Perimenopause Unfiltered: Your Body's Second Puberty Deserves Better Than Gaslighting
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About this listen
You’re listening to the Women’s Health Podcast, and today we’re diving straight into perimenopause – not as an ending, but as a powerful transition in your life.
Perimenopause is the time leading up to menopause when estrogen and progesterone start to fluctuate. The Mayo Clinic explains that this shift can begin in your 40s, and for some women even in their late 30s. Those hormone changes can bring irregular periods, hot flashes, night sweats, sleep problems, mood swings, and brain fog. The North American Menopause Society emphasizes that these symptoms are common, real, and absolutely not “all in your head.”
Think of this episode as your roadmap and your script for self-advocacy. If I were bringing on an expert, say a menopause specialist like a clinician certified by the North American Menopause Society, here’s where I’d start the conversation.
I’d ask: How do you clearly explain what perimenopause is, and how is it different from full menopause? Then: What are the most common early signs you see in your clinic that tell you someone is entering perimenopause, even when their lab tests look “normal”? I’d want to know: What’s actually happening with estrogen, progesterone, and brain chemistry that can make mood and sleep feel so unpredictable?
From there, I’d ask this expert to walk listeners through options. Lifestyle first: What does the evidence say about exercise, nutrition, and stress management? For example, research from organizations like the Marion Gluck Clinic and Every Mother highlights that regular movement, good sleep hygiene, and reducing alcohol can ease hot flashes and improve mood. Then I’d ask: When do you consider medical treatments such as menopausal hormone therapy, and how do you balance benefits and risks for each individual woman?
I’d bring in non-hormonal options too. Hello Clue and other women’s health platforms describe how certain antidepressants, like SSRIs, can help reduce hot flashes and mood symptoms for some women. I’d ask the expert: Who might be a good candidate for non-hormonal medications, and what should women ask their doctors?
Then we’d talk empowerment and gaslighting. Blooming Leaf Counseling has written about how often women in perimenopause are dismissed. So I’d ask: What does medical gaslighting look like in this context, and how can a woman push back respectfully but firmly? How can a symptom journal, tracking hot flashes, sleep, and mood, change the conversation in a short doctor’s appointment?
I’d also ask about community. Where can listeners go for trustworthy information and solidarity: places like the North American Menopause Society, Let’s Talk Menopause, or support groups online and in local communities?
Let’s wrap with key takeaways for you, right now. Perimenopause is a normal, biological transition, not a personal failing. Your symptoms are valid. Education is power: reliable resources like the Mayo Clinic and the North American Menopause Society can help you prepare and plan. You deserve a provider who listens, takes your concerns seriously, and partners with you on treatment options, from lifestyle changes to hormone therapy or non-hormonal medications. Tracking your symptoms, asking direct questions, and seeking a second opinion when needed are all acts of self-respect, not overreaction.
Most of all, this phase can be an invitation to re-negotiate your life on your terms. Your body is changing, yes, but your power, your wisdom, and your voice are expanding.
Thank you for tuning in to the Women’s Health Podcast. If this episode on perimenopause was helpful, please subscribe, share it with another woman in your life, and join the conversation. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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