Perimenopause Power: Why Your 40s Body Needs a New Playbook
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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, Emma Thompson, and today we're diving into perimenopause – that transformative phase leading to menopause, often starting in your 40s, when estrogen levels fluctuate wildly, bringing hot flashes, mood swings, sleep disruptions, and weight shifts that can feel like your body's playing tricks on you.
Picture this: You're Sarah, a 45-year-old marketing exec in New York City, juggling board meetings, soccer practices for your two teens, and suddenly, you're waking up drenched in sweat at 3 a.m., irritable by noon, and noticing your jeans fitting tighter despite the same kale salads and gym sessions. Sound familiar, listeners? You're not alone, and you're not broken. Perimenopause is your body's signal to adapt, not slow down. According to exercise physiologist Dr. Stacy Sims, author of Roar and The Next Level, women are not small men – our hormones demand a different approach to thriving.
Imagine sitting down with Dr. Sims in our Boston studio, just like she did on the Mel Robbins Podcast. I'd ask her: Dr. Sims, for listeners like Sarah hitting perimenopause, what exercise mistakes are we making by following male-centric routines? She'd explain how long cardio sessions spike cortisol, worsening fat storage around the midsection as estrogen dips. Instead, empower yourself with short, intense resistance training – think squats, deadlifts, and pushes three times a week, 20 to 30 minutes, fueled by protein within 30 minutes post-workout. No more fasted morning runs that tank your energy.
Next question: Nutrition feels impossible with busy schedules – how do we eat for hormone balance? Dr. Sims would say skip the carb-heavy breakfast if you're not hungry; opt for a savory protein-fat combo like eggs with spinach or Greek yogurt with nuts. Plants are great, but pair them with animal proteins for muscle preservation – creatine and omega-3s from salmon or supplements combat inflammation and brain fog. For Sarah, waking tired but wired, this shifts her from survival to strength.
And metabolism? Perimenopause slows it, but Dr. Abbie Smith-Ryan, PhD, from the Peter Attia Drive podcast, stresses balancing resistance with aerobic work for busy women – two strength sessions plus one HIIT sprint weekly preserves muscle and bone health, key as estrogen wanes.
Listeners, here's your empowerment toolkit: Track symptoms in a journal to spot patterns. Prioritize sleep hygiene – cool room, no screens. Strength train smart, eat protein-first, and advocate with your doctor for options like hormone therapy if needed. You're resilient, capable, and entering your roar era – stronger, wiser, unapologetic.
Thank you for tuning in to the Women's Health Podcast. Subscribe now for more episodes that fuel your power. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
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