What They Came In For: Painful Menstruation
By the time Meena R. walked into our clinic, her period ruled her calendar.
She had been dealing with severe cramps and heavy bleeding for as long as she could remember. Every month, for five to seven days, her world narrowed: heating pad, dark room, extra clothes packed “just in case,” and a silent prayer that her cycle wouldn’t land on an important meeting, a social event, or a flight. Sometimes she bled through her clothes. Sometimes the pain made her nauseated. Always, she endured.
She had tried birth control pills, which helped at first but came with their own side effects. She tried prescription painkillers, which dulled the edge but left her groggy and bloated. She tried supplements, yoga, pelvic steaming, magnesium, cutting out dairy. Some things helped a little, nothing helped enough.
And every time she brought it up—at her annual exam, during doctor’s visits, in rushed urgent care check-ins—she got a version of the same message: “That’s just your period.”
Which felt, to her, a lot like being told to get used to it.
When Meena came to Root and Branch, she was skeptical—but also exhausted. She didn’t want a miracle. She just wanted one cycle that didn’t leave her drained, curled up, or rearranging her life around bleeding.
We began, as always, by listening. Not just about the cramps, but about the timing. When did the pain start? Was it sharp, dull, dragging, throbbing? What did she notice about clots, color, flow, fatigue? We asked about her cycle from beginning to end—not just the “bad” days, but what led up to them, what came after. We looked at her digestion, sleep, mood. Her tongue, her pulse. Her full picture.
She described herself as “a person who pushes through,” but her body told us otherwise. Her pulse was wiry and tight, her lower abdomen cold to the touch. Her period arrived like a flood—sudden, heavy, painful—followed by days of exhaustion and emotional crash.
We explained that in Chinese medicine, pain and heavy bleeding aren’t random—they’re signs of stagnation and weakness happening at the same time. The blood is stuck, but also not being held. There’s tension, but also depletion. And both need to be treated, in the right order, with care.
We started with a customized herbal formula. That was the cornerstone of her treatment. One blend before her period to move what needed to move and ease the buildup of tension. Another to take during her period to reduce pain and regulate flow. These weren’t off-the-shelf teas. They were carefully selected combinations meant to restore rhythm and clarity to her cycle. She brewed them twice a day, sometimes more during her worst days.
Alongside the herbs, we used acupuncture to move blood, release tension in the lower abdomen, and support her hormonal system. We placed needles with a focus on the Liver and Spleen channels—key players in blood regulation—and paired that with calming points to settle her nervous system, which had been bracing for pain every month for years.
The first cycle after treatment was still painful—but it was different. Less intense. Shorter. She didn’t bleed through anything. She went to work the second day, which felt like a small miracle.
By the third cycle, she wasn’t dreading it anymore.
“I’ve never had a period sneak up on me before,” she said, half laughing, half stunned. “It just… came. And it wasn’t awful.”
The bleeding slowed. The clots lessened. The pain, once all-consuming, became background noise. The fatigue lifted. Slowly, her cycle started to feel like something she could live with, rather than hide from.
What she came in for was fewer bad days.
What she got was a more balanced cycle—and a renewed sense of agency in her own body.
At Root and Branch, we see period pain often—whether from endometriosis, fibroids, hormone imbalance, or no clear reason at all. We treat what’s there, but we also treat what’s underneath. Because pain may be common, but it’s not “normal.” And heavy bleeding doesn’t have to be your monthly reality.
If your cycle has been running your life, we want you to know: there’s another way.