The Cyclist

Jess Quinn and Katherine Douglas

The go-to women’s health podcast for real, honest conversations about hormones, periods, PCOS, endometriosis, fertility, and the rest. Hosted by Jess Quinn & Katherine Douglas, we dive into all things women's health and help you to demystify owning a female body— with expert advice and real stories to help you feel empowered and informed. If you’re tired of being dismissed and want to decode your body, this podcast is for you. Subscribe now and let's learn to cycle better together.

  1. 2D AGO

    Period Pain: The Pain I Learned To Normalise with Ella Cunningham

    We're closing out our period pain miniseries the way it started. With a real story. In the final episode of the Period Pain Mini Series, Jess sits down with Ella, founder of Els Lovers, a New Zealand-made brand creating wearable heat packs designed specifically for endometriosis and period pain relief.  Ella takes us right back to the beginning to a musical theatre rehearsal camp, three days before her 14th birthday, when her very first period arrived and brought her to her knees. From that day forward, eight-day heavy periods, severe pain, and chronic exhaustion became her norm. Because her mum had always suffered the same way, Ella assumed that's just how it was for her too. What followed was years of dismissed symptoms, a GP who attributed her chronically low iron to her plant-based diet rather than the blood she was losing every month, and a gynaecologist at family planning who told her that heavy periods were an opinion. It wasn't until a nutritionist connected the dots, low iron, low B12, IBS-like symptoms, painful heavy periods, and said the word endometriosis, that Ella finally had somewhere to start. She shares what it took to push for her diagnosis, what her endometriosis surgery in February 2024 actually involved, and why the year and a half she spent with a Mirena afterwards was the most painful of her life and how trusting her body and getting it removed was the decision that finally started turning things around. Ella also opens up about having to leave her first full-time job out of university at just 21 because her pain had become too unpredictable to manage, and how that painful chapter led her to create Els Lovers. Handmade in Aotearoa from 100% natural cotton, Els heat packs were born out of Ella's own search for something wide enough, long enough, and weighted enough to actually wrap around the places that hurt. This is the episode we want every young woman who is quietly pushing through to hear. Because how the hell are you supposed to know if your period pain isn't normal if nobody is talking about it? This is episode five of five of The Cyclist's period pain miniseries. All episodes are available now. Find Ella and Els Lovers at elslovers.com or on Instagram @elslovers Follow and connect Instagram: @wearethecyclist Website: wearethecyclist.com Hit play. And if you know someone who needs to hear this, send it to them.

    40 min
  2. 2D AGO

    Period Pain: The Part No One Talks About with Psychologist Andy Leggat

    Your pain is real. And your brain is trying to protect you. In episode four of our period pain miniseries, Jess sits down with Andy Leggat,  registered Health Psychologist and Fertility Counsellor with over 15 years of clinical experience, for one of the most validating conversations we've had on this podcast.  Andy is a returning Cyclist guest, and if you haven't heard her first episode on the emotional side of infertility, we'd highly recommend going back to that one too. If you've ever been told your pain is in your head, been referred to a psychologist and felt confused or even insulted by that, or spent years quietly gaslighting yourself into thinking you're just not coping, this episode is for you. Andy explains why psychological care isn't the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff when it comes to period pain. It's a core part of the picture. She breaks down how the brain actually processes pain, not as a simple tissue-based experience, but as a deeply contextual one shaped by the nervous system, past experiences, trauma, environment, and the relationship we have with our own bodies. Two people with the exact same diagnosis can experience pain in completely different ways, and this conversation explains why. They get into pain memory and how significant pain experiences shape future ones, the cyclical nature of anticipatory anxiety around periods, and why years of chronic dismissal, from doctors, from family, from ourselves, can create deeply entrenched thought patterns that spill over into health anxiety, hypervigilance, and conditions like panic disorder. Jess shares honestly that this conversation hit close to home, describing how she was body scanning and messaging her husband in a spiral just minutes before they sat down to record. Andy unpacks self-gaslighting, what it is, why it's concerningly common, and why it makes complete sense when you've spent years being told your pain is normal. She talks about the grief that quietly sits underneath chronic pain, the grief of missed career milestones, changed relationships, and lost trust in your own body, and why naming it as grief can be one of the most validating things a person can do. There's practical guidance throughout, too. How to navigate period pain conversations in the workplace, how to raise children who feel safe talking about their bodies without amplifying anxiety, and exactly what a first session with a health psychologist looks like so there are no surprises before you walk in the door. This is episode four of five of The Cyclist's period pain miniseries. All episodes are available now. Follow and connect Instagram: @wearethecyclist Website: wearethecyclist.com Hit play. Your body is working hard to keep you safe. This episode will help you understand how. Listen to Andy’s episode, Infertility Unfiltered: The Emotional Side of Infertility with Psychologist Andy Leggat Here’s the link to it on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1S5M8ob4zVC0kDGi1J44wi

    45 min
  3. 2D AGO

    Period Pain: What Your Pelvic Floor Has To Do With It with Pelvic Health Physio Caitlin Fris

    Your pelvic floor has more to do with your period pain than you might think. In episode three of our period pain miniseries, Jess is joined by Caitlin Fris, pelvic health physio, founder of Unity Studios, The Cyclist's resident pelvic health expert, and the woman behind @thevaginaphysio on Instagram.  Caitlin has been on the podcast before and if you haven't heard her first episode, Pelvic Health Demystified: Pain, Pleasure & Power, we'd highly recommend going back to that one too. This conversation starts with something deceptively simple, the term "painful periods", and why Caitlin thinks it does a disservice to everyone who experiences them. When the language we use doesn't capture the full picture, it becomes easier for symptoms to be dismissed, minimised or misunderstood. And that has real consequences. Caitlin shares her own experience of uterine fibroids and the moment she dropped to the ground mid-Pilates class, flooded with blood and excruciating pain, and why that moment changed how she thinks about the language around period pain entirely.  She explains what normal period pain looks like versus what warrants investigation, and why the addition of symptoms like painful sex, bladder pain, or bowel pain alongside period pain should always prompt further investigation. We get into what a pelvic health physio assessment actually looks like from start to finish,  so there are no surprises before you walk in, and why the majority of that first hour is simply talking.  Caitlin explains the central sensitisation picture, how the nervous system gets turned up in volume after months or years of chronic pain, and why that's not weakness or drama, it's biology. She also walks us through the connection between a hypertonic pelvic floor and period pain, explaining how up to 70% of people with endometriosis will experience pelvic floor dysfunction, and why learning to relax the pelvic floor is often much harder than learning to contract it. There's also a beautifully simple breathwork exercise in this episode that Caitlin takes us through live, something anyone can do at home, including a visualisation technique involving a rosebud that we won't spoil here. They also go deep on painful sex, how it presents, what structures might be involved, when it's entry pain versus deep pain, and why even one negative experience can set up a pain cycle that takes time and the right support to unwind.  And Caitlin finishes with honest advice for anyone who has been told their pain is normal when it really doesn't feel that way: get a second opinion, write everything down, and find someone who will actually listen. This is episode three of five of The Cyclist's period pain miniseries. All episodes are available now. Find Caitlin at Unity Studios or follow her on Instagram @thevaginaphysio. She's also listed on The Cyclist's practitioner directory at wearethecyclist.com. Follow and connect Instagram: @wearethecyclist Website: wearethecyclist.com Hit play. Your pelvic floor will thank you. Listen to Caitlin’s episode, Pelvic Health Demystified: Pain, Pleasure & Power with Caitlin Fris  Here’s the link to it on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4PMxhbNRBoKocQifgy4QC9

    40 min
  4. 2D AGO

    Period Pain: What Conventional Medicine Leaves Out with Naturopath Loula George

    What if the answers to your period pain have been hiding in your gut, your diet, and your environment all along? In episode two of our period pain miniseries, Jess sits down with Loula George, one of New Zealand's most respected naturopaths, with over 30 years of experience specialising in women's health. Loula is the kind of practitioner whose name gets whispered in reverent tones across the women's health community, and after this conversation, it's easy to understand why. Loula opens up about how she found her way into naturopathy, from a childhood in a traditional Greek family where food and herbs were medicine, to an ecology degree, to a chance encounter with a naturopathy prospectus on a coffee table at 28 that changed everything. Three decades later, she says it's the women themselves who have taught her everything she knows. This conversation covers a lot of ground. Loula explains exactly where naturopathy sits within the broader women's health landscape, why the time and depth of a naturopathic consultation can uncover things a 10-minute GP appointment simply cannot, and why she sees her role as much about education and advocacy as it does about treatment. She walks us through the naturopathic view of period pain, how the gut, hormones, stress, pelvic floor, trauma, and genetic factors can all play a role, and why the estrobolome (the bacteria responsible for estrogen metabolism in the gut) is one of the most important and undertalked pieces of the period pain puzzle. We get into the histamine connection with endometriosis, the foods that consistently aggravate inflammation, and why gluten and dairy elimination doesn't have to be forever, just long enough to find your individual triggers. Loula also shares the herbs and nutrients she returns to again and again for period pain, including magnesium, PEA, Don Quai, Motherworth, and Ashwagandha, and explains how to know when supplements are working and how long to stay on them. She gives her honest view on the contraceptive pill as a first-line treatment for period pain, and why putting teenage girls on the pill before their endocrine system has even fully developed can create a whole other set of problems down the track. We also go deep on endocrine disrupting chemicals, plastics, non-stick cookware, synthetic fragrances, polyester clothing, and why the load of these in our everyday environment matters more than most of us realise. Kat recommends the Netflix documentary My Plastic Detox, which follows six fertility-struggling couples and shows just how measurably reducing plastic exposure can shift the picture. This is episode two of five of The Cyclist's period pain miniseries. All episodes are available now. Find Loula George and her team at their Auckland clinic. Loula is also listed on The Cyclist's practitioner directory at wearethecyclist.com. Follow and connect Instagram: @wearethecyclist Website: wearethecyclist.com Hit play. Your body has been trying to tell you something. This episode might help you understand what.

    42 min
  5. 2D AGO

    Period Pain: Is Your Pain Being Taken Seriously? It Should Be. Says Gynaecologist Dr Praveen De Silva

    This is where the period pain conversation gets real. In the first episode of our Period Pain Mini-Series, Kat sits down with Dr Praveen De Silva, a New Zealand-born gynaecologist, endometriosis surgeon, and Clinical Lead for Endometriosis and Laparoscopic Surgery at Te Whatu Ora Waitemata. He was also the name our community called out overwhelmingly when we asked who they wanted to hear from on this topic. And after this conversation, it's easy to see why. Dr Praveen opens up about his own journey into women's health, from a passion for obstetrics to completing a two-year fellowship at the world-leading Sydney Women's Endosurgery Centre, and why period pain became the area he chose to dedicate his career to. Together, we unpack one of the most important distinctions in women's health: period pain is common, but significant period pain is not normal.  Dr Praveen walks us through what that actually means, what's happening in the body during a painful period, and at what point symptoms cross the line from manageable to something that deserves medical attention. We also get into the reality of navigating the New Zealand health system with period pain, the delays, the frustration, and what self-advocacy actually looks like in both the public and private sectors. Dr Praveen shares what a specialist appointment looks like from his side of the table, why he approaches each patient as a collaborative brainstorm rather than a one-size-fits-all prescription, and why he'll be the first to admit he doesn't have all the answers. From pain medication and hormonal contraception to the multidisciplinary team approach, surgery, and the long-overdue shift toward diagnosing endometriosis without requiring an operation first, this conversation covers the full picture. Including the stat that still stops us in our tracks: it takes an average of seven to eight years to receive an endometriosis diagnosis in New Zealand. If you are pushing through period pain and wondering whether what you're experiencing is normal, this episode is for you. Part one of five in this deep dive into period pain. All episodes of the mini-series are available now. Find Dr Praveen De Silva at Auckland Gynaecology Group in Newmarket, Waitemata Surgeons in Takapuna, and in Whangārei. Online consultations available from anywhere in New Zealand. Website: drpraveendesilva.com  Follow and connect Instagram: @wearethecyclist Website: wearethecyclist.com Hit play. You don’t have to go through this alone.

    46 min
  6. 2D AGO

    Welcome to the Period Pain Mini Series! Here’s what to expect

    Hello, and welcome to The Cyclist Period Pain miniseries. We are so glad that you're here. Before we get into the episodes, we wanted to sit down and talk to you about why we made the series, because honestly, it comes from a really personal place.  In fact, I don't think The Cyclist would exist without period pain. It was a huge pivotal part in our journey that led us to realise we need more in women's health. Period pain has been one of the biggest things in our lives, not a minor inconvenience, not something we just push through quietly. For us, it has been years of not knowing, of being dismissed, of wondering whether what we were experiencing was normal. And if you're a Cyclist listener, which you clearly are, we're pretty sure that a lot of you have been experiencing this too. So this year, we made the decision to not only do our bi-weekly episodes, we also wanted to go  deeper. We wanted to create a mini series that let you really immerse yourself in a subject, hear from multiple perspectives, and walk away feeling like you actually understand something you didn't before. In The Period Pain mini series, we cover everything from what period pain actually is, to how to navigate the medical system, to what the research says about natural approaches, to the very real psychological toll of living in a body that hurts. We speak to gynecologist Dr. Praveen De Silva, naturopath Loula George, pelvic health physio Caitlin Frizz, psychologist Andy Leggett,  and we hear the real and raw story of Ella Cunningham, who has lived it firsthand.  We have dropped all the episodes of the mini series today, so you can listen at your own pace, in your own time. Follow and connect Instagram: @wearethecyclist Website: wearethecyclist.com Hit play. We hope this series makes you feel a little less alone.

    2 min
  7. APR 28

    Ellie Fitzgerald on Child-Free by Choice, Circumstance, or Something in Between

    Almost two years on, and this conversation goes even deeper. Ellie Fitzgerald was the very first guest on The Cyclist, and she's back. In this raw and honest catch-up, Jess and Ellie revisit everything that has unfolded since Ellie shared her ruptured ectopic pregnancy story, nearly two years ago now. What started as a check-in becomes one of the most vulnerable conversations we've had on this podcast. Ellie opens up about where she and her partner are at today, a place she describes as possibly child-free, though she's still unpacking whether that's a decision from the heart or a response to trauma. She talks honestly about the grief that doesn't follow a timeline, the moments that still catch her off guard, and what it's like to navigate those questions from family and friends when you haven't figured out the answers yourself. She also shares the deeply personal way she holds Binki in her memory, something we've never heard before, and what the approaching two-year due date brings up for her each year. The conversation moves through therapy, which Ellie is only just beginning, and why she's waited this long. She reflects on the unexpected ways the ectopic pregnancy has changed her body, her cycle, her pain, and her hormones, and gets honest about her relationship with her body, which she describes as the hardest it's ever been. From blaming her body through three years of infertility, to losing Binki, to navigating weight changes and self-worth, this is a conversation about what it really looks like to carry grief in your body, not just your mind. Ellie also shares why she recently made the decision to rename her platform from Loving Ellie's Belly to simply Ellie Fitzgerald, and what that change meant for her sense of identity. This one is tender, funny, deeply real, and a reminder that grief has no deadline. Follow and connect Instagram: @wearethecyclist Website: wearethecyclist.com Hit play. And if you haven't heard Ellie's first episode, start there: Endo, Infertility & Losing Baby Binkie with Ellie Fitzgerald. Here’s the link on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/3wy5McIgaGR4Lyb3XQvz9Q

    51 min
  8. APR 14

    We’re back! Sertraline, breastfeeding & a new era of The Cyclist

    We're back! And it feels so good to say that. In this episode, Jess and Kat reunite for an honest and overdue catch-up after a longer break than either of them planned. Life has been full. A new baby, a return to work, new products, and some deeply personal health journeys that kept unfolding in the background. Kat opens up about returning to work after six months of maternity leave with baby Louie, navigating the beautiful chaos of breastfeeding, and the sleep regression that hit two nights before her first day back. She shares what imposter syndrome really feels like when your brain isn't firing, and why she's redefining what success looks like at this season of life. Jess gets honest about where she's at with her panic disorder, now two years in, and the decision she put off for a long time: going on medication. She talks through what finally changed her mind, the realities of tapering onto sertraline while trying to conceive, and the Mel Robbins moment that helped her zoom out and find hope again. She also shares an update on her cycle and what she's noticing as she continues her trying to conceive journey. They also talk through what's been keeping them busy behind the scenes. The team have had three new Cadence product launches, including Period Comfort, Head Ease, and Hydro Babe. Then they pull back the curtain on what The Cyclist looks like in 2026. The Cyclist also has an exciting new format: Biweekly episodes, miniseries (the first of which will be a deep dive on period pain), in-person community events, and a vision to make The Cyclist the go-to library for women's health in Aotearoa New Zealand. This one is warm, real, and a very welcome return. P.S., If you’d like to check out the breast pump Kat has, here it is: https://lacevo.com/products/wearable-breast-pump-set?country=AU  Follow and connect Instagram: @wearethecyclist Website: wearethecyclist.com Hit play. We've missed you. And we're so glad to be back!

    30 min

About

The go-to women’s health podcast for real, honest conversations about hormones, periods, PCOS, endometriosis, fertility, and the rest. Hosted by Jess Quinn & Katherine Douglas, we dive into all things women's health and help you to demystify owning a female body— with expert advice and real stories to help you feel empowered and informed. If you’re tired of being dismissed and want to decode your body, this podcast is for you. Subscribe now and let's learn to cycle better together.

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