Medically reviewed by Chandre Tina May, Registered Nurse & Menopause Society Certified Practitioner (MSCP). See our editorial policy.
You slipped out of the baby shower early and sat in your car for twenty minutes before you could drive. Or you saw the ultrasound photo on your phone and had to put it face-down on the table and breathe. Or you’ve started quietly declining invitations — baby showers, gender reveals, “we have news!” dinners — because the pain afterwards isn’t worth it. If any of this is you, you are not a bad person. You are someone living with PCOS and pregnancy grief, and the two are connected in ways nobody warns you about.
This post is about that specific, raw pain — the kind triggered by other people’s pregnancies when your own feels uncertain or out of reach. We’ll look at what’s actually going on, why PCOS makes it particularly intense, and what genuinely helps.
What’s actually happening: your security system is doing its job
Think of your emotional self as a security system. It’s wired to protect what matters most to you. When something you deeply want — a baby, a future you’d imagined, a version of your body you thought you understood — feels threatened, the alarm goes off. It doesn’t ask whether the threat is “rational.” It just fires.
Pregnancy announcements are a specific kind of trigger because they arrive without warning. A text. A post. A toast at dinner. Your security system had no time to prepare. The alarm — the chest tightening, the hot eyes, the sudden need to leave the room — is not jealousy, even if it feels like it. It is grief. Grief for the pregnancy you haven’t had. Grief for the timeline you’d planned. Grief for the version of your life that felt possible before PCOS started rewriting it.
According to the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, infertility — defined as difficulty conceiving — carries a psychological burden comparable to a serious illness diagnosis. PCOS is one of the most common causes of ovulatory infertility. That means many women with PCOS are carrying a diagnosis-level grief load while being expected to smile at baby showers.
Why PCOS makes this kind of grief especially complicated
PCOS-related fertility grief has a particular texture that sets it apart from other kinds of loss. Several things make it harder to process.
The uncertainty is ongoing
With PCOS, you often don’t have a clear answer. You may have been told “you might struggle” rather than “you cannot conceive.” That limbo — not knowing — can be harder to grieve than a definitive no. Grief needs an object, and “maybe” keeps moving.
Nobody acknowledges it as a real loss
If you haven’t tried to conceive yet, people may dismiss your pain entirely (“you don’t even know if you’ll have trouble!”). If you have tried, you may hear “just relax,” “you’re young,” or “it’ll happen.” The invalidation compounds the grief, and it makes many women with PCOS feel they have to hide what they’re feeling — especially from pregnant friends and family who are, of course, genuinely happy and deserve to be celebrated.
Hormonal fluctuations amplify emotional pain
PCOS involves dysregulation of hormones including androgens, insulin, and often estrogen and progesterone. These hormones are directly involved in mood regulation. Research published in journals including Human Reproduction has found elevated rates of anxiety and depression in women with PCOS compared to those without — meaning your nervous system may already be running hotter before the announcement even arrives. The security system is more sensitive than average because it’s had a lot to manage.
Identity and womanhood get tangled up in it
PCOS can make you feel like your body is working against you in a very fundamental way. When pregnancy — which culture treats as a natural, inevitable milestone — feels uncertain, it can shake your sense of identity, your relationship with your body, and your place in social groups where parenthood is becoming the shared language. That is a profound and legitimate grief, and it deserves to be named as such. You can read more about how PCOS affects identity and emotional wellbeing in our dedicated piece.
What avoidance is telling you — and when it becomes a problem
Leaving a baby shower early is not a character flaw. Protecting yourself from pain you’re not ready for is a reasonable, human response. Some degree of avoidance — choosing not to attend a gender reveal when you’re in the middle of a particularly hard month — is self-care, not weakness.
But avoidance can become its own problem when it starts to shrink your life. If you’re declining family events, pulling away from close friends, or finding that the circle of “safe” situations is getting smaller every few months, that’s a signal worth paying attention to. Avoidance tends to maintain and deepen anxiety rather than resolve it. The security alarm stays on.
It’s also worth knowing that you’re far from alone in this experience. The grief and avoidance that come with fertility challenges are well-documented, and there are real ways through — not around — them.
What actually helps
Lifestyle and self-compassion
- Name it as grief. Saying out loud — to yourself, in a journal, to one trusted person — “I am grieving” is not dramatic. It’s accurate. And it moves the experience out of shame and into something you can actually work with.
- Give yourself permission to opt out, selectively. You don’t owe attendance at every pregnancy-related event. It’s okay to send a gift and a warm message and look after yourself instead. One opt-out is not the same as withdrawing from your relationships entirely.
- Find people who get it. PCOS-specific communities — online forums, support groups run by organisations like Verity — can offer the kind of “me too” that friends without PCOS genuinely cannot. Hearing your experience reflected back is not a small thing.
Non-hormonal and psychological support
- Therapy, specifically. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) both have evidence behind them for fertility-related grief and anxiety. A therapist who specialises in reproductive or perinatal mental health will understand this terrain. This is not “just talking about your feelings” — it’s a structured way to loosen the grip of avoidance and process grief that has nowhere else to go.
- Fertility counselling. Many fertility clinics offer counselling as part of their provision. You don’t have to be mid-treatment to access it — your GP can also refer you.
Medical conversations worth having
- If you have PCOS and are thinking about your fertility timeline, talking to your GP or a gynaecologist sooner rather than later gives you information — and information reduces the particular anxiety of “not knowing.”
- If your mood is consistently low, your anxiety is high, or you’re struggling to function day to day, speak to your doctor about support. The link between PCOS hormones and mental health is real and recognised. You may also find it helpful to read about PCOS and anxiety — the two are more connected than most people realise.
- Screening for depression and anxiety is part of good PCOS care, according to clinical guidelines. If your doctor hasn’t asked how you’re doing emotionally, you can bring it up. You’re entitled to that conversation.
If you’re also carrying grief or anxiety that touches darker thoughts, please do speak to a healthcare professional as soon as you can. You deserve proper support, not just coping strategies.
For more on how hormones and mood intersect in PCOS, our piece on PCOS and emotional symptoms goes into more depth.
When to see a doctor
Please reach out to your GP or a mental health professional if:
- Your anxiety or low mood is affecting your sleep, work, or relationships most days.
- You’re withdrawing from people you love, or life is feeling increasingly small.
- You’re experiencing persistent feelings of hopelessness or worthlessness.
- You want to explore your fertility options with PCOS and don’t know where to start.
- You feel like the grief is not lifting, even with time.
You do not need to be in crisis to deserve support. Struggling is enough of a reason.
Frequently asked questions
This article is for general information and is not medical advice. It was reviewed by a certified healthcare professional in line with our editorial policy, and we update our content as the science evolves — but every woman’s body is different, so please speak to a qualified healthcare professional about your own symptoms.