The Aftermath: Life After Brain Changes
The PsychPod Magazine | Brain & Science
One of the most emotionally complex aspects of neurological and endocrine illness is how deeply it can affect fertility, reproductive health, hormones, and the future people once imagined for themselves.
It is also one of the least discussed.
Many individuals living with pituitary tumors, endocrine dysfunction, hormonal imbalance, or neurological illness quietly struggle with fears and grief related to fertility while simultaneously trying to manage the physical, emotional, and neurological impact of illness itself.
For some people, the changes happen gradually.
For others, the realization feels sudden.
The moment they begin understanding that illness may affect:
• fertility
• menstrual cycles
• libido
• pregnancy
• hormone regulation
• reproductive functioning
• family planning
• intimacy and relationships
That realization can feel deeply emotional because fertility is often connected to much more than biology alone.
It can become connected to:
• identity
• femininity
• masculinity
• self-worth
• future planning
• relationships
• grief
• hope
• fear about what comes next
Many people quietly mourn futures they once assumed would happen naturally.
That grief is rarely talked about openly.
Especially because fertility struggles are often invisible.
A person may appear completely fine externally while privately carrying uncertainty, fear, hormonal symptoms, emotional exhaustion, or grief related to changes happening within their body.
For individuals living with pituitary tumors or endocrine dysfunction, hormonal changes may affect:
• reproductive hormones
• ovulation
• menstrual regularity
• libido
• energy levels
• emotional regulation
• stress response
• physical health
• sexual functioning
And because hormones influence both the brain and body simultaneously, fertility concerns often become emotional and psychological experiences as well.
Weight changes.
Hormonal changes.
Skin changes.
Hair changes.
Reproductive concerns.
These experiences can affect the way people experience confidence, femininity, masculinity, sexuality, identity, and self-worth afterward.
Many people quietly begin questioning:
“Will my body ever feel normal again?”
“Will I be able to have children?”
“Will someone still want me like this?”
“What happens if the future I imagined changes completely?”
Those fears can become incredibly isolating.
Especially when people feel pressure to remain strong while navigating experiences that affect both identity and hope for the future.
Fertility-related grief is not always straightforward.
Some people grieve possibilities.
Some grieve uncertainty.
Some grieve changes they never expected to face so early in life.
And many people carry those emotions silently.
I have seen this throughout my career, and I personally live with a pituitary tumor. One thing many people quietly carry is the emotional exhaustion of trying to navigate hormonal, neurological, and reproductive changes while still attempting to function normally within everyday life.
That experience can feel deeply lonely.
At the same time, healing is not only about outcomes.
Sometimes healing involves allowing space for grief without shame.
Sometimes it involves redefining identity outside of productivity, fertility, appearance, or the expectations people once had for themselves.
And sometimes healing means learning how to hold uncertainty without allowing it to completely consume hope.
Support and healing may involve:
• endocrinology care
• hormone monitoring
• therapy
• emotional processing
• reproductive health support
• nervous system regulation
• relationship support
• stress reduction
• self-compassion
• allowing space for grief and uncertainty
The emotional impact of fertility changes deserves to be acknowledged with the same compassion as any other aspect of neurological or endocrine illness.
Because these experiences affect far more than the body alone.
They affect identity, relationships, emotion, and the way people imagine their future.
Dr. Velmi, PsyD
