If You’ve Been Told “Just Eat Less, Move More” — I’m Sorry
Because that advice?
It doesn’t work for PCOS.
And worse — it can make everything spiral.
Fatigue. Cravings. Mood swings.
And that feeling of doing everything right and still gaining.
You’re not lazy.
You’re not broken.
You just need a different approach.

Weight Loss with PCOS Starts with One Rule: Don’t Fight Your Body
Instead of trying to force it into submission,
you have to work with it —
especially your hormones.
Here’s how:
1. Stabilize Your Blood Sugar (This Changes Everything)
- Eat protein with every meal (yes, even breakfast)
- Pair carbs with healthy fats
- Avoid skipping meals — it spikes cortisol
Small tweaks = big hormonal shifts.
Your cravings will chill. Your energy will rise.
Your body will start to trust you again.
2. Train Smarter — Not Harder
Overtraining = hormone chaos.
Instead, go for:
- Strength training 3x/week (muscle improves insulin resistance)
- Walking daily (underrated fat burner + stress reducer)
- Gentle workouts like yoga or pilates on low-energy days
Consistency > intensity. Always.
3. Prioritize Sleep + Stress Over Scale
With PCOS, stress isn’t just emotional — it’s physical.
High cortisol = high insulin = weight gain.
That’s why you can do everything “right” and still feel stuck.
Fix this first:
- 7–8 hours sleep
- No screens before bed
- Deep breathing or journaling every night
Your hormones will thank you.
4. Track Progress Beyond the Scale
The scale lies — especially with PCOS.
Track wins like:
- Less bloating
- Better mood
- Clearer skin
- More consistent cycles
- Clothes fitting better
Your body is changing — trust the signs.

Good For Girls: Jewellery That Moves With You — Through Every Phase
Whether you’re on Day 1 of your cycle or Day 28,
hitting the gym or lying flat with cramps —
you deserve to feel strong, soft, and seen.
Our pieces aren’t made for perfection.
They’re made for real bodies. Real moods. Real growth.
Throw on a chain before your walk.
Wear hoops to your workout.
Stack rings while journaling at night.
You’re doing the work — you might as well look good doing it.


