Perimenopause Power: Your Body's Loudest Roar Starts at 40 cover art

Perimenopause Power: Your Body's Loudest Roar Starts at 40

Perimenopause Power: Your Body's Loudest Roar Starts at 40

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This is your Women's Health Podcast podcast.

Welcome to the Women's Health Podcast, where we empower you to own every phase of your incredible journey. I'm your host, Sarah Thompson, and today we're diving into perimenopause—the powerful transition to menopause that hits most women in their 40s. You know those irregular periods, hot flashes, mood swings, and that foggy brain? They're your body's signal that estrogen is fluctuating, according to Cleveland Clinic experts. But here's the truth: this isn't the end of your vitality; it's your cue to roar louder than ever. Let's reclaim your energy, strength, and fire.

Picture this: you're waking up tired but wired, juggling kids, career, and everything else, feeling like the workouts that worked in your 30s are now leaving you bloated and exhausted. Sound familiar? Dr. Stacy Sims, the trailblazing exercise physiologist from her game-changing books Roar and Next Level, nails it on the Mel Robbins Podcast: women are not small men. During perimenopause, your hormones demand a shift. Ditch fasted cardio and long slogs—those wreck your metabolism. Instead, fuel up with protein and carbs in the morning, like a plant-based smoothie with collagen, to stabilize blood sugar and build muscle. Hit polarized training: short, intense bursts twice a week, like sprint intervals or heavy lifts, mixed with walking or yoga. This combats bone loss, torches fat, and sharpens your mind, as Dr. Sims proves in her research.

Now, imagine chatting with your doctor about relief. Mayo Clinic recommends hormone therapy as the gold standard—systemic estrogen via pill, patch, or gel eases hot flashes and night sweats best, especially if you're over 45. Still cycling? Birth control pills from Cleveland Clinic stabilize hormones without breakthrough bleeding. For vaginal dryness causing discomfort during intimacy, low-dose creams, rings, or tablets deliver targeted estrogen, per UCHealth. Can't do hormones? Fezolinetant, aka Veozah, blocks brain pathways for severe flashes, while antidepressants like SSRIs cut hot flashes and anxiety, NHS confirms. Gabapentin or oxybutynin offer non-hormonal wins too. Pair it with lifestyle power moves: a low-fat, high-fiber diet packed with fruits, veggies, and whole grains from UCHealth slashes flash intensity. Limit alcohol and caffeine, and weave in strength training to fortify bones against osteoporosis.

Sisters, perimenopause isn't decline—it's your superpower phase. Listen to your body, lift heavy, eat for your cycle, and consult pros like those at Mayo Clinic for personalized plans. You've got the resilience to thrive.

Thank you for tuning in, empowered warriors—subscribe now for more game-changing episodes. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


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