When Your Postpartum Period Has a Personality
After two pregnancies and three babies, I thought I knew my body pretty well. We've been through infertility, loss, two vaginal births, and a C-section — I felt like we had a rhythm. And then my period came back postpartum and introduced itself like someone I’d met once in college and barely recognized now.
Not necessarily more painful. Just… different. Heavier. More dramatic. The kind of cycle that makes you check the calendar twice and wonder if your uterus has been quietly rebranding. I remember thinking, is this just what happens now? Because no one really mentions this part. You get the discharge instructions, the mesh underwear, the six-week clearance. You do not get a heads up that months later your period might return with a slightly louder personality.
There are reasons for it. After pregnancy, your uterus has stretched and shifted and done the absolute most. When your cycle returns, prostaglandins — the compounds that trigger uterine contractions — can fluctuate, and the uterine lining can be thicker at first, which can mean a heavier period. Breastfeeding adds another layer; prolactin suppresses ovulation, so when hormones finally recalibrate, things can feel unpredictable before they feel steady.
For a lot of women, the first three to six cycles are the messiest... heavier, irregular, just off. I wrote a full breakdown of what’s happening physiologically, what actually helps (timed NSAIDs, heat, pelvic floor PT), and when it’s worth checking in about conditions like endometriosis or adenomyosis (which pregnancy can temporarily mask) here.
Just because your body did something extraordinary doesn’t mean it snaps back into familiarity overnight. It’s allowed to need real support afterward.
Ask Clara:
"Can you get pregnant while breastfeeding?"