THE
SECRET’S OUT!
MEXICAN WILD YAM & MENSTRUATION:
Can't periods be easier?
Does menstruation have to bring mood swings and
cramps?
What is menstruation anyway? What happens to my body during menstruation?
Are hormones really responsible?
Women start menstruating generally from the age of 12-14 through to
when menopause starts.
Sometimes it is
earlier, sometimes it is later.
Either way, like it or not, we have to learn to live with the
monthly cycle.
For some of us this means the blues, moods and cramps.
Sometimes we need a little helping hand to ease some of the more
severe reactions and symptoms that can accompany menstruation.
Finding out what happens is the first step to improving conditions.
Natural support is available and it's good to know it is.
How
come women suffer with menstruation?
It is a fact that women have to go through an enormous range of
hormonal changes, ups and downs as part of their life, especially with monthly
cycles called periods or more technically menstruation.
For some women the period passes by almost unnoticed, but for most
of us, it can have its share of ups and downs, cramps and blues. Haven’t you
noticed that just before your period, life gets a little unbearable? Do you
ever find you get a little bit more impatient with things you normally have
loads of time for? Blame it on the
hormones!
What
about mood swings?
Does
anyone suffer from mood swings?
Or
the monthly blues?
How
come we women have to put up with so much?!
Well
I guess that is the flip side of providing the beauty and sensuality in the
world.
The other side of the coin.
Hormones and Menstruation
It is hard to believe that really tiny substances in our bodies can
create so many powerful effects and these are called hormones. Hormones are
small but powerful chemicals in the body that are made up of proteins. They
have specific jobs to do, such as helping to ripen the eggs in the ovaries,
helping to prepare the uterus for pregnancy, encouraging milk production in new
mothers. Hormones are responsible for our periods, monthly moods and menopause
blues! But they are so small! How can something so small be so powerful? And
what controls them?
What happens During
Menstruation?
Well basically, these little chemicals trigger chemical reactions
and that is why the word ‘hormone’ derives from the Greek word ‘hormon’ literally meaning ‘that which sets in motion’, as
hormones set off chemical processes in the body. Such as the ripening of a
female egg in one of the 2 ovaries, the maturation of an egg and its release
called ovulation which happens in the middle of the menstrual cycle usually
about 2 weeks after the last period. Hormones are also responsible for helping
prepare the lining of the uterus in the case that we get pregnant. During our
ovulating years, each month our uterus prepares to become pregnant and becomes
a little thicker inside, and then, unless we get pregnant, each month, this
lining falls away in menstruation as well as the unfertilised egg. Hence the
monthly bleed.
Women often have to learn to live with painful periods or being run
down for days at a time before one’s period and often during it. Pain, cramps,
upsets, moods are common symptoms of menstruation. But then some women are
unfortunate enough to experience extreme symptoms, being sick, feeling faint,
looking very pale and being wiped out by it.
A little bit like: Oh no! Not another one. It is true that sometimes,
one’s period can be almost an overwhelming physical and emotional experience,
at least for a day or 2.
Natural Support for
Menstruation
Finding out what is happening to your body means you can start to
look at natural ways to improve any symptoms you may experience during these
days as well as finding new ways to enhance this time of the month.
Interestingly enough, traditional North American Indian women turned for
natural support during these days. They knew where to look! Perhaps if they’d
have had internet access, Mexican Wild Yam would have been known about long
ago! As it happens it only really started to become known about since 1950 when
US research discovered that it contained a precursor to the hormone
progesterone. The active plant chemical in Mexican Wild Yam is called
diosgenin. It is linked to helping women to better survive through the trials
and traumas of their monthly hormone shake-up.
Natural alternatives have always been there, it’s nice to know you can
still get them today.
Mexican
Wild Yam:
THE WHOLE ROOT, NOT AN EXTRACT.
No fillers, no additives,
THE WHOLE ROOT, NOT AN EXTRACT.
No fillers, no additives,
100%
pure vegetable root. A tonic for women’s health.