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The Pill: What I Wish I Knew Before Taking It
I was 18 when I first started taking the pill.
Like so many women, I was handed a little blister pack of tablets from my local GP. No detailed explanation, no conversation about long-term effects, no mention that this tiny tablet would override my natural hormone rhythm and essentially switch off ovulation.
Back then, I didn’t question it. I trusted my doctors advice and that was just what you did.
Fast forward 15+ years, three babies, and a health journey that’s taken me to the depths of hormonal chaos, gut dysfunction, and back again, I can confidently say: if I could go back in time, I wouldn’t take the pill.
This article isn’t here to scare you. It’s here to empower you. To share what I’ve learned – the hard way – and what brilliant minds like Dr Lara Briden, Dr Libby Weaver, Gary Brecka, and Dr Austin Lake are now openly sharing about what the pill really does to a woman’s body.
Because if you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you feel off. Maybe your energy’s tanked, your periods have gone haywire, or your mood swings have become unmanageable. You might be bloated, tired, struggling to lose weight, or noticing signs of thyroid dysfunction, PMS, hair thinning, autoimmune flares, or poor quality sleep.
What Happens When We Take the Pill?
The pill works by shutting down ovulation. That means your body stops producing its own natural hormones and runs instead on synthetic versions. And while it might regulate your bleed, what you’re experiencing is a withdrawal bleed, not a true period.
Dr Libby Weaver explains:
“Many women don’t realise the bleed they get on the pill is not a period, it’s a withdrawal from synthetic hormones. That’s a very different biological process than ovulation and menstruation.”
These synthetic hormones can impact your brain chemistry, thyroid, immune system, gut microbiome, and liver detox pathways.
What I Noticed After Coming Off the Pill
When I stopped taking the pill, I expected to feel better. But my body didn’t bounce back the way I’d hoped. My digestion was sluggish, I had constant bloating, my PMS worsened, my skin broke out (constantly) and I became sensitive to foods I’d always tolerated.
I later discovered this wasn’t just my experience, this is something thousands of women deal with. Post-pill symptoms are real.
Dr Lara Briden writes extensively about how the pill can suppress important hormones and make conditions like PCOS, insulin resistance, and low thyroid worse over time.
Nutrient Depletion: The Hidden Side Effect
One thing nobody told me about the pill is that it depletes crucial nutrients. We’re talking:
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B vitamins (especially B6, B12, folate)
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Magnesium
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Zinc
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Vitamin C & E
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CoQ10
According to Gary Brecka, “You can’t make a hormone without a nutrient.” So if the pill is depleting your nutrients, it’s no wonder your hormones feel chaotic!
If you have the MTHFR gene mutation (which affects how you process folate), taking the pill can make you feel especially unwell. Many women don’t even know they have this mutation (I do), yet it impacts everything from mood to detoxification to fertility.
And when your zinc to copper ratio becomes imbalanced? Hello, mood swings, anxiety, and skin issues.
Gut Health & The Pill
Your gut is home to your estrobolome – the part of your microbiome that regulates estrogen metabolism. The pill alters your gut bacteria, creating dysbiosis, inflammation, and a less diverse microbiome.
Dr Austin Lake says:
“The pill may mask symptoms temporarily, but the root cause: gut inflammation, hormone imbalance, nutrient depletion, only worsens over time.”
It’s no wonder so many women develop food sensitivities, IBS symptoms, or autoimmune conditions after years on hormonal birth control.
What Can You Do Instead?
There are alternatives. Natural fertility awareness methods are becoming more accurate and widely used. You can track your cycle, basal body temperature, and cervical mucus to avoid pregnancy and reconnect with your body’s natural rhythm.
More importantly, you can support your body back into balance by focusing on:
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Nourishing your gut with fermented, whole foods
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Replenishing your depleted nutrients
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Supporting liver detox pathways
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Regulating your nervous system with rest and mindfulness
My #1 Daily Non-Negotiable: A Women’s Probiotic That Works
After years of trial and error, one thing I’ll never go without again is a high-quality probiotic made for women.
For Her is designed to replenish your gut with real, food-based probiotics and help your body rebuild that critical foundation for hormone balance. It’s 100% organic, rich in fermented nutrients, and gentle enough to take morning and night.
Restoring your gut flora is one of the most powerful steps you can take to regulate hormones, especially if you’ve been on (or are coming off) the pill.
My Thoughts
If you’re navigating the weird and wild world of midlife hormones, know this: you’re absolutely not alone. And you’re not crazy (I’m riding the waves here with you!)
Your symptoms, whether it’s weight gain, fatigue, bloating, anxiety, or painful periods, are valid. They’re signals. Clues. And more often than not, they’re not just “because you’re getting older.” They’re because your body is depleted and ready to be nourished, not masked.
If you’re ready to get to the root cause, I encourage you to look and investigate deeper.
Explore your nutrient status. I recommend starting with the Well Woman Check or the Genetic Methylation Panel from i-screen. It helped me piece together the puzzle of my own health.
💌 Please get in touch here if you’d like to learn more or need help interpreting your results.
