Module 1

Understanding Endometriosis

What it is, what it is not, and why it can be hard to explain with just one scan or one symptom.

What it is

Endometriosis is a condition where tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus. It most often affects the pelvis, but it can also affect the bowel, bladder, and other areas.

What it can feel like

Endometriosis can cause pain, heavy bleeding, fatigue, bowel symptoms, fertility concerns, and disruption to work, school, relationships, and mental health.

What it is not

It is not just “normal period pain,” and it is not always visible through one test or one appointment.

Important

The amount of pain you feel does not always match the “stage” of disease.

Some people with less visible disease have severe symptoms. Some people with more extensive disease have a different symptom pattern. Your symptoms are still real even if your scan, score, or stage does not seem to explain everything.

Why it can feel confusing

  • Symptoms can change over time.
  • Different people have very different symptom patterns.
  • Bowel, bladder, fatigue, and mood symptoms can sit alongside pain.
  • Some symptoms worsen around periods, but not all do.

A reassuring starting point

If you have ever felt that your experience is “too messy” or “doesn’t fit neatly,” that does not mean you are imagining it. Endometriosis is complex, and a lot of people need time and more than one conversation to make sense of it.

Module 2

Symptoms and Red Flags

Common symptoms, signs that deserve attention, and when to seek further medical review.

Common symptoms

  • Painful periods that affect daily life.
  • Pelvic pain between periods.
  • Pain with bowel motions or sex.
  • Heavy bleeding and fatigue.
  • Bloating, constipation, diarrhoea, or “endo belly.”

Symptoms can go beyond the pelvis

  • Bladder symptoms.
  • Shoulder or chest symptoms that feel cyclical.
  • Scar pain or swelling around menstrual times.

Fatigue counts too

Fatigue is common in endometriosis. It can affect concentration, planning, social energy, work, parenting, and recovery after a flare.

Do Not Dismiss

Severe period pain is not something you have to “just put up with.”

If pain stops you from working, studying, exercising, sleeping, or functioning normally, it deserves medical attention even if you have previously been told it is normal.

When to book a medical review
  • Your symptoms are worsening.
  • Over-the-counter pain relief is no longer enough.
  • You have pain opening your bowels or passing urine around your period.
  • You have deep pain during sex.
  • You are trying to conceive and are not getting answers.
  • You feel you keep being treated for IBS, but the symptoms are also clearly cycle-linked.
When to seek urgent medical attention
  • Very heavy bleeding causing dizziness, fainting, or shortness of breath.
  • New severe chest pain, collapse, or breathing symptoms.
  • Severe unexplained weight loss, blood in stool, or other alarm symptoms.
  • Pain that feels suddenly different, extreme, or unsafe to manage at home.

Module 3

Getting Diagnosed

Why diagnosis can take time, how tests can help, and how to prepare for appointments so the pattern is easier to see.

1. Symptom pattern

Doctors start by listening to your symptoms, their timing, and how they affect your life.

2. Examination and imaging

Physical examination and ultrasound can help, but neither can rule out all endometriosis.

3. Specialist review

Some people need gynaecology review or laparoscopy, especially if symptoms continue despite negative imaging.

4. Ongoing review

Diagnosis and management often happen over time rather than in one perfect appointment.

Things patients are often told that can be misleading

  • “Your ultrasound was normal, so it cannot be endometriosis.”
  • “Pain is part of being a woman.”
  • “It is probably just IBS or stress.”
  • “You are too young for this to be endometriosis.”

What may help at appointments

  • Keep a short symptom timeline, not a perfect diary.
  • Note whether symptoms change around your period.
  • Write down what pain relief you have tried and how well it worked.
  • Bring up bowel, bladder, fatigue, or fertility symptoms even if they feel unrelated.

Diagnosis Reality

A delayed diagnosis is common. It is frustrating, but it is not your fault.

Diagnostic delays are widely reported. This often happens because symptoms overlap with other conditions, pain gets normalised, and access to specialist services can be difficult. Needing repeat conversations does not mean your symptoms are less serious.

Module 4

Treatment Options

What the main treatment paths are, what they aim to do, and what questions are worth asking.

Pain relief

Simple pain relief and anti-inflammatories can be a useful first layer of support, especially when you need practical relief while the broader plan is being worked out.

Hormonal treatments

Hormonal treatments are often used to reduce ovulation, bleeding, and pain. They are usually not appropriate if you are actively trying to get pregnant.

Surgery

Surgery can help diagnose disease, remove lesions, and move the plan forward when it matches the problem in front of you. The key is understanding what it is expected to help in your case.

Other support that can matter

  • Pelvic physiotherapy for pelvic floor issues, pain, and pacing support.
  • Psychology support for coping, pain-related distress, and the emotional load of chronic symptoms.
  • Practical self-management like heat, rest, movement, or pacing.

A balanced way to think about treatment

Treatment is usually about improving quality of life, not finding one perfect answer. It is reasonable to ask what a treatment is supposed to help with, how long it takes, what the side effects are, and what the next step would be if it does not help enough.

Helpful questions to ask your clinician
  • What do you think is driving my symptoms right now?
  • What is this treatment supposed to improve?
  • How long should I give it before deciding whether it is helping?
  • What side effects should I watch for?
  • What would the next step be if this option does not help enough?

Module 5

Food, Bowel Symptoms, and Energy

How food can support symptoms, why bowel symptoms are common, and when a low FODMAP approach may be worth discussing.

InsideHer Guidance

Food can support symptoms. It should not become another source of fear.

Many people with endometriosis try dietary changes. Some feel better with targeted adjustments, especially for bowel symptoms. But there is no single “endometriosis diet,” and the most helpful plan is usually the one you can actually live with.

Why eating can feel hard

  • Bloating, constipation, diarrhoea, or pain after eating.
  • Fatigue making meal planning and cooking harder.
  • Stress, low mood, or body image concerns affecting appetite.

What is common

GI symptoms are common in endometriosis and often overlap with IBS. They can happen even when endometriosis is not growing directly on the bowel.

What to avoid

Avoid jumping into multiple restrictive diets at the same time without support, especially if you are already eating very little, losing weight, or feeling anxious around food.

When low FODMAP may be worth discussing

  • You have significant bloating, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, constipation, or urgency.
  • Your bowel symptoms look a lot like IBS symptoms.
  • Your bowel symptoms clearly interfere with quality of life.
  • You can work with a dietitian rather than trying to do it perfectly alone.

How to think about low FODMAP

  • It is a short-term symptom tool, not a forever diet.
  • It is most useful when bowel symptoms are the main thing you want to improve.
  • The goal is to reintroduce foods and personalise the plan.
  • Some people only need stricter changes during worse parts of their cycle.
What may help day to day without becoming overly restrictive
  • Notice whether symptoms change around your menstrual cycle.
  • Try one change at a time rather than multiple exclusions at once.
  • Watch for iron intake and energy intake if bleeding or fatigue are major issues.
  • Get medical advice before making restrictive changes if you have red flags such as unexplained weight loss or blood in stool.

Module 6

Living Day to Day

Support for flares, work and home life, relationships, and the emotional side of living with a chronic condition.

On hard days

Heat, rest, medication plans, simple meals, hydration, and reducing non-essential load can all help.

Emotionally

It is common to feel frustrated, low, isolated, anxious, or exhausted by the unpredictability of symptoms.

Socially

Symptoms can affect plans, intimacy, work, study, and confidence. That impact is real, even when it is invisible to others.

Building a flare plan

  • Know what medication or heat strategies are safe for you.
  • Keep easy meals and fluids available for low-energy days.
  • Reduce the pressure to “push through” every flare.
  • Track what actually helps rather than what you feel you should be doing.

When extra support can help

  • If pain or fatigue is changing how you work, parent, or function.
  • If food has become stressful or overly restrictive.
  • If symptoms are affecting intimacy or relationships.
  • If your mood, anxiety, or sense of self is being worn down.

Support Reminder

You are allowed to need more than pain management.

Many people need support with fatigue, bowel symptoms, work capacity, relationships, body image, fertility worries, or the emotional strain of living with an unpredictable condition. That does not make your case “too much.” It makes it real.

Module 7

Action Plan and Questions

A simple end-of-course reset so you can leave with something practical.

What to notice

  • Which symptoms affect your life the most.
  • Whether symptoms change around your period.
  • What helps, what does not, and what feels unclear.

What to take to appointments

  • A short symptom summary.
  • Your most important questions.
  • Any treatment, test, or food changes you have already tried.

What to ask for

  • Clear explanation of next steps.
  • Support for pain and function, not just diagnosis.
  • Dietitian, pelvic physio, or psychology input if relevant.
Questions you can copy into your next appointment
  • What do you think is the most likely explanation for my symptoms?
  • What else still needs to be ruled out?
  • If my scan is normal, what would you want to do next?
  • What are my options for pain, bowel symptoms, and fatigue?
  • What signs would mean I should come back sooner?

Finish With This

You do not need to have every answer today to deserve better support.

The goal is not perfection. The goal is a clearer picture of your symptoms, better conversations with clinicians, and a management plan that actually helps you live your life.