The Dr. Hyman Show - Office Hours: Your Pregnancy & Postpartum Questions Answered
Episode Date: March 16, 2026Pregnancy doesn’t just change your life—it transforms your entire biology. Hormones shift, metabolism adapts, nutrient needs increase, and your nervous system recalibrates in ways most women are... never fully prepared for. And after birth, the postpartum phase can be one of the most overlooked and underserved stages of a woman’s health. In this episode, I answer your most common questions, including: • How to choose the right prenatal vitamins—including why methylated folate matters and the difference between folate and folic acid • Natural ways to manage common pregnancy symptoms like nausea, heartburn, sciatica, and fatigue • Key nutrition strategies during pregnancy to support both mother and baby • What happens during postpartum—from hormone and thyroid shifts to hair loss, immune changes, pelvic floor recovery, and C-section healing Pregnancy and postpartum aren’t separate events—they’re part of a continuous biological transition that affects hormones, metabolism, and overall health. The goal isn’t perfection. It’s understanding what your body is going through and supporting it with the right nutrients, habits, and care so you can recover, rebuild, and thrive. Visit functionhealth.com for 160+ lab tests at just $365 a year. Grab the FREE Guide: Supplements for a Healthy Pregnancy: What to Take (and Why It Matters) Have a question you’d love answered on Office Hours? Submit it here (0:12) Introduction to office hours with Dr. Mark Hyman (0:33) Comprehensive guide to pregnancy and postpartum health (2:35) Essential prenatal vitamins and managing morning sickness (5:18) Remedies for common pregnancy discomforts and supporting mental health (10:02) Strategies to prevent preeclampsia and ensure optimal nutrition (12:24) How to choose baby formula and understand postpartum hormonal shifts (15:26) Postpartum recovery: pelvic floor, immune health, and depression prevention (18:12) Combatting postpartum hair loss and nutrient support for regrowth (22:13) Post-cesarean recovery: scar tissue repair and rebuilding core strength (25:03) The emotional journey of pregnancy and postpartum recovery (25:47) Free resource and encouragement for a healthy pregnancy journey (26:52) Engaging with listeners and closing thoughts (27:26) Disclaimer and expressions of gratitude
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Welcome to office hours.
This is our dedicated one-on-one space to go deeper, get clear, and explore what truly moves the needle for your health.
I'm Dr. Mark Hyman, and each week we're going to pull back the curtain and share the insights, the research, the lessons that don't always make it into our conversations with guests.
Because at the end of the day, you are the CEO of your own health.
And for many of you, your family's health too.
And you might not feel it all the time, but you have far more power in agency than you realize.
I'm glad you're here.
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Once you can see, the questions don't stop.
They just multiply.
Pregnancy is a time of profound transformation.
Your hormones shift, your metabolism changes, your nutritional needs increase,
your nervous system adapts in ways that most women are not really prepared for.
And postpartum, well, that may be one of the.
the most misunderstood and underserved stages of a woman's life. So in this office hours,
we're slowing things down and answering your most common real work questions about how to
support your body during pregnancy and afterwards. We're going to talk about things like choosing
the right prenatal vitamins and understanding the difference between folate and folic acid.
We're going to talk about managing nausea in pregnancy, acne, heartburn, which is common,
and these many other common pregnancy discomforts.
We're going to talk about supporting mental health during pregnancy and why it matters for your
well-being postpartum. We're going to talk about reducing the risk of complications in pregnancy
like preacampsia, which is high blood pressure in pregnancy. And we'll talk about nourishing your body
in the third trimester to prepare for labor and recovery. And then we're going to move into
postpartum. What happens with your hormonal shifts, thyroid shifts? What happens in your pelvic
floor? How do you heal that? How do you support your immune system? How do you deal with some of the
mood changes that happen with all these shifts in hormones.
What about hair loss and how do you recover after a C-section?
This isn't about doing everything perfectly.
It's about understanding what your body is going through and learning how to support it
with clarity, with some compassion, and a few evidence-based tools.
So whether you're pregnant now or you're planning ahead in the postpartum phase or supporting
someone you love, my goal is to walk you through a process to walk away feeling informed,
to feel empowered, to not feel so alone.
So let's talk about what happens once you conceive and how to support your body through pregnancy
and postpartum. All right, let's start with pregnancy and prenatal vitamins and the whole
difference between folate or even methylfolate versus folic acid. And the question is,
can prenatal vitamins be harmful if I can't process folate? Well, yes, and it's important to take
the right forms of these nutrients, especially when you're pregnant. Something called methylated folate
is a very important form of this vitamin,
also known as vitamin B9.
It's different than folic acid,
which is what's in most prenatal vitamins,
which is often somewhat effective,
but not always very effective.
And there's a lot of genetics that play a role here.
The form of the nutrient matters,
you want to have the right product.
So quality is so important,
and I would avoid anything with aesthetic fillers,
colors, dyes, excipients.
And there's some great brands out there.
I like wee natal.
It's actually a prenatal for men and women,
and we've done some shows on the podcast on male infertility,
but guess what folks, men are half the equation in conception,
so they matter.
And then their health matters,
and they actually need prenatal too.
Before, it doesn't matter once you get pregnant,
obviously, what the guy takes, but before for sure.
So I like we natal.
There's many other brands like Pure Encapsulations,
has prenatal vitamins, Thorin has them.
There are many other companies to do,
but you want to use the best quality you possibly can.
All right,
What about question around nausea?
This is a big thing.
A lot of women get it.
Some women don't, but morning sickness, nausea, acne, these are big things.
So we're going to talk about them.
Now, if you're nauseous, there's some real simple practical things you can do.
One is making sure your blood sugar is balanced.
So you want to eat, you know, often, smaller, more frequent meals, don't eat a lot of carbs and sugar.
There's certain herbs that can be helpful, like ginger tea.
You can just slice up some ginger, boil it.
Vitamins matter, B6, very important.
magnesium really matters.
And there's actually, you know, some study that show that if you take, you know, the B6
and magnesium, it can really help.
And there's even some sometimes medication like Bendecting, which is a weird drug that's
used for insomnia, often known as Unisom.
And I don't like prescribing drugs that often.
But sometimes for women who really have intractable nausea, it can be very helpful in the early
period with the B6 at higher levels.
And you need probably like 50 milligrams.
And you probably need paradoxyl-5 phosphate.
a very special form of be sick.
The next thing you can do is support your liver and your gut health because that plays a role also by helping your microbiome, by supporting it with probiotics, and there's also ways to support your liver with healthy food and nutrients.
So all that's really important.
What about sciatica and psotic pain, heartburn?
These are other things that women get.
We got several questions about that.
For example, why do you get satica?
Well, it's usually caused by the uterus expanding.
And you've got this giant nerve that comes off of your spinal cord, it goes down through your butt.
And as your uterus expands and there's shifts in your posture and there's ligaments that get kind of loose because of hormones called relaxing that your body makes when you're pregnant, you end up, you know, often getting back pain.
So there's some just simple things you can do.
Pelvic tilts, cat, cow stretch, really great.
Prenatal yoga, hip openers, really great.
Just moving helps.
A heat and ice rotating can be very helpful.
Physical therapy.
Massage is great.
myofascial release, learning how to properly sleep so you don't get in bad positions, and just walking, moving.
The more you move, the better you're going to be. I know I have back issues, the more I move, the better I feel.
So sitting here doing this podcast is probably the worst thing for me, actually. Heartburn is often very common, too.
Why does that happen? Well, there's hormones that change, and you get the esophagus relaxing a little bit,
so with the sphincter, which is a little kind of valve at the top of your esophagus, kind of loosens,
and then you've got this big uterus pushing up, and it abdominal pressure grows, and then that kind of
kind of pushes food up. So how do you address that? Well, eat smaller meals, more frequent meals.
If you have a big meal, it's going to make it worse. Try four to six small ones instead of two to three
big ones. Watch the trigger foods for reflux, tomato-based foods, citrus-based foods, chocolate,
fried foods. I mean, listen, if I eat fried foods, I get heartburn, I don't get heartburn.
Caffeine, coffee, which you shouldn't probably drink anyway while you're pregnant. Carbonyed
drinks may be an issue. Peppermint, which sounds good if you like peppermint tea, but that can
make the sphincter even worse. So watch out for that. Make sure you just kind of keep a log of food
or eating and see, like, well, what did I eat? Do I got reflux? So that can help. Also, don't lie down
after eating. That's just a general recommendation for reflux and heartburn, but give yourself two or three
hours, at least, ideally three hours so you can digest rather than, you know, laying down after a meal.
You can also elevate the head of your bed at night. There's ways to do that with blocks or you can,
there's different even beds that do that. That can be helpful. Certain digestive aids, it has,
help like aloeira juice can help it's pregnancy safe little ginger tea can be helpful making sure you
chew your food so you don't like have a lot of undigested food in there don't wear tight clothing you
know obviously you're pregnant your belly's grown but get pregnancy clothes so you're kind of have
loose clothing if you have a waistband around your belly that can increase the pressure um also make
sure you're hydrating but but not during a meal in between meals it's really bad so also don't
chug a lot of water, just keep a steady flow going. Certain things are great. Magnesium can be really
helpful. It relaxes your system. Calcium carbonate or tums can be helpful, but you want to talk to
your OB about that. I like magnesium glycinate, often very helpful. A lot of times people are magnesium
deficient, and that can make reflux worse. And then, you know, if you're stressed, that makes a problem
with your digestion. It slows everything down and it makes heartburn worse. So simple stress techniques,
like breathing slow through your nose, five breath in, five breaths out, really slow, really simple.
It takes a couple minutes or less, and it can make a big difference in your nervous system.
My favorite massage, you can get a pre-edal massage that helps with stress, gentle stretching,
movement, being in nature, just simple things, doing things you love, all help.
What about the mental health stuff in pregnancy?
That's something people talk about a lot.
And, you know, you got to manage all that, anxiety, depression.
It's a thing.
And everybody's different.
Some of them can do great.
have all kinds of mood issues,
but there's some really foundational things around lifestyle
that make a big difference in mental health.
Obviously, eating a whole food, real diet,
moving rarely makes a big impact on mental health,
managing stress that we just talked about
with meditation, yoga, breath work,
asleep, making sure you're prioritized sleep,
emotional support, you know, friends, therapists, whatever.
And then, of course, keeping your blood sugar even,
your nutrient levels optimize, all that matters.
Omega-3, you know, your baby needs a lot of Omega-3,
to make its brain because about 60% of the brain is made up of omega-3s.
So it's going to take all yours.
So you're going to get potentially low.
So you want to make sure you get omega-3s as well during pregnancy.
If you're depressed during pregnancy,
there may be an increased risk of getting postpartum depression,
which is a real thing.
And that's kind of a drag.
But there's a lot of ways to prevent that,
just doing all the things I said.
Okay, well, there's another big problem we're asking about,
which is this thing called preeclampsia,
which is quite a serious problem in pregnancy.
in it, you get fluid retention, you get high blood pressure, it can even lead to seizures.
And there's a lot of good literature that shows that generally getting your metabolic health
straight will help. That means balancing your blood sugar. And again, you've heard me talk about
this forever, but, you know, eating whole foods, not eating a lot of sugar and starch, you know,
having lots of fiber, protein, good fats, all common sense stuff. And that works for high blood
pressure. The biggest driver of blood pressure issues is insulin resistance. So if you're eating a lot
of sugar, you're eating a lot of starch, it's going to drive up your blood pressure, and you
want to be really, you know, careful about that. And, you know, I don't like the idea, like,
just whatever you want, have much ice cream or cake or cookies. I'm pregnant. I could eat.
Doesn't, don't do that. It's not good for you. It's not good for the baby. You want to still
stay on a really optimally healthy diet. Make sure you have adequate protein, lots of minerals,
all that's really important. And I'll make a three is like, you know, you want to be careful
with fish during pregnancy, but you can have the small fish, sardines, herring,
mackerel, anchovies, small wild salmon can be helpful. All that really helps. Now, sometimes
aspirin can help. So there's plus and minuses on that. If you have a high risk of preeclampsia,
if you've had it before, if you have really, if you're overweight, if you have a lot of insulin
resistance and metabolic issues, you know, you might want to take a baby aspirin, but you want to check
with your obstetrician about that before taking any drugs during pregnancy. All right. What about
food? What should you be eating? Well,
It's the same thing you want to be eating anyway,
because to create a healthy you is the same thing you need to create a healthy baby,
but there's a few things that are particularly important.
One is making sure you get adequate protein because you're growing a whole new being.
Two is lots of good healthy fats,
particularly omega-3, as I mentioned, a lot of your neurologic tissue,
your brain nervous systems all made up of omega-3s.
Colleen, which is really important, also important for brain development.
And again, it's very low.
in many Americans diets,
and it's important in neurotransmitter function,
and you can get it from eggs,
particularly egg yolks,
so no egg white omelets, please.
Making sure you stay hydrated and get adequate electrolytes,
all that's important.
So I think just common sense,
but again, don't overeat,
don't just eat whatever you want.
You know, not like, you know,
it's okay to gain 100 pounds in pregnancy.
It's not.
You're affecting the epigenetic programming of the baby.
You're affecting your own health.
And you want to just stay, you know,
following the principles of a healthy diet,
which I've written about a lot in the pagan diet or food,
what the heck should I eat?
Okay, so how do I pick a formula?
That's another question we got.
Well, first of all, ideally you want to breastfeed for at least six months or longer a year.
Sometimes it's not possible.
I understand that.
And so then the question is, how do you figure out what's going on with formula?
And in America, formula is just crap.
It's the average formula has the equivalent of a Coke or two a day that the baby
is consuming. Now, you wouldn't give your baby a can of Coke, but you basically are giving it a
can of Coke if you're giving it the traditional formula. You don't want the corn syrup solids. You don't
want all these additives. You want really clean ingredients. And there are good brands out there.
Bobby is one. There's a new thing that happened. You should know about the FDA released a ban.
Can you believe this? There was a ban on importing formula from Europe, which is way better
formula. It actually has omega-3s in it. They do a lot of
of really good things so they had much better designed. We banned it. Why to protect the American
companies that were making formula? But who was paying the price, the babies and the mothers,
who was, you know, going to the bank all day, the company is making the formula. So that's a good
thing. The new FDA rule that lifted the ban on importing foreign formula is a good thing. And there's
some great brands out there from Germany and other places. So I just kind of check around on that.
Here's the thing about springtime.
It's not just a change in weather.
It's a season designed for your body to accelerate.
Your immune system shifts.
Your energy picks up.
But you can only launch if your foundation is solid.
Are your nutrients depleted?
Are your hormones balanced?
Now, with more outdoor activity, with more stress, more travel,
this is your moment to check in.
And this is our reason for building function.
It gives you over 160 lab tests for your heart,
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metabolism, and lots of more, and all in one check for your entire body,
trusted by hundreds of thousands of members for $365 a year.
That's a dollar a day.
Get your data at functionhealth.com so your body's ready to go.
All right, what happens after you give birth?
Postpartum period is really misunderstood by many people.
It's an underserved part of medicine.
I didn't learn anything about it in medical school.
And it's a really important stage of a mother's life.
So you've got to know what happens.
The question is you get all this hormonal,
imbalance, right? You're on all this flood of hormones when you're pregnant and you give birth,
the placenta's gone, all these hormones are gone. What happens? So the question is, how long until your hormones
get back into balance? Well, it can take a minute. It can take a minute. And some women are more
affected by it than others. But usually things come into back into balance after about, you know,
four to six weeks. There is a, there is a thing that happens often after, and I don't think we exactly
know why, but a shift in thyroid function. And women get postpartum autoimmune disease.
of their thyroid called Hashimoto's,
and about 10% of women do this.
And that can cause depression.
It can cause lots of things,
but depression is one of the key features
of low thyroid function.
So not only depression, but fatigue,
you can get weight gain.
It's not very psychological, it's hormonal.
And you want to make sure you do the right tests.
You know, function health, we do full panel of tests.
Really important to get the right test,
because most doctors don't check the right thyroid test.
They just don't.
They check TSA and they leave it at that.
But you want to check the free T3.
free T4, thyroid antibodies at functioned health,
we see over almost 15% of our members,
almost 500,000 people now have an autoimmune thyroid problem,
and most of them have never been diagnosed before,
and it's affecting the quality of their life.
So you want to make sure you check the right test.
Next question is about what happens to your pelvic floor.
You get birth, it's a big thing,
this big head goes through your pelvic floor,
you can get a lot of tissue stretching
and lots of vaginal issues.
What do you do?
after pregnancy to help with that.
Well, there's lots of things.
Physical therapy can help,
and there's pelvic floor therapy that can help,
breath work, kegles exercises,
strengthening your core, your abdomen,
your abdominal muscles,
all really important,
and that can help a lot.
It's really important both after
vaginal birth, even after a C-section.
Also, women report getting sick a lot after pregnancy,
and the question is,
why am I sick so much after having a baby?
Well, I hate to say this, folks,
but the baby's a parasite.
right. It steals all your nutrients. It takes everything out of you and you got to put it back in.
So hopefully you're doing that during pregnancy. Hopefully you're taking the right multivitamin,
fish oil, vitamin D and so forth. But you want to make sure your nutrient levels are optimized.
And again, at Function Health, we test all your nutrients. You can do the basic function panel,
which has a lot or you can even add the extended nutrient panel. And you can go to functionalhealth.com to learn more.
The other thing that can make you sick a lot is you're done sleeping because they're
baby's up all night or you're, you know, breastfeeding at night. And so sleep deprivation does
affect immune function. Microbiome change has also happened during pregnancy and that can affect you.
So there's a lot of reasons. But as long as you make sure your vitamin D's levels are good,
you're getting the right vitamins and minerals, you've got omega-3 fats, you're learning
how to do some gentle stress reduction because stress suppresses your immune system too,
gets some help with the baby, do some general exercise. All that really can be helpful in
supporting your immune system. All right, next question was about postpartum depression. What can we do
to prevent it? Well, the key is to do the things that work for depression for anything, which is
getting your metabolic health straight. So balancing your blood sugar because insulin resistance,
pre-diabetes, blood sugar issues, all those cause depression, making sure your thyroid's right. And those
tests I just mentioned are really important. Checking for inflammation, you know, lots of inflammation
in your body can cause depression.
And you can use that test that we do at function health, CRP,
which is a measure of inflammation.
There's other tests you can do as well.
You can check your omega-3 status.
Again, you can do that with function health.
Low omega-3s will lead to more inflammation in the body.
So all that's really important.
And there's some simple things around making sure you're getting out of exercise,
getting your sleep sorted.
That's tricky, but getting support.
Maybe your husband and take the baby.
Or maybe you get support from a family member
or even help from a nanny, all that can be helpful of getting time with friends, therapy if you need it.
If you, you know, had trauma in your life, sometimes trauma-informed therapy can be really helpful.
What about postpartum hair loss?
Is another question about that?
Is there a way to prevent so much hair loss after pregnancy?
Well, why did this happen?
It's something called telogen effluvium, which is a big medical word.
It's really common.
It peaks around three to five months after birth, and it's mostly caused by hormonal swings,
especially estrogen after you give birth.
And it also can be.
be from nutrient depletion because you're like I said the babies are parasites taking all your nutrients so
making sure you're on a healthy diet adequate protein hair's made of protein um things like biotin can be
really important and also just making sure you have omega-3s which are important per hair health
and your thyroid's okay all that can affect your hair loss uh and it can really be from nutrient
depletion not just in pregnancy in the birth but breastfeeding also so you're you're still feeding another
human and you need to make sure you're getting yourself enough quality nutrition.
Stress, you know, people say, I'm so stressed, my hair's falling out. Well, that's a thing.
So I know it's hard if your new mother or new family is sometimes tricky, but do the best you can
to find ways to kind of reset your nervous system, whether it's a yoga nidra. You can listen on
Spotify or breathwork or meditation or yoga or hot bath. Just simple things make a big difference.
And sleep disruption also, again, something sometimes hard to avoid. It also can be a big
factor in in stress and causing more hair follicles to go into the shedding face. Like I said,
thyroid, you want to check that very common, a big cause of hair loss. And, you know, there's a lot of
ways to support regrowth of your hair, even if you totally can't prevent all the hormone shows, right?
So you need a lot of nutrients for hair growth. And pregnancy can deplete a lot of these, like iron.
For example, if your ferretin's low, because women lose a lot of blood, again, you have to have a
ferretton, even if you're not anemic, if you're ferretton, which is the iron stores, like the money in
the bank, as opposed to in your pocket, if your iron stores are low with low ferretin, that can cause
hair loss. And if it's under 45, it's a problem. And most lab reference ranges are like 16 as normal.
That's not normal. That's optimal. It's quote normal because people are low. So you want to make sure you
check that. And again, on function health, you can check iron and you can check ferretin levels.
You can check for zinc.
Also really important for follicle repair.
Biotin, really important for keratin production.
Omega-3s, we check that at function health.
Vitamin-D, we also check that.
That vitamin D can, if it's not adequate, it can lead to thinning of your hair.
Omega-3 fats also really critical for hair.
I mean, they give race forces omega-3 fats to make their coat shiny.
And protein.
You know, hair is made up of protein and made up amino acids.
So you need at least 80 to 100 grams a day, especially if you're breastfeeding.
So how do you do all this?
Well, stay on your prenatal vitamin, not just when you're pregnant,
but at least six to 12 months after,
eat a lot of iron-rich foods.
I was talking to this nanny service
because my daughter's going to have a baby soon.
And they're like, well, do they eat liver?
Does she eat kidneys?
And I'm like, so all that stuff.
Liver is probably one of the richest source of iron in the diet.
I love liver.
But you can also get it from grass-fed beef,
from lentils, from spinach.
You want a lot of zinc-rich foods,
pumpkin seeds, oysters, beans.
And you want protein in every meal.
So chicken, fish, meat, nut seeds,
means all that's really important. Make sure you check your labs, folks. You got to check your
labs. If you don't know what's going on in your body, you can't manage it. No, I think some tech guy said
what doesn't get measured can't be managed. So you need to know what's going on. It's like your
dashboard and your car. I mean, if you imagine you didn't know how fast you're going, how much
gas in the tank, like you need to know that stuff. The thyroid is really key, as I mentioned,
around post-potrum, a depression, hair loss, and many other things. And this thyroid thing is a big
thing. You know, a lot of, it's really common, as I said, and it can cause anxiety, depression,
exhaustion, fatigue, hair loss, fluid retention,
prevent you from losing the pregnancy weight.
And you want to get the right test.
Like I said, you don't just want the TSA.
You want the free T3, the free T4, the thyroid antibodies.
There's even something called reverse T3,
which can be very helpful sometimes if there's stress,
that can go up and it's like a blocking thyroid hormone.
So until you fix those, your hair loss isn't going to get better.
So you've got to make sure you check that.
What about C-sections and recovery from C-sections?
Well, what are tips for recovering?
And I delivered 500 babies.
I used to do lots of C-sections.
It's a big surgery, right?
It's not a little surgery.
You know, recovery isn't just about healing the scar.
It's about restoring your strength of your core and your abdominal muscles,
getting your gut health back in shape, making sure your nutrient levels are good,
making sure your immune system's working and the inflammation is down.
And so there's some really good foods to help with repair of tissue and repair of your body.
protein rich foods, which are important, probably about a gram of protein per pound of ideal body weight.
And then you can just do the math on that.
So if you're like, you know, 120 pounds, that's like 120 grams a day.
But you can shoot for, you know, 80 to 120.
That helps collagen, formation, tissue repair.
Vitamin C, also really important for recovery of collagen, formation, peppers are low high sources,
citrus are high sources.
All that's really important.
Also, zinc for wound healing.
great. Pumpkin seeds, oysters, lentils, taking supplements, also helpful. Omega-3s, important for skin, repair and healing, salmon, sardines, walnuts, all that helps. And collagen, you can use, take collagen, bone broth. That helps amino acids that can help rebuild tissue as well. And then, of course, you want to make sure you optimize your microbiome. That helps, especially after antibiotics, which they give you often in pregnancy or C-section to prevent infection. And then getting your blood sugar sorted, because that'll help reduce the overall inflammation in your body.
you know, diabetics don't heal well.
It's no surprise.
If your blood sugar's out of whack,
you're not going to heal well.
And you can support your scar tissue repair, right?
So it can be difficult if you don't take care of it.
So you want to make sure you can, you know,
vitamin E oil, there's silicone gels you can put on your scar.
And there's many things, but you want to make sure you get your scar sealed.
And you also want to start to rebuild your core and your pelvic floor.
So you can work with, you know, a simple exercise or your own,
or you can work with a pelvic floor therapist,
and they can really help create a good plan
for repairing all those things.
And you want to support your energy and your hormones, right?
You know, if you're postpartum tired
and you have surgery on top of that, I mean, that's a lot, right?
So having babies is just big,
but not yet surgery on top of it, it's a lot.
So you get more nutrient demand.
And you get a lot more hormone imbalances
that are going on, but they improve
if you optimize your nutritional state,
if you get the right nutrients,
if your gut is healthy,
and you, you know, deal with the stress that's going on much as you can.
So emotional recovery is important.
Healing the nervous system is just important as healing the incision.
And that's really important.
Like I do breathwork every morning.
I do chie-gong practice every morning.
I live a very high-paced life and I need to regulate in my nervous system like everybody else.
So I encourage you to just find some things that work for you.
In closing, pregnancy and postpartum aren't really separate moments.
They're part of this continuous process of hormonal shifts, of metabolic change,
lots of transformation in your life.
So matter where you are on the journey,
I want you to remember a few things.
You're not powerless.
Small, consistent choices can meanly support your hormones.
They can support your energy.
They can support your mental health.
And they can support your recovery
and even your long-term health and well-being.
Now, if this episode brought you clarity,
please share it with somebody
who might need support during pregnancy
or postpartum.
I'm going to send it to my daughter.
So many women go through these stages,
feeling confused or alone.
And having the right information can make a real difference.
If you want to go deeper, we've created a free resource to support you,
supplements for a healthy pregnancy, including guidance on nutrition, supplements, and recovery
during pregnancy and beyond.
You'll find direct links in the show notes wherever you are in the journey of pregnancy
or postpartum, whether you're in the early weeks or months in or still healing.
Remember this.
Your body's wise.
It's resilient.
and it's capable of incredible change.
Thanks for joining me for office hours.
I love diving into these topics with you.
Remember, you are the CEO of your own health,
and every choice you make can move you closer to healing and vitality.
I want to keep these episodes as relevant and useful as possible,
so tell me, what do you want to explore next?
What questions are you wrestling with?
What breakthroughs are you chasing?
Share your ideas in the comments on some
social media or through the link in the show notes. I'm listening. Until next time, keep taking charge,
keep asking questions, and keep showing up for your health. If you love this podcast, please share it
with someone else you think would also enjoy it. You can find me on all social media channels
at Dr. Mark Hyman. Please reach out. I'd love to hear your comments and questions. Don't forget
to rate, review, and subscribe to the Dr. Hyman show wherever you get your podcasts. And don't forget
to check out my YouTube channel at Dr. Mark Hyman for video versions of this podcast and more.
Thank you so much again for tuning in.
We'll see you next time on the Dr. Hyman Show.
This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center,
my work at Cleveland Clinic, and Function Health, where I am chief medical officer.
This podcast represents my opinions and my guest's opinions.
Neither myself nor the podcast endorses the views or statements of my guests.
This podcast is for educational purposes only,
and is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical
professional.
This podcast is provided with the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other
professional advice or services. If you're looking for help in your journey, please seek out a
qualified medical practitioner. And if you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner,
visit my clinic, the ultra-wellness center at ultra-wellnesscenter.com, and request to become a
patient. It's important to have someone in your corner who is a trained, licensed health care
practitioner and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health. This podcast is free
as part of my mission to bring practical ways of improving health to the public. So I'd like to express
gratitude to sponsors that made today's podcast possible. Thanks so much again for listening.
