“”

Women's Health, Your Way

November 14, 2025

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women’s health answers.

GIRLHOOD / The Luck I Didn’t See at First

The Luck I Didn’t See at First

November 13, 2025
The Luck I Didn’t See at First

When I repeated genetic testing during my most recent IVF cycle, I expected it to be uneventful. I’d already done it before; it felt like just another box to check. But then the results came back: I carry an ATM gene mutation, which puts me at about a 20% lifetime risk of breast cancer.

It was one of those moments where the room doesn’t spin, exactly, but everything suddenly feels sharper. Clearer. Heavier. I had been focused on getting through another retrieval, another transfer… and now here I was, learning I’d need a mammogram and breast ultrasound every year, plus a breast MRI six months in between. Not someday. Not “after 40.” Now.

What made it even harder to process was that it didn’t feel abstract. One of my best friends died of breast cancer at 31. I watched her fight. I watched how fast it moved. I watched how young she was. So reading the word risk wasn’t just informational; it felt like someone tapping on a bruise I’d spent years protecting. 

And yet, life didn’t pause. I was running a business, managing a household, juggling calendars and deadlines. There’s something surreal about learning you need ongoing surveillance in the middle of answering work emails.

But here’s what I’ve settled into: this isn’t a sentence. It’s a roadmap. Knowing my risk means I get to do something. Not everything, but something. I can monitor, ask questions, stay ahead, and refuse to pretend this isn’t hard while still moving forward.

And while the screenings are another layer to an already full life, they’re also a lifeline — a way to stay ahead of something that once blindsided someone I loved.

I didn’t choose this knowledge, but I feel pretty damn lucky to be able to decide what I do with it.

More from GIRLHOOD

If I posted a photo of my new “home gym” on Instagram, I could absolutely fool you. I’d angle the shot just right so the lighting hits my dumbbells at... Read more
I recently listened to a friend — a brilliant, informed, healthy 39-year-old — hesitate to start hormone replacement therapy for perimenopause because of “the breast cancer risk.” A myth she’d... Read more
The other night, I started to feel a little bit of that seasonal depression kicking in. It’s getting dark earlier. My entire family has been sick on and off for... Read more

The Books That Take Us Back

November 6, 2025

“You know how you can remember exactly when and where you read certain books? A great novel, a truly great one, not only captures a particular fictional experience, it alters... Read more

When Skin Trends Go Too Far

November 5, 2025

This week, the FDA issued a safety alert that made me pause mid-scroll. Radiofrequency (RF) microneedling devices — tiny needles that deliver heat under the skin to “tighten” or “rejuvenate”... Read more

Friendship Is a Rising Tide

November 4, 2025

"A rising tide lifts all boats." Someone said that to me in the early days of Rescripted, and it stuck. Something to know about me: I’m a girl’s girl to... Read more
Yesterday, one of my colleagues (squarely on the cusp of Gen Z and Millennial, so I took it with a grain of salt) recommended a "personal growth" podcast to me.... Read more
I’ve had PCOS for as long as I can remember. My periods have never been regular — sometimes showing up after 60 days, sometimes not at all — and acne... Read more
This week, I went on my first business trip in two years (I was pregnant and had a baby, so there’s that). Historically, I’ve been one of those type B... Read more
At the ASRM fertility conference this week, my cofounder Abby and I were talking with our friend Dr. Carmen Messerlian, a Harvard-trained reproductive epidemiologist. The conversation started the usual way... Read more