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For 20 Years, I Lost Myself Every Month — This Is Life With PMDD

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lifestyleApril 13, 2026

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Women's Health

For 20 Years, I Lost Myself Every Month — This Is Life With PMDD

Author: Cierra Scalici

April 13, 2026

Written by

Cierra Scalici

Image by mbg creative x Vertikala / Stocksy

April 13, 2026

For half of every month, I disappeared.

For the other half, I was fully myself—clear, motivated, grounded, connected. I could answer texts, meet deadlines, trust my relationships, and move through my life with the quiet confidence of someone who recognized her own mind.

Then, almost overnight, something would shift.

The change was so complete, and so convincing, that for years I thought this darker version of me might be the more honest one. She was harsher, more fragile, impossible to reassure. She could find evidence of failure everywhere. She could turn a stable relationship into a source of panic, a manageable workday into proof that I was falling apart, a passing feeling into a permanent truth.

I didn’t have language for any of this when it began. I only knew that sometime after puberty, life became harder in a way I couldn’t explain.

Some days, I wouldn’t leave my bed. I would watch the light move across the room and feel time passing without me in it. Other days, I would start crying so suddenly and so intensely that it felt like my body knew something my mind didn’t. At fourteen, there was an explanation close at hand: my family had just gone through a massive upheaval after my dad made a poor business decision. We lost our home, our businesses, our community, and any real sense of stability. Grief was everywhere. So I told myself my struggle made sense.

That explanation followed me for years.

When the problem becomes your identity

Between the ages of fourteen and twenty-five, I sat in doctors’ offices trying to describe something I couldn’t yet see clearly enough to name. I was told it was depression, then anxiety, and at one point bipolar disorder. Each diagnosis came with a new framework, a new treatment plan, and a new hope that this would finally explain why I felt like two different people living in the same body.

But nothing quite fit and nothing fully worked.

Eventually, the labels started to matter less than the conclusion I drew from them: maybe the problem was simply me. Maybe I wasn’t resilient enough, disciplined enough, stable enough. Maybe this was just what my life felt like because I was failing at handling it.

What made it so disorienting was how real each version of me felt while I was in it.

For part of the month, I was capable and rational. I could make plans and believe in them. I could trust the people I loved. I could see myself clearly. Then, in what felt like the blink of an eye, that steadiness would vanish. In its place was someone overwhelmed, despairing, and utterly convinced that whatever she felt in that moment was the truth.

At my worst, I became hypercritical of everything: who I was, what I had done, what I had failed to do, what I looked like, what other people must secretly think of me. Even when some part of me knew it would pass, I couldn’t reason my way out of it. I could only wait for it to loosen its grip.

And when it did, I was left doing damage control.

The cost of losing half your life

In relationships, that meant trying to understand why certainty could dissolve so fast. I could feel secure, connected, deeply sure of someone—and then suddenly become convinced something was wrong, that I needed to leave, and that the relationship itself was the problem. It didn’t feel like fear. It felt like clarity. That was what made it so dangerous. I trusted it.

At work, the shift was just as stark. I could move through my days focused, confident, and clear on what I brought to the table. Then my confidence would erode so quickly that even speaking up on a Zoom call could feel physically difficult. I told myself I was burned out, under-challenged, overextended—anything that sounded more acceptable than the truth, which was that I had no idea why my own mind kept becoming unlivable.

My body felt just as unreliable. I could be doing everything “right” and still feel an abnormal level of exhaustion, bloating, migraines, muscle aches, and a strange disconnection from myself, as if I had been dropped into a body I no longer knew how to inhabit.

Then there was food.

At certain points in my cycle, it felt like I lost control almost completely—as if I stepped slightly outside myself and watched from a distance while I kept eating, long after I wanted to stop. When it passed, I would try to reverse it: restrict, overcompensate, promise myself I’d do better next time. But there was always a next time. Month after month, that cycle chipped away at my confidence, distorted my body image, and eventually contributed to an eating disorder.

For a long time, I tried to simplify all of this. I was told it was bad PMS layered on top of underlying mental health issues. But that explanation never fully held, because this was never just a few

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