Perimenopause Fatigue: Why You’re So Exhausted (And It’s Not Just Poor Sleep)
You used to be the person who got things done. Early mornings, packed schedules, running on a reasonable amount of […]
You used to be the person who got things done. Early mornings, packed schedules, running on a reasonable amount of […]
You’re exhausted in a way that sleep doesn’t fix. You’re gaining weight even though nothing in your diet has changed.
Told your labs are fine but you feel completely unlike yourself? You’re not imagining it — and the problem isn’t you. Here’s why perimenopause symptoms get dismissed, what’s actually happening in your body, and what you can do about it.
The perimenopause supplement market is overwhelming — but the clinical research points to just three with real evidence behind them. Here’s what magnesium, ashwagandha, and myo-inositol actually do, and why they’re worth your attention.
If you have ADHD and you’re in your 40s, the cognitive chaos you’re experiencing isn’t burnout — it’s estrogen and ADHD brain fog in perimenopause hitting your dopamine system from two directions at once. Here’s the neurological truth nobody told you.
If you’re eating less than ever and the weight around your middle keeps creeping up, you’re not imagining it — and you’re definitely not lazy. Perimenopause belly fat is a hormonal and metabolic shift, not a willpower problem, and the advice most women are getting is nowhere near enough.
After 40, collagen loss is real — and it accelerates dramatically around menopause. But the form you’re taking might be the reason you’re not seeing results.
If you were managing fine until your 40s and then everything suddenly fell apart — professionally, cognitively, emotionally — there’s a reason, and it’s not that you’re falling apart. Here’s what the research says about ADHD diagnosis in perimenopause, and why so many women are finally getting answers now.
Bladder problems after 40 aren’t about weak willpower or too much coffee — they’re about estrogen, and what happens to your urinary tract when it starts to decline. Here’s the explanation your doctor probably skipped, and what you can actually do about it.
Your TSH is ‘normal’ but you still feel exhausted, foggy, and like a stranger in your own body. Here are the six thyroid lab numbers that explain why normal TSH but still have symptoms is far more common than most doctors acknowledge.