“”

Women's Health, Your Way

April 04, 2026

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women’s health answers.

GIRLHOOD / Making Birth Control Choices That Actually Feel Right

Making Birth Control Choices That Actually Feel Right

Making Birth Control Choices That Actually Feel Right

I was at my kids’ soccer practice the other day when another mom asked what I do for a living. As soon as I said “women’s health,” she leaned in like we were about to swap secrets. Within minutes, we were talking about how our generation (elder millennials, where you at?!) spent the better part of our twenties on hormonal birth control. It wasn’t just about responsibility, either. For many of us with PCOS or heavy, painful periods, birth control wasn’t a choice so much as the only solution we were ever offered.

So when I read the NBC News story about the Depo-Provera lawsuit, my heart broke a little. The injectable birth control, used by millions of women for decades, has now been linked in some studies to an increased risk of meningiomas, tumors that grow from the lining of the brain. More than a thousand women are suing Pfizer, saying they were never adequately warned about possible long-term effects. The company denies wrongdoing, and ACOG notes that the overall risk is small. But “small” feels abstract when you’re the one living with the fallout.

What’s especially frustrating is how familiar this all feels. From birth control pills to IUDs to hormone therapies, women have long been expected to shoulder the physical and emotional burden of contraception. We’ve endured side effects that were brushed off, symptoms that were minimized, and a medical system that too often treats our pain as anecdotal rather than evidence.

I don’t know what the answer is, but I do know this: women deserve transparency. Not fine print. Not reassurance. Real, honest conversations about risks, benefits, and options — so we can make choices with both eyes open.

Ask Clara: Which birth control is right for me?

More from GIRLHOOD

Somewhere between my postpartum scalp freakout and my third Google search about whether I should be exfoliating or not, I had a realization: women's wellness doesn't have an information problem... Read more
Something else you should know: I am, despite my better judgment, a hopeless romantic. I have watched almost every season of The Bachelor. I have cried at the finale. I am... Read more
If you know me IRL, you know I have the kind of health anxiety that comes from knowing too much. Not spiraling-at-2am anxiety, but the specific, well-researched kind that accumulates... Read more
Confession: I always need to be reading a book. Not want, need. If I have a story in my head, I can't hear my own anxiety. It doesn't have room.... Read more
There's a video circulating that I haven't been able to stop thinking about. It's a critique of the "soft girl" era — the aesthetic of candles, nervous system regulation, protecting... Read more
As someone with an autoimmune condition (hi, Hashimoto's, the gift that keeps on giving), I'm obsessed with the research connecting what happens to us emotionally — especially early in life... Read more
Every day, without fail, a version of the same search lands in Rescripted's data: why are my period cramps so bad, is this amount of pain normal, can't get out of... Read more
Every year around my birthday, I do this thing where I take stock — not in a vision-board way, more like a slightly uncomfortable look at whether I actually am... Read more
This week I did something I'd been meaning to do for months: I sat down, opened my calendar, and scheduled everything — the annual GYN visit, thyroid bloodwork, the follow-up... Read more
Someone asked me recently what I thought about the "trimester zero" trend: the growing movement of women spending months, sometimes years, optimizing their bodies before they even try to conceive.... Read more