Perimenopause Power: Why Your 40s Fitness Routine Needs a Total Rewrite
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About this listen
Welcome to the Women's Health Podcast, where we empower you to own every stage of your incredible journey. I'm your host, and today we're diving into perimenopause—the powerful transition before menopause that can bring hot flashes, mood swings, irregular periods, night sweats, brain fog, and sleep disruptions. This phase, often starting in your 40s, lasts years as estrogen levels fluctuate, but it's not a decline; it's your cue to rise stronger. According to experts like Dr. Stacy Sims, a pioneering exercise physiologist and author of Roar and The Next Level, women are not small men—our bodies demand tailored strategies for thriving.
Imagine waking up tired but wired, just like the busy mom Dr. Sims describes in her Mel Robbins Podcast interview: juggling kids, career, and hormones in her mid-50s. She busts the myth of one-size-fits-all fitness, urging us to fuel with protein and collagen in the morning, sprint instead of steady cardio, and train fasted to build resilience. Perimenopause empowers you to rethink exercise—short, high-intensity bursts preserve muscle and boost metabolism, countering the fatigue many feel.
Let's bring in our imagined expert chat with Dr. Stacy Sims. Dr. Sims, listeners are powering through brain fog and anxiety—how can they exercise like women to reclaim energy? She'd say: Skip the long runs that spike cortisol; opt for 20-minute sessions of weights and HIIT, three times weekly, to stabilize hormones and sharpen focus. What about nutrition during this shift? Prioritize 30 grams of protein at breakfast—think eggs, Greek yogurt with berries—to curb cravings and support bone health, as fluctuating estrogen risks density loss.
For those hot flashes hitting at night, Dr. Roni Farriss, MD, from her work on navigating perimenopause, highlights options like hormone replacement therapy, or HRT—now often called menopausal hormone therapy or MHT. It replaces declining estrogen and progesterone, easing symptoms for many, but always weigh benefits and risks with your doctor, as noted by Katie Ostrom, MD. Non-hormonal paths shine too: SSRIs like selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors help mood and flashes per HelloClue research, while lifestyle wins big. Every Mother recommends a holistic mix—regular exercise, stress-busters like yoga, nutrient-rich diets with phytoestrogens from soy and flaxseeds, and quality sleep routines.
Self-advocacy is your superpower, as Blooming Leaf Counseling urges: Track symptoms in a journal, join online communities for sisterhood, and push back against dismissal. The Lancet's empowerment model, led by Andrea LaCroix, PhD, makes you an equal partner—demand balanced info on MHT versus naturopathic supplements like black cohosh or magnesium.
Key takeaways to empower you now: One, educate and track—knowledge from Jean Hailes Foundation podcasts normalizes it all. Two, move smart with Dr. Sims' woman-first workouts. Three, nourish boldly—protein-forward meals stabilize everything. Four, explore treatments openly, from MHT to mindfulness. Five, build your circle—share stories to shatter silence.
You're not just surviving perimenopause; you're unleashing your next level of strength. Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
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