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Heal Your Womb: Natural Remedies and Medical Solutions for Fibroids, PCOS, Endometriosis, and More

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Are you struggling with fibroids, PCOS, endometriosis, irregular periods, or chronic pelvic discomfort? You don’t have to navigate this alone—Heal Your Womb provides actionable solutions to help you reclaim your body and your life.

Inside this book, you’ll

Natural remedies using herbs, nutrition, and lifestyle changes to support your body’s healing

Medical solutions explained clearly so you can make informed decisions and advocate for your care

Strategies for emotional well-being, helping you process frustration, pain, and hormonal challenges

Inspiring stories from women who transformed their struggles into strength and purpose

This book is for you if you want

Understand your body and the root causes of reproductive health challenges

Learn practical steps to reduce symptoms and improve well-being

Find hope, guidance, and empowerment in a supportive, science-backed approach

Perfect for women facing fibroids, PCOS, endometriosis, hormonal imbalance, painful or irregular cycles, or anyone seeking natural and medical solutions to reproductive health issues.

Heal Your Womb combines expert advice, personal stories, and holistic strategies to guide you on your journey toward healing, balance, and self-empowerment.

Start your path to reproductive health today—grab your copy and take the first step toward listening to your body, reducing discomfort, and reclaiming your vitality.

109 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 24, 2025

1 person is currently reading
3 people want to read

About the author

N.W. Martin

29 books6 followers
I’m N W Martin, an author fascinated by health, history, and stories that often go untold. I draw from my own experiences, careful research, and guidance from professionals to write health guides that are practical, compassionate, and grounded in real life.

Beyond health writing, I love shining a light on underrepresented figures through historical biographies and creating historical fiction thrillers that weave tension with thoughtful insight. Whether I’m writing nonfiction or fiction, I’m always interested in understanding people, their choices, struggles, and the forces that shape lives.

I have been a reader and curious learner my whole life with a particular interest in botanical medicine and the ways natural approaches can complement modern treatments. I spend time experimenting with plant-based remedies, cooking, and learning from both tradition and science, all of which quietly influence my work. My best ideas usually strike in the middle of the night, and I follow them straight to my typewriter!

Through each book, I hope to inform, challenge, and connect with readers, sharing stories and guidance shaped by curiosity, care, and a deep respect for the complexity of human experience.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Felicia Collins.
11 reviews3 followers
November 10, 2025
Review for Heal Your Womb by N.W. Martin

Even though I’ve just recently discovered this book, I’m already very interested in what it offers. Heal Your Womb sounds like an empowering and much-needed guide for women who are looking for real answers about fibroids, PCOS, endometriosis, and other reproductive health challenges. I truly appreciate how it combines natural remedies, medical insights, and emotional healing it feels like a book written with both knowledge and compassion.

I’d love to learn more about what inspired you to write this and how readers can continue following your work or updates. Your message of hope and balance is exactly what many people need today.
Profile Image for Adrienna.
Author 18 books242 followers
December 1, 2025
I wondered if he was a medical doctor, a surgeon, or someone similar, meant to help women suffering from fibroids and other health issues mentioned in the title. However, he starts by talking about his wife's ovarian cyst and the dangers of neglecting her condition. He shares other women's accounts or stories of the silence, inability to help their own child through menstrual changes, and fear of the womb-related diagnosis.

Many women have accepted their pain and suffering as normal and lack true advocates—especially since many male doctors didn't seem to care. When I sought an OB-GYN, I preferred female doctors, and today, girls often start their periods between the ages of 9 and 11.

Additionally, I am interested to see how N.W. Martin will handle these sensitive topics and the remedies discussed in the reading. Further, Martin shares medicinal things we can use in the kitchen for our healing. This would help a novice person new to methods or natural ways to treat their symptoms or find cures (which, sadly, I haven't seen yet; I've only seen prevent or soothe some symptoms from the womb). This book would not only help novices or someone researching for the first time, but also adolescents, youth, and teens, and those who want to learn about their medical conditions, as a starting guide. I would add another herb to help soothe cramps and pregnancy-related pain: primrose. Heating pads do not really work; they have a hot tummy afterwards. But doctors do say to use either heat or cold for pain. Pain pills can help for a little while, but continuously taking them can lead to kidney failure and other medical conditions to help soothe the cramps, which he suggested briefly.

A womb or cycle journal is also recommended, as I have seen in Queen Afua's book(s). I have tried in the past, but still, the pain was so severe that I felt even trying a vegan or plant-based diet may not help. Yet, I tried for a very short time without much relief. Now, after menopause, I seem to be much better as far as womb-related pain and symptoms. Agree that surgery was recommended for the past 10 years before menopause: myomectomy or hysterectomy, and researched about uterine embolization, but heard from another person that stops the blood from going to the fibroid, yet it has a foul odor because it dies inside, and in hopes that it will eventually detach and pass through.

Demystify (debunk) the method of castor oil packs. I still have bottles of it, unchanged. Yet other recommendations are fine: ginger, raspberry leaf tea (also helps pregnancy), etc.

Overall, this book is a helpful tool with insightful words/methods to be mindful of the womb, understand medical conditions you may undergo, and be an advocate for yourself.

Helpful specialists: my favorite section of the book, and I find the best fit for you and your situation. Thank you, N.W. Martin, for listing therapists, counselors, and psychologists for MH (Mental Health), which can easily be overlooked. I have even sought out herbalist and their remedies, yet still not cured, but feel better. FAQ and Glossary at the end of the independently published book.

3.5 to 3.75 stars bumped to 4 stars on this site, out of 5.

I received a free e-copy through LibraryThing.
Profile Image for Monica Waithera.
6 reviews
August 4, 2025
It's a nice book. I like the way the issues are addressed in a way you can identify what one's goes through...
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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