
For most of my adult life, I treated my body like a machine that would simply run forever. I prioritized productivity and ignored the subtle signals my health was trying to send me. It took years of feeling perpetually fatigued and out of balance before I realized that my vitality was tied to an organ I rarely thought about. This is my love letter to my liver, the silent partner that works tirelessly behind the scenes to keep me going.
I owe my liver a proper apology. For years, I treated it like a glorified filter that only mattered after excessive alcohol consumption. I thought its job was to clean up my messes, help me cope with the odd burger, and carry on quietly in the background without requiring any attention to my liver health.
I had no idea that it was doing far more than that. While I went about my life, my liver was working behind the scenes and affecting my hormones, my mood, my skin, my energy, and even how I feel through my cycle.
What still baffles me is how little we get taught about this. At school, I learned how to put a condom on a banana, a skill I have never used in real life, but I learned almost nothing about the organ that has such a big role in how I actually feel. Instead, I spent years memorising the Pythagorean theorem, which I have also never used in daily life. Priorities, apparently. It is also worth noting that historical gender disparities in medical research have often sidelined women’s experiences, leaving many of us without a clear understanding of the deep connection between our vital organs and our hormonal cycles.
Once I started paying attention to the link between hormones and liver health, everything made more sense. My liver is not just there for basic blood filtration. It is one of the main organisers of hormone regulation, acting as a command centre for my body.
My liver is the primary site where oestrogen is processed. After it has finished its work, my liver facilitates the necessary detoxification pathways to ensure these molecules can leave the body.
When my liver is sluggish, estrogen levels can accumulate and linger far longer than they should. This creates a backlog that often manifests as PMS, bloating, and heavier periods. By supporting these pathways, I help keep my estrogen levels in a healthy range, preventing them from taking over my daily life.
My thyroid produces mostly T4, which is the inactive form of thyroid hormone. My liver is responsible for converting a large portion of that T4 into T3, the active form that drives energy and metabolism.
It is common for standard liver function tests and liver enzyme levels to appear completely normal, even when this conversion process is struggling. This mismatch can be incredibly frustrating, as I might feel tired, foggy, and flat while my blood work looks fine on paper. Supporting my liver is essential for the proper activation of my thyroid hormones.
My liver also produces sex hormone binding globulin, known as SHBG. This protein is critical for the regulation of sex hormones, as it binds to the excess circulating in my blood to maintain proper systemic balance.
When SHBG is in an optimal range, I have the right amount of free hormones available without everything running wild. This mechanism is one of the most effective ways to prevent hormone imbalance, which is a nuance I did not appreciate until recently.
I once thought of blood sugar control as a concern for the pancreas alone, but my liver is a vital partner in that picture. It stores glucose and releases it as needed to keep me fueled. Furthermore, the liver is responsible for bile production, which is essential for digesting the healthy fats that help stabilize blood sugar levels throughout the day.
This is a vital connection if I am working to avoid insulin resistance or manage energy crashes. When my blood sugar is steadier, my hormones feel much more balanced. When it is not, everything becomes a challenge, including my skin, my mood, and my patience.
I no longer see my liver as a silent cleaner doing boring work in the background. It is the primary foundation for managing hormones and the liver interactions, and it plays a critical role in preventing hormone imbalance. It is one of the main reasons I feel balanced, or completely out of sorts.
I also think the wellness world makes this more confusing than it needs to be. While people often worry about nonalcoholic fatty liver disease or fatty liver disease in a clinical sense, they frequently overlook the daily impact of stress on liver health. The industry loves a pricey cleanse, a strange tea, or a strict protocol, while ignoring the fact that my body already has a built-in system for processing hormones and waste. My liver does the job, but it needs support, not punishment.
Stress makes all of this harder. When I stay in a constant state of pressure, my body pumps out cortisol and adrenaline. My liver then has to process those stress hormones as well, which pulls energy away from other jobs, like breaking down estrogen and helping with thyroid conversion.
That is where things start to snowball. Stress affects my liver, my liver affects my hormones, and then my hormones make me feel even more stretched. I know that cycle well.
I do not believe in punishing routines or extreme cleanses. What helps me is steady, simple support and a nervous-system-friendly approach that feels kind to my body. By prioritizing liver health, I find it much easier to maintain a healthy weight and keep my internal systems functioning smoothly.
These habits do not magically fix everything overnight. They do help me create the conditions where my liver can do its job properly, and that gives my hormones a better chance of settling into a steadier rhythm.
The liver is responsible for converting the inactive thyroid hormone (T4) into the active form (T3), which regulates your metabolism and energy levels. If the liver is sluggish or overwhelmed, this conversion may not occur efficiently, leaving you feeling tired even if your standard blood tests appear normal.
Yes, the liver is the primary site for processing estrogen before it leaves the body. When liver function is compromised, excess estrogen can accumulate in your system rather than being eliminated, which often contributes to PMS, bloating, and heavier menstrual cycles.
When you are under constant stress, your body produces high levels of cortisol and adrenaline that the liver must work to process. This added workload draws energy away from the liver’s other essential functions, such as hormone regulation and glucose management, creating a cycle that can leave you feeling out of balance.
No, your body already has a sophisticated, built-in system for processing hormones and waste. Rather than using extreme cleanses or strict protocols, it is far more effective to support your liver’s natural detoxification processes through consistent, gentle habits like eating whole foods, managing stress, and getting adequate rest.
My body is intelligent. I spend far too much time being told to override it, control it, or fix it with the latest trend. My own experience has shown me that the better path is to honor its wisdom and work in harmony with it.
So I keep coming back to the same truth, my liver matters. It is essential for managing oestrogen, thyroid function, blood sugar, stress processing, and the way I feel in my own skin. It is also the unsung hero that helps navigate significant life shifts, whether that means managing the hormonal demands of pregnancy or the complex physiological adjustments that occur during menopause.
I still feel grateful for the simple things too, the cups of coffee, the odd glass of wine, the meals I enjoy, and the fact that my body keeps showing up for me. That makes me want to treat it with more respect.
If I start with anything, I start there, by noticing what my body needs, softening my stress response, and giving my liver the steady care it has earned all along to support me through every transition, including the long journey of menopause.
Where can you start?
So how can you start to come home to yourself? How can you start to work with your hormones rather than against them?
This is why I created ‘The Embodiment Cycle Pack’ – a guide to empowering your cycle through somatic practice.
It’s packed with tips to guide you through each cycle and to understand the different seasons of your menstrual cycle. Our body is wildly intelligent, something we are taught to forget as women.
To us, as always
Chantelle
Hormonal Health: Signs you have a Hormonal Imbalance
The Ultimate Guide to Eating and Moving for Your Specific Cycle Phase
Somatic Wisdom vs. The 20-Step Routine
The Luteal Phase: Why do I feel like a different person every three weeks?
Energy Crashes: Understanding Your Body’s Signals
Cycle Syncing: Exercising for Your Cycle to Beat PMS Symptoms
4 Types of PCOS Explained, Symptoms and Causes
How to Support Yourself During the Luteal Phase
Hormonal Health Basics for Women: A Guide
Hormonal Wellbeing: Your Hormonal Happiness
Healthy Habits and Your Hormones: How your everyday habits affect your cycle
Why building Somatic Awareness helps your menstrual cycle
Why Your Nervous System Holds the Key to Hormonal Balance
The Luteal Phase: “I know all this but I can’t move”
An ode to ‘feeling wrecked’ right now
Hormones in the High-Stress Era
Your Hormones aren’t betraying you
Trauma and Your Hormones: Understanding the Silent Connection
Body Literacy: Let’s stop chasing the ‘perfect’ cycle
The Hormone Powerhouse: A love letter to my liver
My Hormones + Hakomi: The 5 simple principles of Hakomi that overhauled my PCOS
From PCOS to PMOS: A Journey in Understanding my Hormonal Health
Data vs. Soul: What My Toxic Hormone Coach Taught Me About Sovereignty
June 3, 2026
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