Perimenopause: It Is Not in Your Head: A Guide to the Symptoms Your Doctor May Have Dismissed, the Hormonal Transition Nobody Explained, and Reclaiming Your Mind, Body, and Sense of Self - Couverture souple

Livre 1 sur 5: The Believed Series

Press, Pointed-Pen; Whitfield, A. S.

 
9798185969212: Perimenopause: It Is Not in Your Head: A Guide to the Symptoms Your Doctor May Have Dismissed, the Hormonal Transition Nobody Explained, and Reclaiming Your Mind, Body, and Sense of Self

Synopsis

Told your tests are normal? Prescribed antidepressants for symptoms that feel hormonal? You are not imagining this.

Perimenopause can begin in your mid-to-late thirties, last for a decade, and produce over thirty distinct symptoms. Yet the average medical consultation ends with a dismissed blood test, a mental health referral, or the instruction to come back once your periods have fully stopped. This book was written for every person who has sat in that room and left without answers.

Perimenopause: It Is Not in Your Head is a science-grounded, compassionate, and unflinching guide to the hormonal transition that medicine has consistently undertreated. Drawing on peer-reviewed research, clinical guidelines, and the lived experience of the perimenopausal population, A. S. Whitfield explains what is actually happening in your body and brain, why your symptoms are real, and how to navigate a medical system that was not designed to support you through this.

What this book covers:

  • Why perimenopause begins years before your final period and what the hormonal fluctuation pattern actually looks like
  • Why a single FSH blood test on a single day is an inadequate and often misleading diagnostic tool
  • The full symptom picture: brain fog, perimenopausal rage, anxiety, heart palpitations, joint pain, hair and skin changes, sleep disruption, and urogenital health
  • The neuroscience behind cognitive symptoms: why brain fog and memory disruption are direct neurological effects of oestrogen fluctuation, not anxiety or stress
  • Hormonal and non-hormonal therapies: what the current evidence actually says, including an honest reappraisal of the research that followed the Women's Health Initiative study
  • How to advocate for yourself in a consultation, document your symptoms effectively, and ask the right questions
  • Perimenopause alongside ADHD, autism, MCAS, hEDS, dysautonomia, and chronic fatigue
  • Premature ovarian insufficiency, early menopause, and surgical menopause: the non-standard timelines medicine is least prepared to support
  • Sleep, movement, nutrition, and the evidence-based lifestyle strategies that account for hormonal change
  • Identity, relationships, and the emotional dimensions of a transition that goes far beyond the physical

This is not a book that reduces perimenopause to hot flashes and mood swings. It is a rigorous, readable account of a transition that affects every person with ovaries, written by a researcher who has done the work that most consultations do not have time for. Whether you are newly symptomatic, years into the transition, or supporting someone you love, this book gives you the language, the evidence, and the clarity to stop accepting dismissal as a diagnosis.

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