. The fact that I’m not pregnant. 2. The fact that everyone around me is.
This.
Woke up this morning like
Lmao I love this
Need more TTC blogs!
Most of the blogs I originally followed are pregnant now so I need some more ttc!
Reblog if you are ttc!
It's okay not to be okay
Negative
No matter how you strong you think you are, nothing prepares you for the amount of failure and sadness when you see a negative pregnancy test.
I’ve survived a lot of things, and I’ll probably survive this.
J.D. Salinger (via thedapperproject)
As readers of this website undoubtedly know, polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) is defined as irregular or even absent ovulation resulting in long stretches of time between menstrual cycles. Often, women with irregular ovulation are given a diagnosis of PCOS, even if they are not insulin resistant. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) sees PCOS in a few different ways, depending on how it presents in your body. Western medicine tends to treat all PCOS patients in the same way, where TCM looks at each patient's pattern of symptoms before making a diagnosis.
How Acupuncture Can Help Fertility
Acupuncture increases blood flow to the uterus and therefore uterine wall thickness, an important factor for fertility. It also increases endorphin production, which, in turn, promotes the release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) to regulate reproduction. Acupuncture can also lower stress hormones responsible for infertility; normalize plasma levels of the fertility hormones: follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteininzing hormone (LH), estradiol (E2), and progesterone; and normalize the hypothalamic-pituitary-ovarian axis to regulate menstruation, a key process in fertility.
During IVF, acupuncture can increase the number of follicles and improve the quality of the uterine environment by relaxing uterine muscles and thickening uterine lining. If you are coming in for in-vitro preparation, one study recommends treatment twice a week for four weeks up to the day of the transfer, in order to increase the flow of blood to the uterus.
Another study showed that for patients who received acupuncture treatment immediately before and after the in-vitro procedure, clinical pregnancies were documented in 42.5% of the patients in the acupuncture group, whereas pregnancy rate was only 26.3% in the control group.
Once you become pregnant, acupuncture can help prevent miscarriages and minimize symptoms common in the first trimester.
Traditional Chinese Medicine in 3 Types of PCOS Women
Below are the three most common types of PCOS patient that I treat. Each of these patients is quite different, but the use of acupuncture and Chinese herbs will still regulate her cycle.
The first type of PCOS is the most commonly seen, and it is caused by insulin resistance. This patient typically presents as overweight, and she may or may not have acne on her jawline and neck. She may also have excess hair on her face, and lower abdomen. This type of PCOS is called “damp stagnation”. In basic terms, the excess weight is seen as “dampness”, and the unreleased follicles as “stagnation”. It responds best to weight loss (to get rid of the “dampness”), exercise (to move the stagnation), and the supplement inositol, to help reduce insulin resistance. Important dietary changes to get rid of dampness include giving up dairy products, wheat, refined sugar and alcohol, which are all dampening foods. Metformin can also be helpful in certain cases.
A second type of patient I see with a PCOS diagnosis has what is called “Qi and Blood stagnation” in TCM. In this case, the patient is often very fit, has quite a bit of acne around the mouth, and on and under the chin and neck. She may also have some hair under her chin. She is stressed and easily frustrated, and uses frequent exercise as stress relief. She is not insulin resistant, so Metformin doesn’t work for her. Chinese herbs to move Qi and Blood stagnation work well to promote ovulation in this case. Electroacupuncture is also very effective right before ovulation to encourage an egg to release.
A third type of PCOS patient has a diagnosis of “Heart Qi stagnation”. This doesn’t involve the Western heart organ, rather the Chinese concept of the Heart, a group of functions which when combined are called “Heart” (with a capital H). One of the functions of the Heart is to open and close the cervix, ie: ovulation. When the Heart energy is damaged by trauma, anxiety or chronic sleep disorders, it has a hard time regulating ovulation. Acupuncture is quite effective in helping calm the Heart, and thus promoting ovulation. This patient may have had a traumatic event in her life, have a very stressful job (one patient was a 911 operator), or a job which upsets her sleep patterns, such as a night shift worker. This patient may or may not be overweight, and may or may not have unruptured follicles in her ovary, but her cycle is irregular, and she has received a PCOS diagnosis. Unless she is insulin resistant, Metformin will not help in this case.
The use of traditional Chinese medicine, including acupuncture, offers women with PCOS an alternative but effective treatment for women with PCOS.
- See more at: http://www.pcosnutrition.com/links/blogs/traditional-chinese-medicine–acupuncture-for-women-with-pcos.html#sthash.QVshR0VN.dpuf
I found it!
The picture at the top is what I found on Pinterest several years ago that inspired me to get my “I will carry you” tattoo.Â
Full post from when I got the tattoo here.Â
The waiting game...
Just waiting for my next cycle to start so I can do my first round of Clomid...
Cycle day 21 blood work.
Morning radio
This morning on the radio on the way to work, they had a topic train called " what's new with you" and a women called in and said. "What's new with me is that after 8+ years of doctors telling me I can't get pregnant. I'm due to have my first child tommrow. " This made me so happy :). People all over listening to the radio heard her!
Ultrasound and trans vaginal ultrasound results...
Well I got my results back from my ultrasound and trans vaginal ultrasound, I’m “normal” but also have cyst on my ovaries. I don’t see how that makes me “normal” but I’m not a doctor. I have more blood test on Saturday and Monday. Hopefully I here something back from them. And I start my first round of Clomid next month oh the joys of TTC. Baby Dust.
Plot Twist:
My ovaries and uterus wake up one day and realise I am actually a nice person and undeserving of all the pain and torment they have bestowed upon me, so they send me a bunch of flowers with a note that says “we’re sorry. Lets get baby making”
Mind Over Matter
“You’re in so much pain” said the ovaries.
“You can’t handle me anymore” said the uterus.
“You feel like crawling into bed and dying” said the ovarian cysts.
“I will never work” said the pain meds.
“You’re not strong enough” says the brain, registering all the pain.
“I’m fine. I can do this” said the strong, beautiful individual reading this, who then gets on with her day smiling, even though she may be crying on the inside.