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Episode 13 opens with tacos, a baby shower on the horizon, and Bri gushing about the magic of being surrounded by women — which leads to a relatable bit about having absolutely nothing to say to men unless soccer stats are on the table. Then it's straight into the main event: a candid, no-filter conversation about egg freezing that neither of them got to have when they actually needed it.
Cambria shares her full experience — how she only discovered she had severe endometriosis and an endometrioma that had overtaken her right ovary when she went in for egg freezing at 36. How she'd been living with debilitating migraines and pain her entire life and simply assumed that was just how periods worked. How her AMH score came back at 0.5 when a healthy score is a 2. And how nobody — not a single doctor across decades of annual pap smears — had ever thought to offer her an ultrasound or an AMH test before she started asking questions herself.
Bri, 27 weeks pregnant at the time of recording, adds her own perspective: she was over a 2 on her AMH and still had no idea what that test even was until recently. Together they make the case that the information gap between "how to prevent pregnancy" and "how to preserve fertility" is enormous, frustrating, and completely fixable — if women are given earlier access to the right questions.
Cambria walks through the full egg freezing process — the hormone phase, the injections, the bloating, the emotional chaos, the retrieval procedure itself (easy, apparently, especially with fentanyl) — and then brings it home with something genuinely surprising: Costco now offers egg freezing medication packages that can cut costs by up to 80%. They close with a practical guide for what younger women — or anyone who loves a younger woman — should know and ask.
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By Briana Steel and Cambria SteelEpisode 13 opens with tacos, a baby shower on the horizon, and Bri gushing about the magic of being surrounded by women — which leads to a relatable bit about having absolutely nothing to say to men unless soccer stats are on the table. Then it's straight into the main event: a candid, no-filter conversation about egg freezing that neither of them got to have when they actually needed it.
Cambria shares her full experience — how she only discovered she had severe endometriosis and an endometrioma that had overtaken her right ovary when she went in for egg freezing at 36. How she'd been living with debilitating migraines and pain her entire life and simply assumed that was just how periods worked. How her AMH score came back at 0.5 when a healthy score is a 2. And how nobody — not a single doctor across decades of annual pap smears — had ever thought to offer her an ultrasound or an AMH test before she started asking questions herself.
Bri, 27 weeks pregnant at the time of recording, adds her own perspective: she was over a 2 on her AMH and still had no idea what that test even was until recently. Together they make the case that the information gap between "how to prevent pregnancy" and "how to preserve fertility" is enormous, frustrating, and completely fixable — if women are given earlier access to the right questions.
Cambria walks through the full egg freezing process — the hormone phase, the injections, the bloating, the emotional chaos, the retrieval procedure itself (easy, apparently, especially with fentanyl) — and then brings it home with something genuinely surprising: Costco now offers egg freezing medication packages that can cut costs by up to 80%. They close with a practical guide for what younger women — or anyone who loves a younger woman — should know and ask.
What We Cover
Timestamps