“”

Women's Health, Your Way

March 11, 2026

Ask & Search With Clara

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

GIRLHOOD / Trimester Zero: Knowledge Is Power, Until It Isn't

Trimester Zero: Knowledge Is Power, Until It Isn't

Trimester Zero: Knowledge Is Power, Until It Isn't

Someone asked me recently what I thought about the "trimester zero" trend: the growing movement of women spending months, sometimes years, optimizing their bodies before they even try to conceive. Swapping out nonstick pans, replacing workout clothes, unplugging the Wi-Fi at night, taking beef organ capsules. All of it in pursuit of the perfect fertility foundation.

They asked: what's your hot take?

I said: do you want my answer as a founder, or as a person?

As a founder in the women's health space, I believe knowledge is power — Rescripted is quite literally built on that premise, the idea that women deserve access to real, evidence-based information about their bodies, and that being informed leads to better outcomes. I stand by that completely.

But as a type-B woman with ADHD who has lived through infertility, two high-risk pregnancies, and a miscarriage, I also know that more information is not always more peace. And peace, it turns out, matters more than most wellness influencers will ever admit. 

The thing that worries me about trimester zero isn't the prenatal vitamins or the earlier bedtimes. It's the subtext. The quiet implication that if you just prepare enough, optimize enough, eliminate enough toxins, you'll be rewarded with an easy road to pregnancy. And when it doesn't work out that way, as it doesn't for one in six people globally, the information that was supposed to empower you can start to feel like a (very long) checklist of things you did wrong.

Fertility issues are not your fault, regardless of what you did or didn't do to prepare, and no amount of optimization changes that. My "hot take"? Know what helps you, ignore what doesn't, and whatever helps you sleep at night — that's the right answer.

More from GIRLHOOD

When I was pregnant with my twins, I was not what you'd call a planner. I had the basics covered and a general sense of optimism, which — if you've... Read more

Say Yes to the Plans

I saw a video recently that said something like: if you want a social life, you have to actually say yes when people invite you places. Which sounds obvious. And... Read more
When Meghan Trainor shared that she used a surrogate for her third baby after two C-sections and complicated pregnancies, my first reaction wasn’t shock. It was recognition. Not because I... Read more
After two pregnancies and three babies, I thought I knew my body pretty well. We've been through infertility, loss, two vaginal births, and a C-section — I felt like we... Read more
I finished Half His Age in two nights — the kind where you look up, it’s past midnight, and you’re already tired for tomorrow. If you read I’m Glad My... Read more
There’s a very specific kind of disappointment that can sneak into birthdays in your 30s. Not because anything goes wrong, exactly, but because the day rarely lives up to the... Read more

ADHD and the Six-Digit Code

Today is my 37th birthday, and if I could have one gift — no wrapping required — it would be a small reprieve from two-factor authentication. I know. Cybersecurity. Identity... Read more
Somewhere between the protein obsession and the cold plunge discourse, sleep quietly became the coolest thing you can do for your health. And honestly? It's about time. Bustle recently ran a... Read more
They say death comes in threes, but lately it feels less like superstition and more like a pattern I can’t unsee. And the cause, in so many of these losses,... Read more
They say some people eat to live, while others live to eat. As a second-generation Italian-American girl from Queens, I have always, proudly, lived to eat. Food is how we... Read more