Then I would tell the doctors to bite themselves... if you get it less, and its not physically affecting you or has any long term effects that I am not aware off within women... then why they hell would you want to put yourself through that... I'm with you if there is no real benefit to a monthly menstrual cycle... the pill screws with women, I know that from obviously being with women and watching the ranging effects it has had across past relationships.
Yes, this is exactly what I plan on doing. NO MORE PILLS!
Hi ScaredOfLonely,
If I read correctly, you said you've never had a regular, monthly cycle. While stress and trauma are both huge factors in causing irregular cycles, it is worrisome that you've never had a typical monthly cycle. If this is due strictly to stress/trauma, then I truly hope you are able to work in therapy to better regulate your emotions and hopefully your body will follow. I know - easier said than done.
I said it wasn't MONTHLY, not that it wasn't "regular". At this point I have no hope for therapy making my cycle monthly (a big LOL there!) I have CPTSD due to CHILDHOOD trauma, so my whole life has been one big ball of stress.
As for going on birth control pills, that is entirely your decision and not one that a physician should force upon you. If you want your cycle to be regulated, the pills would have that effect, regardless of any stress you are experiencing. If your irregular cycle is an added source of stress, it may be beneficial to go on the pill to reduce your overall stress. My concern for you is that it is not healthy to go your entire adult life not having a regular cycle. I'm not sure how old you are, but build up of the uterine lining (endometrium) can lead to problems later on down the road.
I think the most important thing for you to do is identify the cause of your irregularity and than go from there.
Honestly, I get my period four times a year, and that's the minimum that you need in order to avoid cancer issues down the road. I think its a bunch of crap to say "here are some pills that will give you a FAKE period, and yes, we know that they may increase your chances of cancer, and yes, we know that they can increase your anxiety, blah blah blah blah blah, but in the end, you need to be on birth control because you don't fit within what XYZ medical textbook says you should" BLAH!
AND I counter with if only getting my period four times a year is soooo bad, then WHY are there birth control pills which are designed to give a woman her period only four times a year? So yes, its medically induced... We have pills that make women get their period less, but if you aren't regular to begin with, we want you to get your period MORE?
Regarding the PCOS diagnosis - your ultrasound can be negative for cysts even if you do have PCOS. It is normal for women to have cysts at certain times throughout the menstrual cycle, but PCOS is characterized by an abnormal amount and type of cysts. These cysts, however, are not always present, and do follow your normal menstrual cycle. Since your cycle is not medically "normal" your pattern of cysts may not be either. You could have cysts one week and none the next. The blood work is usually the more definitive aspect of diagnosing PCOS, which you also said was negative, but I'd be interested in knowing what they actually tested you for. Do you have any other symptoms of PCOS, aside from weight gain? Because you've never really been regular, I wouldn't rule out PCOS as a cause unless you've been tested on multiple occassions.
Yes, PCOS cysts are different, but I believe you are incorrect when you say they come and go. IF that were the case, there wouldn't be medical procedures to remove the cysts. Doctors would just wait for them to go away. I don't have the "pearl" cysts which ARE typical of PCOS and do NOT just "go away" on their own. (Actually, I don't have any cysts...)
IMHO it is just a trash can diagnosis. Oh, you're not text book regular and we don't feel like taking the time to figure out what is wrong with you? It must be PCOS. Sorry, but that's the attitude that I've gotten from more than one doctor.