Menopause / perimenopause support!
claireychn074
Posts: 1,613 Member
There have been quite a few threads recently about ladies not being able to lose weight after menopause, and there’s a great peri thread where we groan and mumble to each other. There is a lot of snake oil on the internet, and I know in MFP we have lots of users who have lost weight (and kept it off) during the menopause. Let’s share what works so that we can stop the snake oil peeps profiting off misery!
So tips about increasing NEAT (maybe info about what NEAT is?), tips on coping with poor sleep and the resulting cravings, and hopefully some empathy and sympathy….
So tips about increasing NEAT (maybe info about what NEAT is?), tips on coping with poor sleep and the resulting cravings, and hopefully some empathy and sympathy….
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Replies
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I am just starting this phase and would appreciate any guidance!1
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I’ll go first - I’m in peri and having delightful night sweats. So I keep biofreeze gel (the cold stuff you rub on sore muscles) by the bed, and slather it on pulse points when I’m boiling. It’s obvs a temporary solution but it helps me get back to sleep. Just don’t rub your eyes when it’s on your hands 😮6
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Re hot flashes/night sweats, I'll quote myself from the other peri thread:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/comment/46774162/#Comment_46774162
I'm 55 and still have yet to have a hot flash, but am always hot. This was not a problem when I controlled the thermostat, but now I am living with my 84 year old mother, who is always cold. I just found out Gabapentin can help with night sweats and that SSNRIs can help with peri/menopausal vasomotor symptoms during the day. I was already taking the lowest dose of Cymbalta available, and have just switched to a higher dose, which I think I needed for some mental health issues as well.1 -
Great NEAT thread here:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10610953/neat-improvement-strategies-to-improve-weight-loss/p1Before I get to the point - more successful weight loss (Yay!) - please bear with me for a bit of background, so we're all on the same page.
Your daily calorie burn, or TDEE (Total Daily Energy Expenditure) is composed of your BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate, the amount you'd burn in a coma) + NEAT (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis, your job and chores and such) + TEF (Thermic Effect of Food, calories burned processing food eaten) + EAT (Exercise Activity Thermogenesis, your separately- accounted intentional exercise).
For an average person, the biggies are BMR, NEAT, and EAT, usually (not always) in that order from biggest to smallest. We can't do much to change BMR intentionally in the short run, and most people here are already taking steps (heh) to increase EAT, as they can fit it in.
But how much are we all thinking about and effectively increasing NEAT? It can be an immediate improvement, and for some a surprisingly big one, allowing us to either lose faster, or eat more, depending on our personal healthy goals. (The only downside is that new NEAT calories are hard to estimate, but we'll see them reflected in our weight loss rate.)
Some of the successful MFP weight losers/maintainers here have increased TDEE by a reported hundreds of calories daily by increasing NEAT. A couple of common examples are parking further from the door at stores, and taking stairs more often instead of elevators.
What non-exercise strategies are you using to increase movement in your daily life, to burn more calories via NEAT? Share them below!
(I'll add mine in a reply)0 -
Kshama beat me to the NEAT thread (thanks, Kshama!).
On the eating front, I did this (to lose, and now to maintain):
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10636388/free-customized-personal-weight-loss-eating-plan-not-spam-or-mlm/p1
I'm also vegetarian, but I think that's a complete tangent to weight management, health, or performance. (If anything, it makes those things a tiny bit more difficult, logistically and socially.) Reason for saying that: I was vegetarian all the way through decades in which I was thin and healthy; then fat, evenutally obese and unhealthy (high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and many other things, including cancer that's more common among obese women); then athletically very active (but still high BP/Cho) for over a decade; and finally thin again.
On the exercise front, I didn't much change my exercise routine to lose weight, since I was already active - had been since my mid-40s, starting after cancer treatment as part of recovering; I was already menopausal at that point. During loss, I did make it a point to be a little more consistent with strength training, something I'd done before off and on, but that I tend to be flaky and inconsistent about because I don't enjoy it.
I do have major sleep problems, not sure whether from menopause or chemotherapy. I've tried pretty much everything, and have been treated for sleep apnea. I still have significant, disruptive sleep interruption insomnia: I go to sleep easily, wake up multiple times a night, go right back to sleep. It's not restful. There are various things that helped a little, a lot that helped not at all. The only thing that helped remotely significantly was a few sessions of hypnotherapy from a credentialed psychologist. That got me from longest sleep interval being 60-90 minutes, to often getting one block of 3 hours, and occasionally as many as 5 hours.
My background story, as context: Chemotherapy put me into menopause, hard stop, right around my 45th birthday. Then I took anti-estrogen drugs for 7.5 years. Those drugs, speaking loosely, create a sort of hyper-menopausal state, making the menopausal symptoms worse than average for many who need to take them. (They're part of what kept me alive after stage III locally advanced breast cancer, so I'm grateful: Alive is a good start on the rest of my day.)
At the time of cancer treatment, I was in terrible physical condition, very sedentary, depleted by a very bad few years right before that (widowed, deaths of other family members, stressful career with long hours, etc). After cancer treatment, I gradually became more active, to try to recover strength and energy. Eventually, I was even competing as an athlete, not always unsuccessfully . . . but I stayed class 1 obese for another decade plus, despite working out pretty intensely 6 days most weeks.
At age 59, I committed to lose weight, and was at a healthy weight by around my 60th birthday. I'm maintaining now, age 66, 5'5", up and down a bit within the healthy range, but considering goal to be mid-120s pounds, and currently thereabouts. I'm still pretty athletically active, though no longer competing (I think 😉).
I posted a thread about how my loose skin (and body generally) looked after a few years in maintenance. Be forewarned: I wasn't trying to look my inspirational best (by managing clothes, poses, lighting, etc.), I was trying to be brutally honest. If you aren't up for that, don't go there
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10809632/loose-skin-50lbs-loss-at-60-4-years-m.aintenance#latest
I'm a little prickly about the "menopause as weight loss/fitness doom" idea. Weight management and fitness improvement is challenging for nearly everyone, though the details differ. Sympathy is one kind of support, but "oh, the difficulty" or "woe is me" are not action plans. When I'm dissatisfied with a state of affairs, I personally prefer an action plan (or action ideas) to commiseration. For my personality type, commiseration can just get me dug in deeper to feeling disempowered and discouraged, maybe even cozy in the thought that there's no alternative to my unfortunate state.
I feel like there are some common (not universal) patterns among women of menopausal age and beyond, that can potentially contribute to where we find ourselves in these years, that are underappreciated in their impact on on weight, fitness, and body composition. These include common tendencies to be better caregivers to ourselves than to others; to have come up when athleticism among young women was less encouraged (pre Title IX in the US, for example) and maybe even discouraged; perhaps to have gone through multiple cycles of extreme yo-yo dieting; and often to have activity patterns that subtly and gradually shift in a less active direction as we age.
I also see some tendency, among women my age I know in real life, to have unrealistically low expectations of ourselves, and to be self-deprecating. I can remember being at dinner with a group of friends (6-8 women around my age), when one of them said with complete seriousness "of course, we can't lose weight at our age" and everyone else nodded sadly, equally seriously.
A first step toward losing weight and improving fitness is believing it's possible, and that we as individuals are capable of it. Because we are.
/curmudgeon /manifesto
I said something similar on another thread recently was accused of being non-supportive. 🤷♀️ I'd like to help, sincerely . . . but since the support I personally want is action steps or relevant science references, that's mostly what I try to offer.
There are mixed results, but a few studies suggest that strength training may have extra benefits for post-menopausal women (with results like reduced central adiposity, which is researcher-speak for less belly fat). This is one example, but there are others:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5005909/
This one may be unpopular, though I find it hopeful: It suggests that "metabolism" is pretty constant in adults from 20-60:
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abe5017
From separate sources, I understand that there as some exercise interventions that can sustain youthful "metabolism" longer (blah blah blah telomeres, mitochondria, blah blah blah). For those, I don't have easy links, but the general idea is that including some higher intensity in one's exercise mix - once fit enough to do it without problems - has some of those effects.3 -
I can't speak to the weight loss aspect as I've never needed to lose but I was pretty horrified at the change in my body composition within the first year or year and half or so of menopause. Or maybe peri. It's difficult for me to tell as I had a hysterectomy (kept ovaries) when I was 33 so no periods to gauge by. I've never been athletic at all, I'm actually very clumsy so never been keen on sports, but what little muscle I had just seemed to evaporate.
The other issue for me is very high risk for osteoporosis due to family history, plus being a former smoker. Everything pointed to resistance training being the best way to maintain bone density so I buckled down and started, also figuring I could regain some muscle. After reading on here for a while I decided weight lifting was even better and tried that out... surprise, surprise, it turned out to be something that I could do and I LOVE it.
So building muscle and preserving bone density have been major aspects for me.
I've had hot flashes and deplorable sleep now for 10 years because my doctor doesn't "believe in" HRT, and I find this a bit annoying because I've been pretty miserable and I think something should have been done medically in terms of osteoporosis prevention. I've recently been found to have degenerative disease in my mid-thoracic spine despite the weight lifting and I'm now awaiting a full bone scan. (Okay, I'm actually super freaking angry that I've had this much deterioration already when it should have been addressed as a concern years ago)2 -
So building muscle and preserving bone density have been major aspects for me.
I've had hot flashes and deplorable sleep now for 10 years because my doctor doesn't "believe in" HRT, and I find this a bit annoying because I've been pretty miserable and I think something should have been done medically in terms of osteoporosis prevention. I've recently been found to have degenerative disease in my mid-thoracic spine despite the weight lifting and I'm now awaiting a full bone scan. (Okay, I'm actually super freaking angry that I've had this much deterioration already when it should have been addressed as a concern years ago)
Sounds like you need a new doctor !
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8 years of hot flashes and weight gain (20 slowly 20 quickly during 2020). A couple of weeks ago my doc said to do this naturally I would have to lift heavier, do more cardio. At the time I was training to run a race and didnt lift as much bc it of DOMS.. So now I am day 3 of pushing myself, outside of the gym random squats, running in place etc. inside the gym adding an extra 5-10lbs and more of an incline on the treadmill. I've read that our metabolisms are pretty steady till 60yo..but change because of our habits activity/food. IDK I am still trying to figure it all out.
Thanks for giving me a place to rant lol5 -
So building muscle and preserving bone density have been major aspects for me.
I've had hot flashes and deplorable sleep now for 10 years because my doctor doesn't "believe in" HRT, and I find this a bit annoying because I've been pretty miserable and I think something should have been done medically in terms of osteoporosis prevention. I've recently been found to have degenerative disease in my mid-thoracic spine despite the weight lifting and I'm now awaiting a full bone scan. (Okay, I'm actually super freaking angry that I've had this much deterioration already when it should have been addressed as a concern years ago)
Sounds like you need a new doctor !
Trust me, if that was possible I would have cut her loose years ago but we have an ongoing shortage of GPs and tens of thousands of people who don't even have a family doc. I've had better luck with the other doctors at the clinic by showing up at the walk-in (although there's always a chance I'll end up with my own anyway) but there hasn't really been a walk-in since Covid.3 -
I believed that my bloated, cellulite ridden, flabby excess was now my life.
I turned 50 in January and I suspect I may finally be on the flipside of menopause.
Solid sleep (longer than a 2hr block) seems, at the moment, to be a thing of the past for me. I started perimenopause quite early (around 38-40years).
I've always been relatively lean, without too much excess weight. In the past, if I felt I needed maintenance, I would start walking 5kms each morning and the weight would drop off within a week or two! But since traveling through the later stages of menopause, I've managed to accumulate about 10kg in the past 3-4 years. Even when resorting to my reliable 5kms a day walking, the weight wasn't budging. So these attempts lasted only 3-4 weeks at a time, before they fizzled out.
Once I turned 50, I decided enough was enough. I got to thinking... "they say you never shift the middle-age spread once you've been through menopause" ... They say "you will never regain the fitness levels and/or stamina that you had even in your 40s"
Well... Pffft to that... That just didn't seem right to me. My logic told me that if I persisted over and above my normal approach to exercise, then the weight HAS to come off.
About 3 months ago I started doing a 5km walk everyday. Then, about 4 weeks into that, I started doing 45mins yoga after my walk.
Then, 8 weeks in, I introduced a 20km (leisurely) bike ride once a week.
Today:
• 3km Interval run (1min jog/1min walk - 15 sets) - Daily. I'm actually working toward a straight 5km run.
• 5km brisk walk - Daily
• 1hr Iyenga yoga - 5-6 days per week (time permitting)
• 20km leisurely bike ride - weekly
I know this seems like alot, but I found the biggest hurdle for me was setting myself a routine and committing to it.
My day starts at 6am. As a result of menopause, I would be awake at 6am anyway. Because I couldn't get back to sleep, I would spend about an hour and a half scrolling on my phone before I got out of bed. Now, this scrolling time is my run/walk time.
I have noticed significant changes to my body and stamina. It has taken a few months to shed the excess fluid weight, before the fat weight began to fall.
Over the past two weeks, I've lost 2kg, and I feel SO much fitter! The scales are FINALLY beginning to show weightloss.
I guess what I'm saying is that it took hard work and commitment on my part, but I'm determined to keep at it.
Persist. Persist. Persist.
It CAN happen.
🙂
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