About Us
We See Your Pain
We've seen moments like this.
In the middle of a meeting, Helen suddenly went quiet. Face pale, clearly struggling. The pain had hit her right there.
Wendy's situation was more severe. Every month, for about 24 hours straight, she would vomit nonstop. Stomach cramps so intense she'd break into cold sweats. Sometimes she had to go to the ER—IV drip, anti-nausea shots, oxygen.
In our OA system, almost every month, there were women requesting sick leave for period pain.
They had all seen doctors. The answers were almost always the same: "Your tests are normal. This is just part of being a woman. It might get better after you have kids."
Tests normal. But they were clearly in pain.
The Paths You've Tried Don't Really Work
Painkillers can suppress it for a while. But next month, it comes back.
See a doctor, run all the tests—"no significant abnormalities found."
Push through it. You survive. But why should you have to fight this battle every single month?
Most methods do the same thing: push it down.
Push down the pain signal. Push down the body's response. Push down the discomfort for a few hours.