This is your Women's Health Podcast podcast.
Welcome to the Women's Health Podcast, where we empower you to own every stage of your incredible journey. I'm your host, Alex Rivera, and today we're diving into perimenopause—the powerful transition that can feel chaotic but is your body's way of evolving into its next strong chapter. Listeners, you've got this; knowledge is your superpower.
Picture this: you're in your 40s, maybe juggling career, family, and that inner fire, when suddenly hot flashes hit like a summer storm, moods swing like a pendulum, sleep vanishes, and your cycle goes rogue. That's perimenopause, as explained by the Mayo Clinic, the phase before menopause when estrogen levels fluctuate wildly, sparking symptoms like night sweats, vaginal dryness, irregular bleeding, anxiety, and joint aches. The Cleveland Clinic notes it often starts in your late 30s or 40s, lasting four to eight years, but here's the empowerment: you can thrive through it.
I'm thrilled to bring in Dr. Stacy Sims, the trailblazing exercise physiologist behind books like Roar and The Next Level. Dr. Sims, in her chat on the Mel Robbins Podcast, shattered myths by saying women are not small men—our hormones demand a female-first approach. "Exercise like a woman," she urges. Forget fasting or long cardio that leaves you drained; fuel up with protein and carbs in the morning to combat that tired-but-wired feeling. Short, intense resistance training—think squats and weights three times a week—preserves muscle and boosts metabolism, countering perimenopause's fat redistribution. Pair it with aerobic bursts, and you'll build resilience.
Dr. Sims, what one mistake do perimenopausal women make with workouts? "Training like dudes—endless endurance without strength," she says. Instead, eat within 30 minutes of waking: Greek yogurt with berries for steady energy. For symptoms, Mayo Clinic recommends hormone therapy like low-dose systemic estrogen patches for hot flashes, or vaginal estrogen creams for dryness and painful sex. If hormones aren't your path, try Veozah, a hormone-free pill blocking brain heat signals, or SSRIs like those from selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors for flashes and mood. Gabapentin helps sleep and flashes too. Lifestyle wins? Hertility Health suggests regular exercise, stress-busting yoga, a plant-rich diet, and cool environments to tame night sweats.
From the NIH's perimenopause guide, target bothersome symptoms holistically: a progestin IUD for bleeding, plus estrogen if needed. Office on Women's Health affirms menopausal hormone therapy eases severe hot flashes when used short-term at low doses. Dr. Sims empowers: strength training protects bones and mood as estrogen dips.
Key takeaways, empowered listeners: Track symptoms in a journal. Consult your doctor for personalized options like hormone therapy or Veozah. Prioritize protein-packed breakfasts, lift weights, manage stress. You're not declining—you're leveling up.
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