Specialized Care

Fertility, Nurtured

Fertility is not a single switch, it is a whole body story written by your hormones, your cycle, your thyroid, your blood sugar, and your stress. When one of those drifts, conception gets harder, and the usual advice is just to keep waiting. We do the opposite. We test, we find what is actually in the way, and we support egg quality, ovulation, and a calm, ready body. Modern tools like GLP-1 have a place too, but only to prepare your metabolism before conception, never during pregnancy.

Steady Cycles
Stronger Ovulation
Better Egg Quality
Balanced Hormones
A Calm Body
Real Hope
BloomHer™
Health
Reimagined
Bloom into your best self
When You Heal the Root

What Blooms in Her

Caring for fertility at the root does not fix one thing, it lets the whole woman return. Tap a petal to see what comes back.

Sweet Anticipation

Could This Be It?

After all the tracking and nurturing, here are the early signs, and the questions every woman whispers at 2am, answered gently.

Missed Your Period?

A late or missed period is often the first whisper, but on its own it is not proof. Stress, travel, thyroid shifts, and PCOS can all delay a period. The only way to know for certain is to test.

How long after a missed period is a test accurate?

Home pregnancy tests are most reliable about one week after your missed period. Testing the very first day your period is late can catch some pregnancies, but the hormone hCG may still be too low to show, so an early negative can be a false negative. If your period has not arrived, wait a few days and retest with first-morning urine, when hCG is most concentrated. A blood test at your practitioner can detect pregnancy a little earlier than a urine test.

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Myths About Pickles and Ice Cream

The fun folklore, and the gentle truth.

MythSalty cravings mean a boy, and sweet cravings mean a girl.

TruthCravings do not reveal your baby's sex. It is charming folklore, not science.

MythPickles and ice cream means you are definitely pregnant.

TruthCravings alone are not a pregnancy test. Only a test confirms it.

MythYou have to eat for two.

TruthMost women need only a few hundred extra calories a day, and mostly later in pregnancy.

Why the cravings happen
Shifting hormonesA heightened sense of taste and smellBlood-sugar swingsA nudge toward nutrientsComfort and emotion

Light, loving education, not a diagnosis. A test and your practitioner are what confirm a pregnancy.

What Women Notice

Signs Your Fertility Needs Support

Fertility struggle looks different on every woman. Most notice a handful of these, not all. The pattern matters more than any single sign.

Irregular or Absent Cycles

Cycles that come far apart, skip, or stay unpredictable make ovulation and timing uncertain.

Trouble Conceiving

Months of trying without success. Twelve months under 35, or six months over 35, is the usual point to test.

Signs You May Not Be Ovulating

No clear ovulation signs, or cycles that run very short or very long, can mean ovulation is not happening.

Heavy, Painful, or Spotting Cycles

These can point to hormone imbalance, thyroid issues, endometriosis, or fibroids.

PCOS or Thyroid in the Picture

PCOS and thyroid imbalance are two of the most common, and most treatable, drivers of fertility struggle.

Stress, Sleep, and Weight Shifts

Chronic stress, poor sleep, and rapid weight change all interrupt the signals that drive ovulation.

How We Work

Our Root-Cause Approach

Naturopathic logic first, modern medicine in parallel. We always ask what the body is trying to do before we override it.

01

Test, Don't Guess

We start with practitioner-ordered fertility labs: AMH and FSH for ovarian reserve, LH and estradiol, day-21 progesterone to confirm ovulation, thyroid, prolactin, vitamin D, and blood sugar.

02

Support Egg Quality

Eggs take about 90 days to mature, so the time to nourish them is now. CoQ10 as ubiquinol, a quality prenatal with folate, and steady blood sugar protect the egg you release next season.

03

Restore Ovulation

Myo-inositol, often with D-chiro inositol in a 40 to 1 ratio, is among the best-studied tools for ovulation, especially with PCOS. We steady insulin, thyroid, and stress so ovulation returns.

04

Where GLP-1 Fits

Only before conception. For extra weight or insulin-resistant PCOS, GLP-1 can restore ovulation and prepare metabolism, then it is stopped on a planned washout well before trying. It is never used during pregnancy.

Get to the Root

The Root Drivers of Fertility Struggle

Fertility struggle is rarely one thing. A few drivers feed it, and they talk to each other. Tap a driver to see the signs it creates and how we help calm it.

Trying to Conceive

Your Trying-to-Conceive Hub

Everything in one place: when to time it, what to take, what to eat, when to get help, and how to protect the window you have. This is education to bring to your practitioner, not a substitute for care.

Step One

Your Fertile Window: The Best Time to Get Pregnant

You are only fertile a few days each cycle. Knowing those days is the single highest-leverage thing you can do.

When it happens

Ovulation usually lands about 14 days before your next period, which is not always day 14. In a 28-day cycle that is mid-cycle, but cycles vary.

The 6-day window

Your fertile days are the 5 days before ovulation plus ovulation day, because sperm can live up to 5 days and the egg lives about 24 hours.

How to time it

Intercourse every 1 to 2 days through the window gives the best odds. You do not have to pinpoint a single perfect day.

How to spot it

Cervical mucus turns clear and stretchy like egg white, an ovulation predictor kit catches the LH surge about a day before release, and your temperature rises slightly just after.

Step Two

Before You Start: Supplements With Research Behind Them

Begin about three months before trying, because that is how long an egg takes to mature. Choose these with your practitioner, and test before you supplement where it matters.

Prenatal with Folate

400 to 800 mcg daily

The non-negotiable foundation. Start at least three months before conceiving to support healthy early development.

Standard of care

CoQ10 (Ubiquinol)

200 to 600 mg daily

Fuels the mitochondria inside the egg. A randomized trial in women with low reserve improved ovarian response and embryo quality, with the biggest role after 35.

RCT evidence

Myo-Inositol

often 2 to 4 g, 40 to 1 with D-chiro

One of the best-studied tools for ovulation and egg quality, with the strongest evidence in PCOS, where it helps restore regular cycles.

Meta-analyses

Vitamin D

dose to your level

Receptors for vitamin D sit in reproductive tissue. Correcting a deficiency supports hormone balance and egg quality. Test first, then dose.

Test, then treat

Omega-3 (EPA and DHA)

food first, then supplement

Anti-inflammatory fats linked in studies to better reproductive outcomes and healthier egg environment. Salmon and sardines, or a clean fish oil.

Observational

Choline

450 mg or more daily

Vital for your baby's brain and spinal development, yet most prenatals fall short. Eggs and lean meat are rich sources, and a supplement helps you reach the preconception target.

Often under-dosed
Step Three

Foods for Fertility

Tap to switch between what to lean into and what to ease off while trying to conceive.

Leafy greens and folate-rich foodsColorful fruits and vegetablesHealthy fats: avocado, olive oilSalmon and sardines (omega-3)Quality protein, eggs, legumesWhole grains over refinedNuts and seedsFull-fat dairy in moderationIron-rich foodsPlenty of water
Highly processed foodsTrans fats and fried foodsExcess sugar and refined carbsSugary drinks and sodasHigh caffeine (keep under 200 mg)Excess alcoholProcessed and cured meatsHigh-mercury fish
Step Four

When to Check With a Fertility Specialist

Time is the one thing you cannot get back. These are the points where it is wise to ask for testing.

Under 35

After 12 months of trying without success.

35 to 39

After 6 months of trying.

40+

Right away, do not wait the year.

Reasons to go sooner, at any age

  • Irregular, absent, or very painful cycles
  • Known PCOS, endometriosis, or thyroid disease
  • Two or more miscarriages
  • A known male-factor concern
  • Prior pelvic surgery, infection, or STI
Step Five

Don't Let the Window Close: Know Your Egg Timeline

You are born with every egg you will ever have, and both number and quality fall with age. If you are waiting to have children, knowing your numbers early is power.

~75%
of eggs chromosomally normal around age 28
~50%
around age 35
under 40%
by age 38 and beyond
50 to 60%
live birth from eggs frozen before 35, versus under 20% after 40
Mid-20s

Know your baseline. If you plan to wait, ask your practitioner about an AMH and antral follicle count so you can watch the trend instead of being surprised, and recheck periodically.

Late 20s to 34

The strongest window to freeze eggs if you are delaying. Egg quality is high and a single cycle often yields enough.

35

Fertility and egg quality decline faster from here. Testing becomes genuinely time-sensitive, not something to put off another year.

38 and up

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine advises against freezing past about 38. Conceiving is still possible, but with honest expectations and prompt support.

How to keep your eggs healthy as you age

Start support 90 days aheadCoQ10 or ubiquinolSteady blood sugarAntioxidant-rich foodsOmega-3 fatsNo smokingLimit alcoholProtect your sleepLower chronic stressA healthy weightTreat thyroid and PCOS

The Truth About IVF, and Why We Start Earlier

~$19,200
median cost of a single IVF cycle in the US
83%
of fertility patients say they are worried about cost
~70%
who do IVF take on debt to pay for it
1 in 3
women say infertility care is hard to access

IVF is a gift for many families. It is also expensive and daunting, and many women are frightened of the injectable hormones and the unknowns. That is exactly why we start with testing and the natural, root-cause levers, so a great many women conceive, or arrive far more prepared, before injectable IVF drugs are ever on the table.

If You Have Endometriosis

How to Get Pregnant With Endo, and Beat the Odds

Endometriosis makes conception harder, but it is far from a closed door. An estimated 60 to 70 percent of women with endometriosis conceive on their own, while 30 to 50 percent face some infertility. Here is the path most specialists follow.

Start: Endo and trying to conceive

Confirm the picture first: your age, AMH and ovarian reserve, partner semen analysis, and whether the tubes are open. Age is the biggest lever of all.

Stage I to II, minimal to mild
Try naturally first

Many conceive on their own. Track ovulation, support egg quality, and reduce inflammation.

Gentle assistance

If younger, removing visible endo at laparoscopy can help. Clomid or letrozole with IUI is a common next step.

Stage III to IV, moderate to severe
Surgery often helps first

Removing cysts and scar tissue can lift pregnancy rates, and many conceive within six months after.

Move to IVF sooner

If no pregnancy in six months, or you are 35 plus, IVF is often the most effective route, with strong success under 35.

Throughout: stack the odds

The 90-day egg-quality window, anti-inflammatory nutrition, steady blood sugar, and not letting time slip apply to every path.

How you beat the odds: act early instead of waiting, test so you know your real picture, calm inflammation, use surgery when it is indicated, and reach for IVF without shame when it is the faster road. Endo is a reason to start now, not a reason to give up.

Educational only, not medical advice. Every decision here belongs with you and your endocrinologist, OB-GYN, or reproductive specialist. Sources include the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Endometriosis UK and the Endometriosis Fertility Index, Cochrane reviews on antioxidants and CoQ10, research on myo-inositol and ovulation, and Fertility and Sterility on egg-freezing outcomes by age.

The Good News

Reasons for Real Hope

Fertility responds to the right support more often than women are told.

Tap any card to open it ✦

By Angel Laurent, M.Ed., HHP, HNP

Sources include: the American Society for Reproductive Medicine on ovarian reserve testing and infertility evaluation, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Cochrane reviews and Reproductive BioMedicine Online on CoQ10 and antioxidants, peer-reviewed research on myo-inositol and ovulation, and FDA labeling with reproductive endocrinology guidance on GLP-1 use and the recommended washout before conception.

All BloomHer™ content is for educational and informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Lab testing and any products or protocols are guided by a qualified practitioner. Anyone under 18 requires parent or legal guardian consent for any services, labs, or products. Read our full disclosures →

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