Thyroid Imbalance

Now has a new story

Your thyroid is small—but its power is massive. It’s the control center for your metabolism, mood, energy—and fertility. If you’ve been feeling constantly tired, cold, anxious, bloated, gaining weight without reason, or experiencing irregular cycles, your thyroid may be whispering for help.

You’ve probably been told

“Your TSH is slightly off—it’s nothing to worry about.” 

 “Take this pill and retest in 6 months.” 

 “Thyroid doesn’t affect pregnancy that much.”

 But the truth?

Thyroid imbalance is one of the most common silent disruptors of natural conception. You don’t have to live in hormonal fog.

 Change your fertility story.

The story of Thyroid Disorders has changed

Thyroid Disorders Story
🧓
OLD STORY
“Your thyroid levels are within range.”
"Just take thyroxine and move on.”
“Thyroid won’t affect your pregnancy chances.”
🌱
NEW STORY
Normal labs don’t always mean optimal fertility function.
Medication helps, but doesn’t fix the root triggers.
Both underactive and overactive thyroid can block conception and increase miscarriage risk.

What is Thyroid Imbalance?

There are two primary issues:

Hypothyroidism (Underactive Thyroid)

Root Hormonal Imbalances
Slows down metabolism and ovulation
Common in women with fatigue, weight gain, depression

Hyperthyroidism (Overactive Thyroid)

Root Hormonal Imbalances
Speeds up metabolism erratically
Causes anxiety, hair loss, weight loss, and hormonal chaos

Both disrupt fertility because the thyroid is deeply linked to ovaries, pituitary, adrenal glands, and uterus.

How Thyroid Issues Affect Fertility

3x3 Disruptors Grid
Irregular or missed ovulation
Thin uterine lining due to hormonal suppression
Increased risk of miscarriage in the first trimester
Slower embryo development
Higher chance of failed implantation
Progesterone deficiency (in hypothyroid women)

What Makes It Worse?

3x3 Disruptors Grid
High stress → Elevated cortisol blocks thyroid hormone conversion
Poor gut health → 20% of T4 to T3 conversion happens in the gut
Nutrient deficiencies: iodine, selenium, zinc, iron, Vitamin D
Exposure to fluoride, BPA, heavy metals
Overuse of raw cruciferous vegetables in hypothyroidism
Ignored subclinical hypothyroidism (normal TSH but symptoms present)

Your thyroid is not broken.

It just needs to be heard. Let’s help it speak life back into your body.