What your body is trying to tell you when it grows something…
At the clinic, I often hear this sentence: “Something is growing in my body — and I’m scared.”
A cyst. A fibroid. PCOS. Endometriosis.
And very quickly, the conversation becomes about removing it, suppressing it, or fighting it.
But I want to offer you a slightly different way of looking at this.
Not instead of medical care — but alongside it.
Not everything that grows is your enemy.
Many conditions in women’s health are benign. They grow slowly, develop over time, and reflect deeper imbalances.
They are not random. They are expressions.
Your body is not suddenly breaking. It is adapting. Compensating. Speaking.
When we look deeper, we often find patterns:
Hormonal shifts, chronic stress, suppressed cycles, metabolic changes.
PCOS (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome) for example, is not just about cysts.
It is a whole-body condition involving hormones, metabolism, and environment.
Endometriosis is not “just pain.” It is tissue responding to your cycle — just in the wrong place.
What I see in practice is not just the diagnosis.
It’s the pattern behind it.
Bodies that have been holding things together for years.
Cycles that have been ignored. Stress that has been constant.
Needs that are unmet. Processes that have been suppressed.
And then, slowly, something begins to grow. Because the body is actually trying very hard to adapt.
The real question thus changes- don’t ask why the growth. Instead ask, why the need for the growth?
In homeopathy, we don’t treat the diagnosis alone.
We look at your story.
Your patterns.
Your energy.
Your history.
The aim is not suppression.
The aim is regulation.
And even only Homeopathy is not the full deal we offer you when you work with us.
Lifestyle matters too: Regular meals, stable blood sugar, movement, rest. Simple things. Done consistently.
What you need specifically in your unique set-up; not a page out of a standardized text book.
What I tell my patients is this:
You are not your diagnosis.
Your body is not failing you.
It is trying to find balance.
Let’s reframe from “How do I get rid of this?”; to: “Why did my body need this?”
That’s where healing begins.

