My acquaintance is not of pre menopausal age. She says that in her periods she has to get up three times in the night to change pads. Not at all normal.
Some accounts on the internet - and videos - are horrifying.
I hope she can get help, and not just gaslighting! That will make you anemic very, very fast, and tends to lead to emergency hysterectomy if it's not dealt with in a timely manner.
Getting a depo shot to shut things down for a while can buy you some time to research your options (I know how ugly that sounds-- know a few people who've been through it). Just-- in that situation it's really easy to get badgered into having your uterus and ovaries removed because "it's an emergency!" (and maybe it is!), but it doesn't always have to happen right now, without properly informed consent. Most women go into a hysterectomy with *no idea* what the long-term risks of that are, physically (organ prolapse, loss of sexual function) or hormonally (loss of libido, loss of maternal feeling, needing exogenous hormones).
My family and I came to the United States from Havana in 1961. My mother already had 4 children and my father died when she was pregnant with me. In her late 30s or early 40s, a GYN tried to convince her that she needed a hysterectomy. She refused and never had issues with her reproductive system until she passed at age 94. I’m sure this was part of the population control agenda so that she wouldn’t have any more children. 
Offering hysterectomies to healthy pre-menopausal women used to be very, very common in the US. I think for my grandparents' generation it was the most common method of birth control for married people.
The only problem with using Depo in this manner is that many women bleed and/or spot after receiving Depo, especially when starting it. That could be a *real* problem in the setting of bleeding caused by or exacerbated by spike protein (whether the source is post-Covid infection or jab)
The shut down of bleeding may take as long as 1 year, receiving continuous doses of Depo, on time, every 11-13 weeks. Many women love the no period feature of Depo, but it isn't an instant side effect (this is almost never the case).
The FLCCC now has a protocol to help people recover post-jab, and a list of docs who treat long-covid. While I haven't heard of many gynos specifically treating gyn issues caused by the jab or post-covid, I think just treating long-Covid or post-jab issues in general may also help women with gyn issues specifically because the treatments are systemic, and all our systems are connected, so helping one system will likely have beneficial downstream or secondary effects.
Oh, absolutely, I would never recommend using that to cover up spike exposure symptoms. Only that if you're being pressured into a right-now hysterectomy, it's better than getting rushed into a life-altering medical decision you may have serious regrets about.
Of course, but as a strategy to buy time to find alternatives, Depo may backfire since it can take so long for Depo-related bleeding to stop it may exacerbate bleeding from covid-related issues.
The real issue is so many who get the jab are going to docs who will gas-light them into thinking there is no relationship with the "coincidence" once they start connecting the dots and timeline. So even if they might now be willing to consider a non-mainstream / narrative treatment, getting non-conventional information will be a challenge if they do not have any friends who made different choices. The last two years have been so polarizing I think many people's network of friends have become echo-chambers.
Shoot, even for folks who aren't living in echo-chambers, normalcy bias is a crazy powerful thing. My vaxd husband is completely unable to even contemplate the idea that the shots may have more than the most teeny tiny negative side-effects. He's very trusting of authority.
Observations from VAERS: by day of onset, highest reports within 24 hours of shot - normalized frequency data looks like: 1.0 for day 0, 0.5 for day 1, 0.25 for day 2, followed by extended reports
Candidates: Spike protein, LNP, innate immune response, or other???
For immediate onset symptoms lasting on two cycles, the innate immune response is the most likely candidate because the same pattern occurs for other high reactogenicity vaccines at 15-fold lower rate
Spike and LNP are prime candidates for symptoms lasting more than 2 months - see reports on LNP biodistribution to ovaries etc plus expression of Spike for 60 days plus
Jackie Maybin, an English gyno, who is pro vaccine of course, listed three possible causes for period disturbances post jab in 2021.
Effects on brain controlling reproductive hormones.
effects on ovaries, eg inflammation in reaction to Covid or the jabs, which would be temporary. But this could, though she didn't say so, cover damage to eggs, though it's hard to see how that effect would link to heavy periods.
Direct effects on the womb lining. I wonder how these would work. Would the body shed the womb lining especially thoroughly if it contained some risk to future implanted eggs? We're out of known science with that speculation. If so you'd expect the problems to be temporary so long as a woman stops the shots. Elsewhere the shots cause clots, so has any informed scientist who is sceptical suggested a mechanism?
It's not PEG to blame because AZ causes it too.
My guess is that it is miscarriages and stillbirths causing the drop, since in the Pfizer trial a roughly equal number got pregnant in both groups, so possible temporary. But the partners of men in that trial probably weren't monitored - anyone know? A reduction due to a drop in sperm quality probably wasn't examined, and would add to any miscarriage effect, and could be a permanent change. If so, there will be months of lower birth rates, then a recovery, but never back to pre jab levels.
My acquaintance is not of pre menopausal age. She says that in her periods she has to get up three times in the night to change pads. Not at all normal.
Some accounts on the internet - and videos - are horrifying.
I hope she can get help, and not just gaslighting! That will make you anemic very, very fast, and tends to lead to emergency hysterectomy if it's not dealt with in a timely manner.
Getting a depo shot to shut things down for a while can buy you some time to research your options (I know how ugly that sounds-- know a few people who've been through it). Just-- in that situation it's really easy to get badgered into having your uterus and ovaries removed because "it's an emergency!" (and maybe it is!), but it doesn't always have to happen right now, without properly informed consent. Most women go into a hysterectomy with *no idea* what the long-term risks of that are, physically (organ prolapse, loss of sexual function) or hormonally (loss of libido, loss of maternal feeling, needing exogenous hormones).
My family and I came to the United States from Havana in 1961. My mother already had 4 children and my father died when she was pregnant with me. In her late 30s or early 40s, a GYN tried to convince her that she needed a hysterectomy. She refused and never had issues with her reproductive system until she passed at age 94. I’m sure this was part of the population control agenda so that she wouldn’t have any more children. 
Offering hysterectomies to healthy pre-menopausal women used to be very, very common in the US. I think for my grandparents' generation it was the most common method of birth control for married people.
Oh lovely!
The only problem with using Depo in this manner is that many women bleed and/or spot after receiving Depo, especially when starting it. That could be a *real* problem in the setting of bleeding caused by or exacerbated by spike protein (whether the source is post-Covid infection or jab)
The shut down of bleeding may take as long as 1 year, receiving continuous doses of Depo, on time, every 11-13 weeks. Many women love the no period feature of Depo, but it isn't an instant side effect (this is almost never the case).
The FLCCC now has a protocol to help people recover post-jab, and a list of docs who treat long-covid. While I haven't heard of many gynos specifically treating gyn issues caused by the jab or post-covid, I think just treating long-Covid or post-jab issues in general may also help women with gyn issues specifically because the treatments are systemic, and all our systems are connected, so helping one system will likely have beneficial downstream or secondary effects.
Oh, absolutely, I would never recommend using that to cover up spike exposure symptoms. Only that if you're being pressured into a right-now hysterectomy, it's better than getting rushed into a life-altering medical decision you may have serious regrets about.
Of course, but as a strategy to buy time to find alternatives, Depo may backfire since it can take so long for Depo-related bleeding to stop it may exacerbate bleeding from covid-related issues.
The real issue is so many who get the jab are going to docs who will gas-light them into thinking there is no relationship with the "coincidence" once they start connecting the dots and timeline. So even if they might now be willing to consider a non-mainstream / narrative treatment, getting non-conventional information will be a challenge if they do not have any friends who made different choices. The last two years have been so polarizing I think many people's network of friends have become echo-chambers.
Shoot, even for folks who aren't living in echo-chambers, normalcy bias is a crazy powerful thing. My vaxd husband is completely unable to even contemplate the idea that the shots may have more than the most teeny tiny negative side-effects. He's very trusting of authority.
That is scary.
Two variables: age and day of menstrual cycle
Observations from VAERS: by day of onset, highest reports within 24 hours of shot - normalized frequency data looks like: 1.0 for day 0, 0.5 for day 1, 0.25 for day 2, followed by extended reports
Candidates: Spike protein, LNP, innate immune response, or other???
see: https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-1508835/v1
For immediate onset symptoms lasting on two cycles, the innate immune response is the most likely candidate because the same pattern occurs for other high reactogenicity vaccines at 15-fold lower rate
Spike and LNP are prime candidates for symptoms lasting more than 2 months - see reports on LNP biodistribution to ovaries etc plus expression of Spike for 60 days plus
Jackie Maybin, an English gyno, who is pro vaccine of course, listed three possible causes for period disturbances post jab in 2021.
Effects on brain controlling reproductive hormones.
effects on ovaries, eg inflammation in reaction to Covid or the jabs, which would be temporary. But this could, though she didn't say so, cover damage to eggs, though it's hard to see how that effect would link to heavy periods.
Direct effects on the womb lining. I wonder how these would work. Would the body shed the womb lining especially thoroughly if it contained some risk to future implanted eggs? We're out of known science with that speculation. If so you'd expect the problems to be temporary so long as a woman stops the shots. Elsewhere the shots cause clots, so has any informed scientist who is sceptical suggested a mechanism?
It's not PEG to blame because AZ causes it too.
My guess is that it is miscarriages and stillbirths causing the drop, since in the Pfizer trial a roughly equal number got pregnant in both groups, so possible temporary. But the partners of men in that trial probably weren't monitored - anyone know? A reduction due to a drop in sperm quality probably wasn't examined, and would add to any miscarriage effect, and could be a permanent change. If so, there will be months of lower birth rates, then a recovery, but never back to pre jab levels.
😳