The guide you needed
the day you were diagnosed
Asherman's syndrome is rare, misunderstood, and isolating. Finding clear, trustworthy advice — all in one place — feels impossible. This guide changes that. From the first symptom through diagnosis, holistic support, treatment, emerging research, and what life looks like on the other side.
A message from Daniella
Watch the 90-second welcome
The problem
When I was diagnosed, I spent months piecing together advice from scattered forums, outdated studies, and doctors who barely knew what to say.
Hard to find, harder to trust
Medical information on Asherman's is scattered, contradictory, and rarely written for the person who actually has it. Most of it assumes you're a doctor.
Nowhere addresses the whole you
Forums talk symptoms. Doctors talk surgery. Nobody talks about grief, hope, your body's resilience, or what you can actively do to support your own recovery.
No one to guide you through
You're often left between specialist appointments with no roadmap — no one to tell you what questions to ask, what to track, or what's actually normal.
The emotional weight is invisible
Asherman's touches fertility, identity, relationships, and your deepest sense of self. Nobody tells you how to hold that — or that it's okay that you're struggling to.
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A warm, natural image of you
From me to you
"I searched for something like this when I needed it most. It didn't exist — so I built it."
I was diagnosed with Asherman's syndrome after a procedure that I was told was routine. The months that followed were the loneliest and most confusing of my life. I found fragments of information everywhere, but nothing that held it all together — and nothing written by someone who actually knew what it felt like to be inside this.
After my own recovery journey — the surgeries, the holistic work, the grief, the quiet victories — I decided to create the resource I desperately needed. Every chapter of this guide comes from real experience, deep research, and a genuine wish for you to feel less alone in this.
Daniella
Asherman's Syndrome Recoverer & Guide Author
Read my full story →What's inside
Eight chapters. Everything you need.
The Asherman's Compass covers every stage of the journey — from that first confusing symptom to the other side of treatment, and the emotional terrain in between.
Recognising the Signs
Symptoms, what's "normal" vs. what to act on, why Asherman's is so often missed, and how to advocate for yourself from the first appointment.
Getting Diagnosed
What tests to ask for, what hysteroscopy and imaging actually show, how to find a specialist who takes you seriously, and questions to bring to every appointment.
Holistic Support — What You Can Do
Nutrition, supplements, acupuncture, castor oil, seed cycling, herbs, rest, and the mind-body practices that supported real healing. Evidence-informed, never false promises.
Treatment Options
Hysteroscopic surgery, hormone therapy, the different types of adhesions and what they mean for outcomes. How to prepare, what to expect, and how to compare approaches.
Emerging Treatments
Stem cell therapy, PRP, estrogen protocols, uterine balloon stents — what the latest research says, what's showing promise, and how to ask your doctor about them.
After Treatment — What to Watch For
Re-adhesion risks, monitoring your cycle, warning signs, follow-up protocols, how to interpret your next hysteroscopy, and what "success" realistically looks like.
Life After Asherman's
Fertility after treatment, managing ongoing uncertainty, what trying to conceive looks like post-recovery, and redefining your relationship with your body and future.
Your Emotional Wellbeing & Self-Compassion
Grief, identity, relationships, managing anxiety between appointments, processing trauma, what helped me emotionally, and how to hold yourself through all of it.
Simple pricing
Choose your path forward
Every option includes lifetime access to the guide. No subscription required for the main guide.
- All 8 guide chapters
- Symptoms & diagnosis deep-dive
- Holistic support protocols
- Treatment options explained
- After-treatment monitoring guide
- Downloadable resources & checklists
- Free updates as the guide grows
10% goes to The Compass Fund
- All 8 chapters — complete access
- Access to the private Facebook community
- Submit questions directly to Daniella
- Daniella answers personally — no bots, no team
- Community of women who actually understand
- Priority updates & new content as it's added
- Lifetime access — yours to keep
10% goes to The Compass Fund
- Monthly cycle & symptom tracking
- Treatment milestone logging
- Appointment notes & questions
- Emotional wellbeing check-ins
- Progress charts over time
- Share reports with your specialist
Secure checkout. Instant digital access. 14-day refund policy if the guide isn't right for you.
10% of every purchase
The Compass Fund
Asherman's syndrome affects hundreds of thousands of women worldwide — yet research funding is almost non-existent. When I was going through it, I couldn't believe there was so little being done.
That's why 10% of every guide sale goes directly into The Compass Fund, a dedicated pool I manage and distribute to Asherman's research initiatives. You're not just investing in your own recovery — you're helping the next woman get diagnosed faster, treated better, and supported more fully.
The Compass Fund is managed by Daniella and distributes to Asherman's research initiatives. Updated quarterly.
Real stories
From women who've been where you are
"I had been to four specialists and none of them gave me the clarity that this guide did in the first two chapters. Finally felt like I understood my own body."
"The holistic chapter alone was worth it. I started three of the protocols and my follow-up hysteroscopy showed real improvement. I'm not saying it was the cause — but I felt in control for the first time."
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A 1–2 min video from a real community member is the most powerful proof you can add. Even one is transformative.
A note on medical advice
This guide is written from lived experience and carefully researched information. It is not a substitute for medical care. Always work with a qualified gynaecologist or specialist for diagnosis and treatment. The holistic and wellbeing guidance in this guide is designed to support — not replace — your medical team.
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