You Are Not Losing It — Just Changing: Understanding Perimenopause
Turning Hormonal Chaos Into Your Next Chapter of Strength and Wisdom
If you’ve been wondering why your body feels like it’s flipping through emotional weather channels without warning — you’re not alone.
Welcome to the Perimenopause Chaos Zone.
It’s not just your imagination.
Your hormones really are shifting dramatically.
But more importantly, there’s a deep and understandable reason why this transition can feel so intense — physically, emotionally, and even spiritually.
What you’re experiencing isn’t a breakdown — it’s a recalibration.
A profound change is happening inside you, and when you understand the science and the soul behind it, you can move through it with more grace, resilience, and empowerment.
Let’s dive into what’s really happening — and how you can navigate it with strength, wisdom, and conscious support.

First, Meet Your Quiet Hero: Inhibin B
In your younger years, inhibin B worked quietly behind the scenes, keeping FSH (follicle-stimulating hormone) in check.
Produced by small developing follicles, it basically told your pituitary gland, “Relax — we’ve got eggs growing. No need to panic.”
But as you enter perimenopause:
• Your ovarian reserve (egg stash) begins to shrink.
• Fewer follicles = less inhibin B.
• Less inhibin B = pituitary panic.
• Your brain responds by cranking up FSH, urgently trying to stimulate any remaining follicles.
(Think: your boss yelling for more projects just as everyone’s ready to leave for vacation.)
The Great Progesterone Fade-Out
At the same time, fewer eggs mature properly.
Fewer ovulations mean fewer corpus lutea forming — and less progesterone production.
Progesterone is your calming, stabilizing hormone — the wise elder who keeps emotional teenagers (estrogen) in line.
When progesterone fades:
• Emotional resilience drops.
• Sleep becomes disrupted.
• Anxiety and mood swings creep in.
• Your body’s temperature regulation goes haywire.
Without enough progesterone, you lose your natural calming buffer — and the emotional storms feel bigger and closer.

Meanwhile… Estrogen Goes Wild
Now, here’s the real kicker:
While progesterone quietly exits, estrogen throws wild parties.
Sometimes spiking too high (hello, breast tenderness, migraines, irritability).
Sometimes crashing too low (cue night sweats, sadness, dryness).
Since FSH is high, any semi-willing follicle might overachieve and dump a flood of estrogen — totally unpredictably.
(It’s like having a roommate who either disappears for days or blasts techno at 3 AM.)
The Perimenopause Chaos Equation
Here’s the simple math behind your symptoms:
Low Inhibin B → High FSH → Inconsistent Follicles → Fluctuating Estrogen + Low Progesterone → CHAOS
Translation:
Your hormones are like an orchestra playing without a conductor — the violins are too loud, the drums are offbeat, and everyone’s trying to solo at once.
No wonder you feel out of sync!

But Why Do We Suffer So Much?
The real problem isn’t just that hormones change — it’s that our body’s ability to adapt to those changes gets challenged.
Here’s why:
Physical Root: Loss of Emotional Resilience and Adaptability
When progesterone drops and estrogen fluctuates, your emotional resilience — your ability to roll with the punches — declines.
Adaptability is one of the most essential markers of health.
Science proves it:
• Heart Rate Variability (HRV):
A healthy heart shows flexibility, adapting quickly to stress and relaxation.
High HRV = good adaptability = better health.
Low HRV = rigidity = poor prognosis.
• Brain Signaling Variability:
A healthy brain shifts gears easily between focus, rest, creativity, and calm.
Brains that can’t adapt get stuck — leading to excessive stress, anxiety, or even PTSD.
In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), this principle of adaptability belongs to the TCM Liver organ system.
The TCM Liver ensures the smooth flow of Qi (energy).
When it’s flexible, you feel calm and resilient.
When it’s rigid, symptoms like irritability, depression, frustration, insomnia, and feeling stuck appear.
In short:
When your body’s adaptability drops, discomfort rises.
Symptoms are the side effects of a system struggling to keep up.
Spiritual Root: Burning Through the Old, Making Way for the New
Beyond the shifting biology, a deeper transformation stirs:
Menopause is the soul’s quiet revolution.
What may feel like random heat, night sweats, and emotional upheaval can be imagined as an inner fire — not destruction, but refinement.
An ancient, invisible process burning away the residues of what no longer serves.
As A Course in Miracles reminds us:
Through suffering comes awakening.
Each hot flash, each restless night, each emotional wave can be seen as a flame touching the parts of you that are ready to be released — karma, identities, past wounds — all offered to the fire for transmutation.
The symptoms are not merely physical events.
They are part of a larger spiritual current moving through you, inviting you into rebirth.
You’re not being punished.
You’re being forged into something stronger.

Perimenopause Isn’t a Breakdown — It’s a Recalibration
When you realize:
• Your physical adaptability is being tested,
• Your spiritual landscape is being reshaped,
…the chaos starts to make sense.
You’re not broken.
You’re changing.
And that’s profoundly healthy — even if it feels messy.
The more we support our adaptability — through lifestyle, acupuncture, mind-body work, herbal support, and conscious self-compassion — the smoother this transformational journey can become.
Pain May Be Inevitable, But Suffering is Optional: You Have Agency
While perimenopause invites profound transformation, you are not powerless in this process.
There’s a Buddhist expression that says:
Pain is inevitable — suffering is optional.
Discomfort may arise as you move through physical and emotional changes.
But you have agency — the ability to consciously support your adaptability, resilience, and healing.
This is exactly where the work we do together becomes so vital:
• Energy psychology, including powerful tools like EFT tapping and the Conscious Work process we facilitate.
• Acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine — not only to regulate hormones and support your nervous system, but also to smooth the flow of Liver Qi, crucial for maintaining adaptability and emotional resilience
• Diet, nutrition, and supplementation to nourish your body and fortify your energy
• Rest, deep sleep, mindful exercise, and meditation to strengthen your inner foundation
• Nervous system resets, like vagal tone activation, to rebuild emotional flexibility
• Forest bathing (mindful time in nature), hikes and walks, and building supportive community connections to restore your sense of connection and flow
All of these practices are designed to reinforce your adaptability — the essential key to navigating this transition with grace, strength, and joy.
You don’t have to suffer your way through perimenopause.
With intention, support, and the right tools, you can walk this path awake, resilient, and empowered — transforming what feels like chaos into a conscious, beautiful evolution.

Trust the process ands ask for support:
The chaos of perimenopause isn’t random.
It’s your body and spirit realigning for your next chapter.
Support your flexibility. Honour the fire. Trust the process.
And remember: you have the power to choose a smoother, more empowered transformation.
