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Millions of women in their 40s are being prescribed antidepressants and anti-anxiety medication for a condition they do not have. The anxiety is real. The diagnosis is wrong. And those two things are completely different problems.
You may have done everything you were told. Therapy, breath work, medication, cutting caffeine, cleaning up your sleep. And you're still waking up at 2am with your heart pounding for no reason you can name. That's not a willpower problem. It's a wrong target problem.
In this episode, I'm going to show you what is actually happening in your hormonal biology when those anxiety symptoms arrive, why standard treatment completely misses it, and how to tell whether this pattern applies to you.
⏱️ TIMESTAMPS
2:19 Progesterone and your nervous system in perimenopause
3:56 Why progesterone deficiency produces symptoms that look identical to anxiety disorder
5:10 The cortisol-progesterone loop and why it keeps the problem self-reinforcing
5:53 How gut dysfunction compounds the problem in 45% of cases
6:39 Five questions to tell if this is your hormonal pattern right now
8:18 The real problem is a hormonal cascade, not a brain chemistry issue
9:05 The first thing to ask about tonight before accepting the next prescription
❓ QUESTIONS ANSWERED
Q: How does low progesterone cause anxiety symptoms in perimenopause?
A: Progesterone is your body's primary calming agent in the nervous system and binds to the same receptors as anti-anxiety medication. When it drops in perimenopause, the result is a hyperactive nervous system producing racing heart, fragmented sleep, and a persistent low-level alarm that every standard clinical tool correctly identifies as anxiety, because it looks exactly like anxiety.
Q: What is the cortisol-progesterone loop and why does it keep anxiety symptoms going?
A: Cortisol and progesterone compete for the same hormonal building blocks, so high cortisol drives progesterone lower, and low progesterone can drive cortisol higher. This becomes a self-reinforcing cycle that every brain-aimed treatment ignores entirely, because neither the cortisol imbalance nor the progesterone deficiency is being identified or addressed.
Q: How does gut dysfunction contribute to anxiety symptoms in perimenopause?
A: Compromised gut bacteria can produce an enzyme called beta-glucuronidase that reactivates already-cleared estrogen and sends it back into circulation. This compounds existing estrogen dominance, amplifies the hormonal imbalance driving the nervous system response, and is a compounding factor in approximately 45% of the cases seen clinically.
📱 RESOURCES
Website: https://thehormonebalanceclinic.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehormonebalanceclinic/
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheHormoneBalanceClinic/videos
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ABOUT ROWAN SANDERSON: I'm Rowan Sanderson, a Functional Diagnostic Nutrition Practitioner specialising in female functional endocrinology. After more than a decade working exclusively with women navigating perimenopause and hormonal transition, and having worked with over a thousand women who arrived having already failed conventional HRT, I founded The Hormone Balance Clinic to give women the precise clinical approach that the standard medical model has consistently failed to provide.
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