A cycle out of rhythm.
PCOD is a cascade. We work it from the
top.
An irregular cycle, weight that holds where it didn't, acne that returned in your thirties, the diagnosis. PCOD is rarely about the ovaries alone. The cascade starts higher up.
The hormonal cascade
The cycle is a conversation between the brain and the ovaries. The hypothalamus releases GnRH; the pituitary releases LH and FSH; the ovaries release estrogen and progesterone in turn. When this conversation flows, the cycle is regular.
In PCOD, the conversation gets jammed. Cortisol from chronic stress disrupts the brain's signal. Insulin resistance pushes the ovaries to make more androgens. Inflammation makes everything worse. The cycle stretches or skips, follicles stall as cysts, the body holds what it shouldn't.
the yogic understandingSvadhisthana and the pelvic flow
The lineage names the स्वाधिष्ठान चक्र as the energetic centre below the navel — the seat of the reproductive system and emotional flow. Postures that open the hips and gently move the pelvis bring circulation, lymph, and prana into the area.
And we work the higher cascade too — slow breath to drop cortisol, restorative postures to signal safety, yoga nidra to give the nervous system the rest it forgot how to take.
what helps, and whyHip openers · belly work · breath · rest
Baddha Konasana opens the hips and the pelvic floor. Bhujangasana stimulates the thyroid and the adrenals. Nadi Shodhana balances the nervous system. Moola Bandha works the pelvic floor. Yoga Nidra resets cortisol and supports the brain's signal.
This is not a cure. It is a practice that gives the cycle a better chance.
Rhythm in the breath teaches rhythm in the cycle.
For an irregular cycle
A note: skip Bhujangasana and Moola Bandha during your bleed. If you're trying to conceive, pause Kapalbhati and strong inversions. This practice supports your medical care; it doesn't replace it.
Come work it
with me.
Free Saturday class. For something this layered, the slow, supported practice is the most useful one to learn.
Reserve your place — Saturday 7:30 PM