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Desperation drove her to the internet. She typed the words she was afraid to say aloud: Belly button bleeding with period.
On the third month, the bruise returned. It was larger now, darker, and it bled for three full days. The pain was no longer a dull ache; it was a sharp, twisting cramp that made her double over in the middle of a lecture on invertebrate zoology.
The search results were a ghost town of old forum posts and abandoned questions. But one link, a PDF from the Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology , caught her eye. The title was dense and impenetrable, but one word glowed on the screen:
She ignored it for three months. Then it bled.
Dr. Ionescu didn’t say “coincidence.” She didn’t reach for a penlight. She reached for an ultrasound wand.
The treatment was a surgery called an umbilical excision. Dr. Ionescu explained it simply: “We cut out the bad tissue, down to the fascia of the abdominal wall, and sew the healthy skin back together. You’ll lose the deep shape of your navel, but you’ll gain your life back.”
She knew what endometriosis was. Tissue from the uterine lining growing where it shouldn’t—on ovaries, on bowels, on the lining of the pelvis. But in the navel ?
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Desperation drove her to the internet. She typed the words she was afraid to say aloud: Belly button bleeding with period.
On the third month, the bruise returned. It was larger now, darker, and it bled for three full days. The pain was no longer a dull ache; it was a sharp, twisting cramp that made her double over in the middle of a lecture on invertebrate zoology.
The search results were a ghost town of old forum posts and abandoned questions. But one link, a PDF from the Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology , caught her eye. The title was dense and impenetrable, but one word glowed on the screen:
She ignored it for three months. Then it bled.
Dr. Ionescu didn’t say “coincidence.” She didn’t reach for a penlight. She reached for an ultrasound wand.
The treatment was a surgery called an umbilical excision. Dr. Ionescu explained it simply: “We cut out the bad tissue, down to the fascia of the abdominal wall, and sew the healthy skin back together. You’ll lose the deep shape of your navel, but you’ll gain your life back.”
She knew what endometriosis was. Tissue from the uterine lining growing where it shouldn’t—on ovaries, on bowels, on the lining of the pelvis. But in the navel ?