How Can I Get Pregnant After Birth Control? (NO CLOMID!)

Uncategorized 15 December 2009 0 Comments

Hey there ladies! Been a while, but don’t worry, I’ve been a busy bee helping more wonderful couples achieve their pregnancy dreams and constantly learning more to help all of you!

Today I want to discuss a question that I’ve been receiving very often recently.

How Can I Get Pregnant After Birth Control?

Many couples have turned to a “fight-fire-with-fire” approach using harmful fertility pharmaceuticals to counteract years of hormonal damage from birth control. I’ve always found this peculiar because its like saying, “well, if I messed up my fertility with hormone altering substances that were foreign to my body before [read: birth control], the solution is just a different hormone altering substance that is foreign to my body now [read: clomid or other pregnancy drugs]!”

I don’t think these people are stupid, just mislead.  Their intentions are great. They want to conceive so badly that they are “ready to do anything,” to undo their previous mistakes. Fortunately, this type of self punishment is not necessary to reverse the hormonal damage of prolonged birth control use.

In Western cultures, people tend to think of ailments in the body as things that should be “fought.” How many times have you heard somebody say “I’m fighting a cold,” “I’m wrestling with this flu,” “he’s battling cancer?” Seems like no big deal, right? Isn’t it just an innocent part of our language patterns? Well, not quite. I believe this represents a fundamental misunderstanding of how the body works and the signals that its sending when something in it isn’t functioning properly. The Western view is that an ailment is some kind of invader into the body that needs to annihilated, which is why so many medicine commercials feature cartoons of warfare in the body!

In Eastern medicine, ailments are not seen as rival factions in the body that need to be fought or subdues, but as imbalances or misalignments that simply need to be healed and rebalanced. Especially with regard to fertility, this view is far more helpful than the Western view. When a woman struggles with infertility after years of chemical abuse from birth control, her body is not asking for more of the same punishment, but to be healed, realigned and cared for. This is the appropriate way to resolve infertility problems, not by declaring further “war” against her body, but by nurturing it and making it healthy and happy.

Question:

Is it possible to get pregnant using Clomid or other harmful pharmaceuticals?

Answer: Sure, but not without consequences.

What now?

At the very least, before you resign yourself to chemical warfare with your own body, be nice to yourself and make an honest effort at a holistic, natural approach to restoring your fertility. I’ve seen this work for many women, some of whom had even tried Clomid and other pharmaceuticals. If you need a place to start, take a look at the Pregnancy Miracle system. It helped me get pregnant at 37 after being declared with premature menopause. Since then, I’ve used the same approach to coach countless other women to do the same. Give it a shot, You deserve it!

Hugs and Kisses to all of you out there striving for your dreams and never giving up. You are my heroes and inspiration!

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Tagged in eastern fertility cures, eastern medicine, infertility, natural fertility, no clomid

Eastern Medicine. Snake Oil or the Key to Fertility?

Uncategorized 5 December 2008 1 Comment

My readers already know I’m a Southern girl. I grew up in a community where the words “Eastern Medicine” and “Holistic Healing” would likely be interpreted as something a doctor from New York would do and some unusual Sunday church ritual (respectively). If you went on to explain that you were actually referring to medicine from East Asia, the person you’d be speaking to might ask, “Is that anything like what them voodoo folk do in New Orleans?”

Some of you may be laughing at me, but after my previous post, I got some emails from folks that were a bit outraged that I suggested that “infertility” is a condition largely made up by pharmaceutical companies to profit off of emotionally vulnerable women.

One man wrote the following:

Angie,

My wife and I are huge fans of your blog. It’s given us a lot of insight and inspiration, but I’m honestly a bit offended that you would say that infertility is “made up.” It feels like a slap in the face to hear you say that.

My wife and I have been trying to conceive for 28 months now, and it’s not looking good for us. How can you tell us we’re just imagining this?!

Perhaps there’s something I’m not understanding about the Eastern view of infertility. Could you please explain this better?

Looking forward to hearing from you,

T——–, NM

I completely understand this reader’s outrage so I’d like to better explain why I’m convinced Eastern medicine holds the key to infertility.

Eastern medicine looks at the entire body a complex interrelated system, and not just at its malfunctioning parts.

As you already know, cancer often originate in one part of the body and spreads to other parts of the body. This sad reality is well known and widely accepted, there is nothing controversial about it. The cancer, although it originates in one place, does not care about distinction of body parts, it sees all cells in the body as the same

Now, let’s talk about how Western medicine perceives and attempts to treat infertility. The Western approach to infertility seeks to find what is “broken” in the reproductive organs and fix it. The assumption is that, if you can’t get pregnant, the problem must originate in the reproductive organs and related glands. However, what if the source of the problem were not actually IN the vagina/uterus/ovaries, but only manifested there. What if the root cause of infertility were actually in the kidneys? As it happens to be, Chinese medicine does believe that the kidneys play a primary role in reproductive health.

Are you surprised?

I found this strange at first too, but I quickly realized that there is absolutely nothing that suggests that my infertility originates in my reproductive system. As it all started to become clearer, I began to see how fertility drugs do not solve the cause of infertility, but only treat it superficially.
Therefore, in order to treat infertility properly,  a holistic, or “whole-body” approach is necessary, and this is precisely what is offered in the Eastern techniques taught in The Pregnancy Miracle.

What with “Energy?” Sounds like hocus-pocus to me.

Not quite. In the Pregnancy Miracle, Lisa discusses different kinds of energies (e.g. ying, yang, chi, etc.) to explain “imbalances” in the body that cause infertility. Although this sounds like some “new age” nonsense at first, it’s actually quite logical. In fact, I now find it bizarre that the concept of energy is entirely missing from Western medicine.

If we accept that the body is indeed a complex, interrelated whole, rather than a bunch of loosely related parts, then we need some way to understand how each part of the body communicates with the rest. Western medicine breaks the body into individual “systems,” where the “blood” is the messenger of the cardiovascular system, neurons are the messengers of the nervous system. But the Western approach still fails to explain how all of these systems coexist within the body. How do they all work together? This is precisely what the concept of “energy” explains in eastern medicine – how the bodies parts function with respect to whole at the most basic level.

Still sound a bit farfetched? Well take this into consideration – Western medicine accepts that the nervous system is literally an electrical network. Read that again, electrical network. So the significant of energies isn’t hocus pocus afterall? Western medicine doesn’t reject the concept of energy in the body, it just offers an incomplete account.

Ok. So what’s this talk about “broken” vs “imbalanced?”

Excellent question. I previously said that my Western doctors labeled me “infertile” due to my abnormally high FSH levels. That’s it. In their eyes, my body was broken. In order to fix it, they would need introduce foreign substances into my body, namely fertility drugs, which made me feel sick and didn’t help me get pregnant for 3 years.

The Eastern approach in The Pregnancy Miracle does not accept that I am broken nor that I need outside help to be fixed. Instead, it believes that I am “imbalanced” and that the “cure” does not require much outside help, but a realignment of the forces within my body. Besides the fact that that is an incredibly empowering mindset, it also opens up pathways to alternative cures for infertility such as acupuncture, herbal supplementation, special dieting, meditation, etc.

With this said, any woman that has been diagnosed as “infertile” should be EXTREMELY interested in the Holistic approach of the Pregnancy Miracle.

I hope this has helped resolve a lot of misconceptions around Eastern medicine as a path to fertility. I am absolutely convinced that the Eastern approach is much more effective for women with fertility problems.

If you haven’t already joined our community of Pregnancy Miracle mommies and daddies , please download the Pregnancy Miracle now. You have too much to gain, and absolutely nothing to lose. Remember, the program comes with a 100% money back guarantee if you’re not absolutely convinced that it will help you get pregnant.

I sincerely hope this post will encourage many more couples to join our no-is-not-an-option fertility community! Can’t wait to have you with us!

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Tagged in eastern fertility cures, eastern medicine, infertility, pharmaceutical companies, vulnerable women, western medicine