PCOS: A Personal Journey
Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) is a hormonal imbalance that affects approximately 18-20% of women during the reproductive years. This number continues to rise each year leaving many women infertile and devastated.
I was 14 when I first noticed the hair growth on my face. I had no idea where it was coming from or why. The women in my family weren’t hairy people, but I certainly was. I had a few strands of dark hair also growing on my chest and eventually I grew a full beard. I can still hear the kids taunting me at school. By the time I was 15, I was hiding away every weekend so that my face could rest from the constant shaving and razor burn that I endured. The hair on top of my head also started falling out in clumps and my scalp was becoming increasingly visible.
In addition to the hair issues, I gained weight. It didn’t seem to matter what I ate or when I ate it. I played sports all throughout high school, so I was very active. Yet the pounds continued to climb. I know that my family was trying to encourage me to lose weight, but I was often belittled for my weight gain both at home and at school. It didn’t matter that I was binging and purging to lose weight or that I would starve myself all day long and eat only at night. I was on a multitude of diets from the time I was 5 years old. Eventually, by the time I finished my first year of college, I weighed somewhere around 350 pounds. I was miserable, unhappy, and hated everything about me. I felt betrayed by my body. I thought that maybe I was supposed to have been born a male since my body was acting that way. I had facial hair, no menstrual cycle and a deep voice. It made me question (and hate) everything about myself.
While most practitioners treat this condition simply as a physical condition, PCOS also affects a woman’s emotional and mental health as well. The whole person isn’t addressed in most practitioner’s offices. They don’t know what this condition feels like. They don’t know the constant struggles that we have to keep the weight off, to balance the blood sugar and cholesterol levels, to have our hair fall out in large clumps every time we wash our hair, and to have hair appear in areas where it doesn’t belong.
PCOS requires that the entire person be treated. There isn’t any place for the one-ill-one-pill mentality that our current healthcare paradigm maintains in treating PCOS. There is a much better way. It is one that involves providing the right nutrients, the right types of exercises, and the right mental and emotional support.
Dr. Jennifer Champion holds a Doctorate in Clinical Nutrition and is a Board-Certified Nutrition Specialist. She works with women who are ready to make positive changes in their lives. She has a thriving practice in Tacoma and is currently accepting new clients. For more information, please check out her website at www.NeoGenesisNutrition.com
, call 253.507.5775 or email her at jennifer@NeoGenesisNutrition.com.






