A 28-year-old patient came to the medical center, and during the consultation at the clinic she confided her distress. She had been married for four years, and had been busy with her career before, and had aborted two children, and was ready to get pregnant in the past year, but she could not get pregnant. After a comprehensive and detailed examination, she found the culprit of her infertility —- uterine adhesions. A year later, she walked into the center with her baby in one hand and a cross-stitch of “Goddess of Mercy” in the other, her whole body smelling of happiness. The birth of a great life requires the sperm and egg to meet in the tiny, narrow fallopian tube, leave the tube and enter the uterus on the 4th day of the encounter, and bury deeply into the endometrium on the 11th-12th day of the encounter, settling completely in the uterine cavity. The beautiful encounter is short, and the days waiting for the blossom are long, and the fertile soil is indispensable for the conception of life. If we compare the uterine cavity to a house, the endometrium is like the soil. Once the soil is damaged, it will inevitably affect the development of the seeds. When undergoing abortion surgery, curettage, tuberculosis infection, and uterine cavity infection, our uterine lining is damaged and prone to form uterine adhesions or scarring changes. The fragile endometrium cannot feel the hormonal changes and cannot produce sufficient thickness, and we experience symptoms such as decreased menstrual flow, amenorrhea, dysmenorrhea, or aggravated dysmenorrhea; eventually, the endometrium lacks the function to accommodate embryos leading to infertility or even miscarriage. If you have not been able to conceive and it happens that your uterine lining has been damaged before, please seek medical attention as soon as possible. Doctors can use a variety of tests to clarify the diagnosis, such as iodine oil imaging of the uterine tubes, Doppler ultrasound, hysteroscopy and testing of sex hormones, among which hysteroscopy is the gold standard. We hope that women will protect our endometrium like the Yellow River and cherish our ‘soil’.