PCOS and Prosecco

Tianna Trinidad @ Love Served Warm

PCOS and Prosecco is for women with PCOS who are trying to get pregnant or lose weight naturally and are tired of guessing. Hosted by nurse and hormone coach Tianna Trinidad, each episode blends simple hormone science, mindset shifts, and real-life PCOS strategy. You’ll learn how to restore ovulation, decode your fertility signals, balance your cycle, and lose stubborn weight without diets, shame, or medical gaslighting. If your labs look “normal” but your body says otherwise, you’re in the right place.

  1. 2h ago

    Low Progesterone With PCOS: Why Your Body Gets Close But Still Isn’t Getting Pregnant

    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]

    18 min
  2. Jun 9

    Brown Discharge Before Your Period With PCOS: Is Your Cycle Ending Too Soon to Get Pregnant?

    Brown discharge before your period can feel small to everyone else, but when you are trying to get pregnant with PCOS, it can send your whole body into panic mode. Is it your period starting? Is it implantation bleeding? Is it old blood? Is it low progesterone? Is it a sign your luteal phase is too short? Or is this one of those symptoms everybody keeps brushing off while you are still staring at negative pregnancy tests? In this episode of PCOS and Prosecco, Tianna Trinidad, RN and fertility strategist, explains why brown discharge before your period with PCOS may not be random, especially when it keeps showing up in the same part of your cycle. Because when you are trying to conceive with PCOS, the question is not just, “Did my period come?” The better question is, “What was happening before it came?” We are talking about why spotting before your period needs context, how brown discharge may connect to ovulation, progesterone, the luteal phase, implantation support, and why your second half of the cycle matters when you are trying to get and stay pregnant with PCOS. This episode is for the woman who keeps wiping, checking, Googling, spiraling, and wondering if her body is giving her a sign that nobody is helping her understand. You’ll learn: Why brown discharge before your period may matter when you have PCOS Why “old blood” is not always the full answer How spotting after ovulation may connect to the luteal phase Why timing matters more than the symptom by itself How repeated brown spotting can be part of a bigger cycle pattern Why positive OPKs, normal labs, and regular bleeding do not always mean your body is fully baby-ready Why you should not have to decode every symptom by yourself This is not about panicking over every wipe or turning your bathroom into a fertility investigation. This is about learning how to understand your body’s signs with more clarity, more context, and more support. Because you do not just want the spotting to stop. You want the baby. You want the positive pregnancy test, the ultrasound, and the chance to stop feeling like every symptom is a secret message you have to decode alone. If your body keeps giving signs nobody is connecting, 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 Free Fertility Training]

    18 min
  3. Jun 2

    Clomid Made You Ovulate… So Why Didn’t You Get Pregnant With PCOS?

    You took Clomid. You followed the directions. Your doctor confirmed you ovulated. So why are you still not pregnant with PCOS? In this episode of PCOS and Prosecco, Tianna Trinidad, RN and fertility strategist, breaks down why confirmed ovulation does not always mean your body had everything it needed to conceive and support early pregnancy. Because here’s the part most women with PCOS are not told: ovulation is one piece of the fertility puzzle, but it is not the whole plan. If you have taken Clomid, Letrozole, Metformin, or inositol and you keep hearing “you ovulated” while still staring at negative pregnancy tests, this episode will help you understand what may be missing before ovulation, around ovulation, and after ovulation. We’ll talk about: Why ovulating with PCOS does not always lead to pregnancy Why a positive OPK or confirmed ovulation can still leave the full cycle unclear How the luteal phase, progesterone signs, spotting, and cycle stability may impact implantation Why “try again next month” is not always enough when your body keeps giving you clues What to look at before walking into another medicated cycle with the same partial answers This episode is for the woman with PCOS who is tired of guessing, tired of being told to just keep trying, and tired of feeling like every negative test means her body failed. Your body may not be broken. Your cycle may just be unmapped. If you are ready to stop guessing and finally understand what your body needs to get and stay pregnant with PCOS, apply for From PCOS to Pregnancy here: [Insert From PCOS to Pregnancy application link] And come to my free fertility training, How to Get and Stay Pregnant With PCOS, here: [Get and Stay Pregnant with PCOS Training]

    18 min
  4. May 12

    When Trying to Get Pregnant With PCOS Makes You Feel Disconnected From Your Body

    If you’re trying to conceive with PCOS and sex has started to feel timed, pressured, awkward, or like one more thing you have to “get right,” this episode is for you. In this episode of PCOS and Prosecco, I’m joined by Laura Federico and Morgan Miller, a sex therapist and midwife, for a conversation about timed intercourse, body literacy, ovulation tracking, fertility stress, and learning how to trust your body again. Because you wanted a baby. You did not ask for a sex life that feels like a calendar invite with side effects. We talk about why trying to get pregnant with PCOS can make women feel disconnected from their bodies, how stress can affect arousal and intimacy, and why tracking everything does not always mean you understand what your body is trying to tell you. Inside this episode, we cover: Why timed sex can feel so heavy when you’re trying to conceive with PCOS How pressure, stress, and fear can affect arousal and connection What body literacy actually means in real life Why PCOS can make ovulation signs feel confusing or unpredictable Why apps and calendar-based tracking often miss PCOS ovulation patterns How feeling safe in your body can change the way you move through fertility What to do when ovulation sex starts feeling mechanical instead of connected This episode is your reminder that your body is not broken. It may just be speaking a language you were never taught. And once you learn how to read your body’s signals, fertility becomes less about control and more about connection. Mentioned in this episode: Laura and Morgan’s website: The Cycle Book: Ready to get baby ready with PCOS? Sign up for the free training here:

    41 min
  5. May 5

    PCOS Advocacy, Medical Gaslighting, and the Women Left Figuring It Out Alone

    In this episode of PCOS and Prosecco, I’m sitting down with Megan from PCOS Awareness Association for a real conversation about PCOS advocacy, medical gaslighting, diagnosis delays, and why so many women are left fighting for answers alone. Megan shares how her symptoms started young, how long it took to get real answers, and what it felt like to be dismissed while her mother kept pushing because she knew something was wrong. And that’s the heart of this episode: What happens when a woman knows her body is not okay, but the system keeps acting like she’s being dramatic? We talk about why PCOS gets reduced to irregular periods, fertility problems, and birth control, instead of being treated like the whole-body condition it is. We also discuss teen education, mental health, partner support, and why advocacy work needs funding, visibility, and real community behind it. In this episode, we cover: What made Megan start advocating for women with PCOS Being dismissed by doctors while searching for a diagnosis Why young girls are still handed birth control without real education The emotional side of PCOS, including anxiety, shame, and burnout Why partners, fathers, brothers, and families need education too What PCOS Awareness Association is building next How to donate, shop, support, or get involved This episode is a reminder that women with PCOS deserve answers before they are desperate for them. Not only when they want to get pregnant. Not only when symptoms become impossible to ignore. Before. Mentioned in this episode: PCOS Awareness Association: Donate to PCOS Awareness Association: Ready to get baby ready with PCOS? Sign up for the free training here:

    36 min
  6. Apr 28

    What Your Insulin Is Doing to Your Chances of Getting Pregnant With PCOS

    If you are trying to conceive with PCOS and your body keeps looking like it is getting close, but pregnancy still is not happening, this episode is for you. Maybe you keep getting positive OPKs, brown discharge before your period, long or missing cycles, or “normal labs” that still do not explain why your body feels off. In this episode, we’re talking about insulin resistance and PCOS fertility, and why insulin may be one of the missing pieces affecting ovulation, progesterone, cycle stability, and your chances of getting pregnant with PCOS. Because insulin does not just affect weight, cravings, or that 3 PM crash where your body starts acting like it needs a nap, a snack, and a new life plan. It can also influence how your ovaries respond, how your follicles develop, whether ovulation fully completes, and whether your body can support the second half of your cycle after ovulation. Inside this episode, we cover: Why insulin resistance matters for PCOS fertility, even if your blood sugar or A1C looks normal How insulin can affect ovulation, follicle development, progesterone, and implantation support Why positive OPKs with PCOS do not always mean your body completed ovulation What brown discharge before your period may mean when you are trying to conceive with PCOS Why long cycles, missing periods, and irregular periods can point to a deeper hormone pattern How “normal labs” can miss what is actually affecting your chances of getting pregnant Why getting pregnant with PCOS is not just about ovulating, but whether your body can actually follow through If your body keeps giving you “maybe” instead of a baby, this episode will help you understand why it may not be your fault, why trying harder may not change the outcome, and why your body may need a deeper pregnancy-supportive strategy. Want the next step? Join the free PCOS fertility training here: [REGISTER HERE] Inside the training, I’ll show you how to get baby ready with PCOS, why your cycle may keep looking hopeful without fully following through, and what it means to prepare your body for pregnancy in a way that feels clear, grounded, and connected to your real life.

    18 min
5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

PCOS and Prosecco is for women with PCOS who are trying to get pregnant or lose weight naturally and are tired of guessing. Hosted by nurse and hormone coach Tianna Trinidad, each episode blends simple hormone science, mindset shifts, and real-life PCOS strategy. You’ll learn how to restore ovulation, decode your fertility signals, balance your cycle, and lose stubborn weight without diets, shame, or medical gaslighting. If your labs look “normal” but your body says otherwise, you’re in the right place.

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