When you think of menopause, you may picture a woman
ripping off layers of clothing mid-hot flash or power-walking the neighborhood
wearing ankle weights while complaining about her lack of sex drive. I still
think of that Sex and the City scene where Samantha is despondent and embarrassed
about entering menopause. The episode ends in “triumph” when her period returns
mid-sex, as if the worst thing that could happen would be an early menopause.
But what if
instead of fearing menopause or talking about it in euphemisms like “The
Change” menopause was instead something to celebrate? It’s not as revolutionary
a thought as it might seem. Entering menopause used to be a cause for joy, and
in some societies it still is.
Looking Back to Redefine Menopause
Many ancient
societies embraced the three phases of womanhood: maiden, mother, and crone.
Crone, which refers to a woman past child-bearing years, was not a pejorative
like it is today; instead, these women were celebrated for their wisdom,
intuition, and guidance. Certain Native American tribes still embrace this in
the position of the Clan Mother, an older woman who presides over all
ceremonies, appoints the chief, and has the ability to remove him if she feels
he’s not adequately representing the clan. Interestingly, many tribes don’t
have word for menopause, suggesting that it’s not seen as a major event.
We can also see an example of this in nature. Killer
whales (orcas), short-finned pilot whales, belugas, and narwhals are the only
animals besides humans who go through menopause. Other animals who have periods
continue to be fertile throughout their entire lives, but female whales live
long after they stop menstruating. During this final chapter, they become
leaders of their pods or “repositories of ecological knowledge” according to a
2015 study on post-menopausal whales.
Celebrating
Menopause Today
Menopause
officially occurs after 12 months without a menstrual period, and it happens to
women typically between the ages of 45 and 55 (though 51 is the average age).
While it’s often
thought of as an end rather than a beginning, a shift in thinking and
understanding can help us reframe menopause not as something to dread, but as a
gateway into the most empowering phase of life.
“The exciting part
about menopause is that, before the age of 40, women have very high estrogen
and progesterone levels and those hormones wire you to mother,” says Dr.
Gabrielle Francis, a naturopathic doctor known as The Herban Alchemist. “Those hormones wire you to give, give, give.
They flood you with this inability to see your own needs because you're wired
to take care of everybody else. Even if you don't have kids, women under the
age of 40 are very focused on caring for other people, worrying about other
people, or needing to be needed.”
During menopause,
follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and Luteinizing Hormones (LH) rise. Dr.
Francis calls these the “queen hormones” because they wire women to get in
touch with their spirituality and their creativity. “She starts to think about
her own needs first for the first time. [She may get] very creative, very
spiritual, very intuitive.”
Dr. Francis says
women will often experience a shift in their relationships at this point,
especially with family. “It’s like, ‘Hey, I love all you people, but you can do
this yourself now. I'm gonna go take a belly dancing class.’ And everybody's
like, ‘What happened to mom?’”
But this shift to
prioritizing our own needs is essential for women, and it allows us to thrive –
if we’re willing to embrace these new feelings.
Preparation Is
Key to a Smooth Transition into the Goddess Phase
During menopause, the ovaries, which produce as much as
80% of a woman’s estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone essentially close up
shop and stop producing hormones associated with ovulation and menstruation.
The remaining 20% of these hormones are produced by the adrenals, and that
continues post-menopause.
“One of the most important things that I tell women as
they're moving into perimenopause is that, when the engine shuts down, you want
to make sure the backup generators are going to kick in,” Dr. Francis says, speaking
of the adrenals as the backup. “A lot of people are going through their
perimenopause time and their backup generators are depleted — that's when they
start to have all these menopause symptoms that are really uncomfortable.
That's not normal – it's common, but it's not normal. It's a sign that there's
imbalance.”
Perimenopause is
the time before menopause officially begins; it may last several years or just
a few months, and it's categorized by irregular periods and sometimes hot
flashes and other symptoms. This can be a tricky time; women may feel like they
have feet in two camps. “One day she's wired like a queen and some days she's
wired like the mother, and she'll often feel like she's kind of two different
people in one,” Dr. Francis says. “It's a time where I see a lot of people
going through frustrations because they don't understand that the changes in
their hormones are affecting how they see themselves emotionally and
spiritually.”
In addition to lifestyle tweaks like meditation, healthful
eating, exercise, and prioritizing sleep, Dr. Francis says it’s important for
women to have “a partner in health” in the time leading up to and through
menopause — a doctor or health professional who can test for hormonal changes
and help her navigate through them. “It's very rare that a woman in our culture
who's going, going, going, never recharging, always giving, always working and
taking care of other people isn’t depleted. [She will likely] need some kind of
additional hormonal supplemental support to help this be an easy transition,”
she says.
Dr. Francis says that this state of pre-menopause burnout
isn't the norm for people in other cultures who are less stressed. It wasn’t
until the last 25 or so years, for example, that the Japanese language created
a word for “hot flash” (derived from English). The Japanese word for menopause
translates as “renewal” or “season.”
Dr. Francis says
she was recently chatting with some friends in Denmark when the conversation
turned to menopause. The Danish women were joking about how their American
friends complained about gaining weight, mood swings, not sleeping, and having
hot flashes. “They were like, ‘we didn’t experience that at all,’ because their
culture does not have nearly the kind of stress that we have,” Dr. Francis
says.
One study outlined
in Reuters backs up this anecdote, finding that residents of Denmark, Sweden,
and Norway were most likely to report that “going through menopause turned out
better than they expected,” whereas the reverse was true for those living in
the U.S., U.K., France, and Canada. If menopause were simply a hormonal change,
the experience would be similar across cultures, but societal implications and
biases about “aging women” paired with stress levels also influence the experience
of menopause.
“We don't want to
move to Denmark. It's boring there,” Dr. Francis jokes. “But we do need to
understand that you can't just keep driving a car with no gas in the tank and
think it's going to get you where you want to be.”
A change of
mindset that celebrates menopause paired with lifestyle tweaks and hormone
checks during perimenopause can set you up to embrace your Goddess Phase rather
than fear it.
Source: https://veracityselfcare.com/blogs/the-knowledge/welcome-to-the-goddess-phase-menopause