Low progesterone with PCOS can feel terrifying when you are trying to get pregnant. The brown spotting before your period. The short luteal phase. The chemical pregnancy fear. The negative pregnancy test after you were sure you timed everything right. The temperature drop. The cramps. That feeling that your body gets close to pregnancy but somehow cannot hold long enough for you to feel safe hoping. In this episode of PCOS and Prosecco, Tianna Trinidad, RN and fertility strategist, breaks down the progesterone problem nobody explains clearly enough to women with PCOS. Because yes, progesterone matters. But low progesterone may not be the beginning of the story. It may be the receipt. If you have been Googling low progesterone and PCOS, low progesterone TTC, low progesterone miscarriage, progesterone cream, progesterone supplements, brown spotting before period, or short luteal phase, this episode will help you slow down and ask a better question: What happened earlier in the cycle that created this progesterone pattern in the first place? Inside this episode, we talk about why progesterone rises after ovulation, why ovulation quality matters, why the second half of your cycle needs to stay steady for implantation, and why chasing progesterone alone may leave you doing more without actually understanding more. This episode is for the woman with PCOS who is tired of adding one more supplement, one more cream, one more lab, one more Google search, and still feeling like her body is giving signs nobody is helping her connect. You’ll learn: Why low progesterone with PCOS may not be the whole problem How progesterone connects to ovulation and the luteal phase Why brown spotting before your period may need more context Why a short luteal phase can feel so scary when you are trying to conceive Why progesterone support may help some women, but still may not explain the full cycle Why the better question is not just “How do I raise progesterone?” but “What created this pattern?” How your PCOS fertility plan may need to look at what happens before ovulation, during ovulation, and after ovulation This is not medical advice, and it does not replace care from your provider. If you have concerns about progesterone, spotting, pregnancy loss, or early pregnancy, please talk with your doctor. But if progesterone has become the thing you keep chasing, supplementing, Googling, and blaming yourself over, this episode will help you see the bigger picture. Because you do not just want a better progesterone number. You want the baby. You want the positive test. The ultrasound. The heartbeat. The chance to feel safe enough to hope past the first faint line. If you are ready to stop guessing and finally understand the cycle that keeps creating the progesterone pattern, apply for From PCOS to Pregnancy here: [ From PCOS to Pregnancy link] And if you need the map first, join my free fertility training, How to Get and Stay Pregnant With PCOS, here: [Get and Stay Pregnant with PCOS Fertility Training Link]