About this episode
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, empowered and ready to dive into perimenopause—the powerful transition before menopause that hits women in their 40s and early 50s, bringing hormone shifts, hot flashes, mood swings, and sleep disruptions. Today, we're claiming our strength with real strategies to thrive, not just survive.Imagine this: You're waking up tired but wired, juggling career, family, and that nagging fatigue. Sound familiar? According to research from PubMed and EMBASE studies on menopause empowerment, lack of awareness amplifies these challenges, but knowledge flips the script. Perimenopause isn't a decline—it's your cue to empower yourself through education, movement, and smart choices.Let's bring in the wisdom of experts like Dr. Stacy Sims, the exercise physiologist behind books Roar and Next Level, who joined Mel Robbins on her podcast to shatter myths. Dr. Sims says women are not small men—our bodies need fuel before workouts, not fasting like guys do. She advises eating protein and carbs in the morning to combat that puffy, tired feeling from male-centric routines. Picture starting your day with a plant-based smoothie packed with berries and nuts—Dr. Sims swears it stabilizes hormones and builds muscle, key as estrogen dips.What would you ask an expert? Here's how I'd chat with Dr. Sims: "Dr. Sims, perimenopause listeners feel fluffy and frustrated after workouts—why, and how do we fix it?" She'd explain: Ditch long cardio; go for brisk walking, running, biking, or swimming—150 minutes weekly of moderate intensity, per Empower Lifestyle Medicine guidelines. Add weight training twice a week to boost metabolism and fend off osteoporosis and heart disease risks.Next question: "Hot flashes and night sweats are stealing our sleep—what's the empowerment play?" Enter hormone replacement therapy, or HRT, praised by Premier OBGYN of Ridgewood and Katie Ostrom MD for easing flashes, vaginal dryness, and bone loss while cutting visceral fat and insulin resistance. Non-hormonal options like SSRIs from HelloClue insights help moods too. But lifestyle leads: A PubMed review highlights healthy diets, stress management via yoga, and social support networks—even involving spouses—to skyrocket quality of life.Dr. Sara Gottfried, hormone guru from her Women, Food, and Hormones podcast with Kathy Smith, would nod: Diet as medicine—load up on phytoestrogens from soy and black cohosh, as Gollschewski's trials show for flush relief. Complementary meds like vitamin supplements build long-term wellness.Key takeaways to own your power: One, educate relentlessly—83% of postmenopausal women in group studies craved menopause info for better adaptation. Two, move like a woman: Morning fuel, strength training, 150 minutes cardio. Three, layer in HR