-
The Emotional and Physical Toll of PCOS: What People Don’t See
One of the hardest parts of having PCOS for me is not even the pain. I can take painkillers. I have developed a high tolerance for discomfort. It is not the irregular cycles either. For a while, I even convinced myself that not having a period was convenient.
It is not even the facial hair. I can book a wax appointment. I can pluck. I can manage it.
It is the fight.
It is the constant negotiation with my own body that feels like a losing game. It is doing everything “right” and still feeling like nothing is ever enough.
I remember how dismissed I felt the first time a doctor looked at my symptoms, barely asked questions, and said, “Just take birth control. You will be fine.”
That was it. No real conversation. No investigation. No compassion.
Just a prescription and a dismissal.
I walked out feeling small. Like my pain was not serious enough to deserve curiosity. Like I was overreacting. Like I should just be grateful and stop asking questions.
But I was not fine.
I was bloated. Inflamed. Uncomfortable in my own skin. I looked in the mirror and felt disconnected from the woman staring back at me. I felt like a stranger in my own body.
I was called lazy when I did not have the energy to exercise, not because I lacked discipline, but because the fatigue was bone-deep. I dealt with brain fog that made simple tasks feel heavy. I could be well-rested and still exhausted.
My body changed so many times that I no longer knew what “normal” looked like for me. My self-esteem suffered because I did not recognize myself anymore.
I took medications that were supposed to help, progesterone and estrogen, and watched them create new problems. Mood swings. Tenderness. Emotional instability. A body that felt unfamiliar. I often wondered if I was overreacting or simply overwhelmed.
I managed symptoms while quietly grieving the side effects.
I told doctors I was in excruciating pain and was not taken seriously. I learned that about one in ten women in the United States live with PCOS, yet many of us still feel invisible in the medical system. Because it is common, it is often minimized.
I thought about infertility more than I wanted to. I held the possibility that becoming a mother, something I have always dreamed about, might not be simple for me. I carried that fear privately while smiling publicly.
I did my best with food and exercise and watched my body respond slowly, unpredictably, or not at all. I wondered if something was wrong with me. I wondered if I was not trying hard enough.
Then there were the comparisons.
People sent me before-and-after photos of other women with PCOS and asked why I could not do the same.
As if effort is universal.
As if hormones are predictable.
As if bodies are machines.They did not see the meal prepping, the workouts, the supplements, or the tears. They only saw the outcome and assumed I was failing.
I would click “record” for my content and hate what I saw on the screen. I felt puffy. Swollen. Exposed. From the outside, my absence looked like laziness or inconsistency.
In reality, it was a confidence battle.
PCOS did not just affect my hormones. It affected how I showed up in the world.
I used to walk into rooms feeling confident and visible. Over time, as my body changed and my confidence shifted, I shrank. I stayed home more. I avoided cameras. Mirrors. Attention.
I became more introverted, not because my personality changed, but because I no longer felt safe in my body.
There were seasons where my lowered confidence made me accept less than I deserved. I stayed in spaces that did not honor me because I did not feel strong enough to demand better. I internalized blame that was never mine.
PCOS did not cause those choices, but it weakened my voice enough for me to doubt myself.
And that is the part people do not talk about.
PCOS is not just weight gain.
It is not just fertility.
It is not just cysts on ovaries.It is the psychological erosion that happens when you feel like your body is constantly working against you.
It is the exhaustion of trying to care for something that does not seem to cooperate.
It is the grief of losing the version of yourself that felt effortless.
For a long time, I felt like my body was my enemy. Like, no matter what I did, I would never win. But I am learning something different now.
I am learning that my body is not against me. It is dysregulated. It is sensitive. It is navigating insulin resistance, inflammation, and hormonal imbalance. Instead of fighting it, I am learning to steward it.
Research shows that for many women with PCOS, high-intensity and high-stress workouts can worsen symptoms by increasing cortisol and inflammation. Lower-intensity movement, such as walking, strength training, Pilates, and yoga, combined with consistency, often supports better hormonal balance and insulin sensitivity.
More is not always better.
Gentleness is not weakness.
Slow progress is not failure.PCOS has humbled me. It has forced me to slow down. It has made me confront how much of my confidence was tied to appearance. It has exposed how deeply I internalized society’s expectations of what discipline should look like.
Living with PCOS has taught me that the best way forward is not comparison.
It’s a commitment to doing your best and loving your body at every stage.
Every PCOS journey is different.
What works for one woman may not work for another.
What looks easy online may be years in the making.
What seems slow may be sustainable.And that matters.
PCOS has taken some things from me. But it has not taken my will to fight for myself. It has not taken my faith. And it has not taken my voice.
That is enough to keep rebuilding.