Baby, that app cannot read your body.
It is not in your ovaries.
It is not checking your cervical mucus.
It is not watching your temperature shift.
It is guessing based on a textbook cycle, and PCOS does not always care about the textbook.
So if your app says you ovulated, your OPK gave you a smiley face, you had sex in the fertile window, and you still ended the month staring at one lonely line…
You may not be missing the window.
You may be trusting the wrong proof.
With PCOS, your body can gear up to ovulate without actually releasing an egg.
That means slippery mucus, cramps, and a positive LH test can show up before ovulation actually happens.
To confirm ovulation at home, look for what happens after the fertile signs:
A temperature shift that rises and stays up.
A mucus shift after ovulation.
A luteal phase long enough to give implantation a real chance.
Progesterone rising after suspected ovulation, if you’re using at-home testing.
But here’s the part most women miss:
These signs work best together.
One clue alone does not tell the whole story.
And when you’re trying to get pregnant with PCOS, the goal is not to become a full-time cycle detective.
The goal is to know whether your body actually released the egg, made enough progesterone, and gave that cycle a real shot.
That’s what I’m teaching inside my free PCOS fertility training.
Comment INFO and I’ll send you the training so you can stop trusting fake fertile windows and learn what your PCOS body needs to get pregnant.





































































































