Tuesday, December 25, 2007

The Need to Bleed, Pt. 2

I got this comment on an old post called Defending the Need to Bleed. Period. I'm bumping it up because it's important.


I stumbled upon your blog while doing some web research on seasonale, and was very interested in what you had to say.
I am currently very frustrated with my doctors concerning birth control and menstruation. I am 23 years old but have never had a period without medication. My doctors put me on the pill at 17, specifically seasonale. For years I dealt with cystic acne, dehabilitating depression and when I was switched to the generic form of the pill, nausea resembling morning sickness. I went off the pill three months ago due to some health insurance problems, and immediately my skin cleared and I felt a great weight lifted from my shoulders. I felt happier than I had in a long time. My problem now is that I have not gotten a period in 3 months.

My doctors just tell me that acne isn't a big deal, that I made the depression up, and that the nausea will clear up in less than 3 months (3 MONTHS!) and want to start me back up on some form of the pill.
I am now terrified of the hormones, and do not want to put artificial chemicals into my body (I have been a vegetarian for 10 years now). Yet I know that I need to somehow have a period.
I am completely confused and frustrated with modern medicine's options.

If you know of anything that may help me, I would love to hear it. If not, it felt helpful to write my worried down.



Hi, Kristin-

First, it's important for me to point out that I'm not a doctor. Based on what you've said here, I think you might want to consider getting a second opinion before you go back on birth control pills.

Depression can be life threatening. As a 46 year old who still has severe scars from cystic acne, I can assure you that it's a big damned deal. Nausea is never pleasant - I can't imagine dealing with it for months at a time. My alarm bells go off when I hear of a doctor telling a woman she's making up symptoms like depression. You need a physician who listens to you, not one who treats you as an hysteric.

You didn't say why the doctors felt it was necessary for you to be on birth control. I know there are some medications they won't give a woman unless she's on birth control, and that in addition to its intended use, they sometimes give it to women to control ovarian cysts or severe cramps or bleeding. There might be a legitimate need for them in your case. Feel free to write back if you want to share more information.

If you need birth control, consider the combination of foam and condoms - the two together are very effective, they're portable, you only use them when you need them and the condoms help protect you from STDs. In the 21st Century, there's no such thing as a monogamous relationship. Always protect yourself.

As I mentioned before, I'd see a different doctor. There are risks to taking hormones, including an increased tendency to form tumors. If you can get by without them, it would probably be better, but only a doctor can advise you. 6 years is a long time to be on any medication, and you've seen from this break you're taking that you feel better without the drug. Your body may have changed dramatically in those 6 years. I wouldn't panic at this point about not having had a period. It could take a year or more for your cycle to normalize itself, if it ever does. Some women are regular as clocks, some aren't - it's not an indication of how healthy you are. There have also been huge changes in the availability of new drugs and treatments. There might be something new available that hasn't been considered yet.

Find a doctor who sees women as people, not problems to be solved. You know your body better than anyone, and Nature often knows best.

Good luck, and do check in and let me know how you are doing.

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2 Comments:

At 10:19 PM, Blogger Lexia said...

Hi,

I just wanted to recommend any Feminist Women's Health Center. Google will bring up the ones in Atlanta and Washington State immediately by typing in the above terms. There are links to the main FWHC site from those as well.

The one in Atlanta was a revelation in caring, woman-centered, informed and complete health care 25+ years ago. Oregon's Feminist Women's health center was as wonderful, but the relentless terrorism of the anti-woman thugs seems to have removed that center from the directory. From my experience with those two, I would not hesitate to recommend any FWHC.

Also many Planned Parenthood clinics have complete gynecological services and can be light-years ahead of other medical centers located in backward areas.

I hope Kristin finds the same life-long relief I did from similar doctors many years ago.

 
At 5:42 AM, Blogger Leah said...

First off, Morgaine, YOU ROCK! Thanks for adding your blog to the Google feed web clips directory, otherwise I would have never found you!

Kristin, you rock too! Kudos to you for listening to your intuition and daring to question the dudes in the white coats!

As Morgaine pointed out sometimes there are good reasons, like PCOS (poly-cystic ovarian syndrom) for hormonal treatments via EOCs (extended-use oral contraceptives) like Seasonale. And though I don't necessarily like admitting it, as a psychotherapist I've seen Seasonique have positive effects counteracting depression in one woman who couldn't be prescribed anti-depressants because of a family history of bipolar disorder. Sometimes pharmaceutics has its place.

But if deep down you KNOW that these pills are poison for you, LISTEN. And as the other wise w'moon on here have echoed, find health practitioners who will do the same - LISTEN.

I can't urge you strongly enough to use whatever mental, physical, social, and energetic resources you have available to you to find a doctor who is open and encouraging of complimentary forms of treatment. In my ten plus years of being a menstrual health educator, one of the most successful treatments i've witnessed is a multi-system approach, often combining Traditional Chinese medicine with western herbs with energetic/subtle modalities (like Reiki or flower essences).

Tonight I had the honor of gifting a new friend with a "welcome back to wombmoonhood" care package (cloth pads, iron-rich herbs for tea, and the book the red tent). She started bleeding yesterday after not having a period in five years (after being on the pill for about four years). She attributes her cycle's return to an all natural soy-derived topical hormone balancing cream. I don't know much about these, so i can't endorse either way, but perhaps you might find an herbalist/naturopath who does.

One practice I can recommend that has absolutely no harmful side effects and may help your menstrual cycle return, is to live as if you already are cycling, using the moon as your marker. During the dark moon do all the things you imagine yourself doing if you were bleeding. During the full moon do all the things you would imagine yourself doing if you were ovulating. During balsamic moon (waning quarter, half way between full and dark) do whatever you imagine yourself doing if you had a gentle healthy flavor of PMS (yes, this DOES exist! think reading through your journals, allowing yourself to be sad or angry about past or current situations in your life, giving yourself the space for those emotions to surface and run their course, released and flowing out of you as your blood would when the dark moon returns).

If you consciously start allowing your mind and emotions to cycle, perhaps your body will be more likely to follow suit.

Dark moon is approaching (its on monday night / early tuesday morning depending on your time zone) - a great time to start!

blessings to all you beautiful w'moon!

-leah jeannesdaughter

 

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