Live Like a Girl with Dr. Mindy Pelz - Age Like a Girl Part 2: Rebuilding Your Neurochemical Girl Gang
Episode Date: November 24, 2025In this solo episode, Dr. Mindy breaks down the 12 neurochemicals that shift in menopause and why you suddenly feel different. Learn how to bring back your mood, memory, motivation, and sleep with sim...ple lifestyle tools — and why this neurochemical reset is part of your biological design. To view full show notes, more information on our guests, resources mentioned in the episode, discount codes, transcripts, and more, visit https://drmindypelz.com/ep315/ Check out our community membership at https://resetacademy.drmindypelz.com Please note our medical disclaimer.
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Welcome back to the Resetter podcast. In this episode, we're picking up where we left off in our
Age Like a Girl series and diving straight into what I call estrogen's girl gang, the powerful
network of neurochemicals that estrogen stimulates to keep your brain sharp, your mood
balanced, and your energy vibrant. In this episode, I'll break down who's in the gang.
How do they work together to shape your memory, motivation, and calm,
and most importantly, how your lifestyle can bring them back online.
These are the tools our primal grandmothers used instinctively,
and they're all free and available to you right now.
So get ready.
This is where Science Meets Strategy episode
that will show you exactly how to thrive through menopause and beyond.
Let's jump in.
So get ready.
Here we go.
Into the lifestyle of the girl gang.
Let me list the members of the girl gang.
And the way I like to look at them is that there are nine of them that are true neurochemicals.
And then there are three of them that I call honorary members.
And they're honorary members because they're not technically neurochemicals, but estrogen affected them.
So here are the 12 in total.
Let's start with nine neurochemicals.
Every time estrogen appeared in your body in big amounts.
She stimulated dopamine.
We'll talk about what each one of these do in a second.
She stimulated serotonin, acetycholine, glutamate, gaba, which calms the brain, BDNF, which helps you hold on to new memory, oxytocin, melatonin, and insulin.
She affected insulin.
The honorary members, I mentioned them before, are collagen, creatine, and glucose.
So she impacted all of these.
Now, before I go into each one of these neurochemicals and the lifestyle you trick that you can use to bring these
neurochemicals back, I want to go back to this hormone replacement idea for a moment.
Because even if you're on hormone replacement, you're not on the same dose of hormones that you had at 20 and 30.
So you're still having the shedding of the neurochemical armor.
you're still getting some of the brain fog and brain changes.
So even if you are on hormone replacement, these neurochemicals may still be needing a lifestyle
tool.
So let's start with the memory tool.
So there are three key neurochemicals that really helped you with memory.
And that's the cetocoline, glutamate, and BDNF.
So acetycholine is the master regulator of attention.
attention, alertness, and memory.
And how you can get acetycholine at this particular moment, there of course are supplements.
There are foods you can eat, and there are a lot of supplements that are recommended for
acetylcholine production.
But what I wanted to do in age like a girl is I really wanted to give you lifestyle tools
that are free that you can do any single time.
And so, like with fasting, you know, fasting, you know, fasting.
was just we sold over a million copies of Fast Like a Girl. I mean, that thing just took off because
you all had now a free tool that you could lose weight. You didn't need to put $800 down every
month or $1,000 down for Ozump. You had a free way of doing this. So I wanted to continue that
theme through with age like a girl. And there's a couple really interesting things. I'm not going to
go through all of them because the book is dense. There's a lot in there. So I'm going to give you
some of the highlights. Storytelling, what the grandmothers did in the primal days is they came home
and they did a lot of telling of their past to the younger generation. Every time you have to go back
and think of a memory in your body, you're asking your brain to dip into a part of the brain
that holds memories called the hippocampus. It also happens to be the part of the brain
that is where Alzheimer's happens.
So the hippocampus, when you have to go back and recall a memory and tell a story,
you are igniting the hippocampus.
And what ignites that hippocampus is acetycholine.
And you are telling your body to make acetycholine so you can pull those memories out and speak them.
The best way I can explain this is how many of you have that mom that tells the same story
over and over again, and you're like, oh, God, not again, mom.
You're going to tell the same story?
Once I understood the principles of estrogen and the girl gang, and I understood acetycholine
and how I could bring her back, I started asking my mom more details about the story.
Yeah, you've told me that before, but what about this aspect of the story?
To try to get her brain to go into the hippocampus, to try to get her brain to go into
making more acetycholine.
This is what the grandmothers did.
They came home after forging for food and tubers all day long,
and they sat down and they peeled the tubers,
and they told stories to the younger generation,
and they believed that actually the language of the grandmothers
was more sophisticated than the toddler's language.
And so it actually helped build the brain of the toddler,
as far as our ability to expand into deeper languages and more vocabulary,
that was initiated by the grandmother, but her telling the story kept her brain sharp.
So it worked both ways.
So that's acetycholine.
Again, in the book, I have a lot more.
I'm just giving you some highlights.
Second thing that they did is they stimulated BDNF.
Now, there are a lot.
It's called BDNF is brain-derived neurotropic factor.
And BDNF, it helps you hold on to new information.
It's often referred to as miracle growth.
for the brain. So BDNF is necessary. I don't know about you, but I know somewhere in my 40s,
I had these moments where I was like, gosh, I am reading a book, I'm reading a science article,
but I'm not retaining it. Well, that's the dip in BDNF. So there are many ways you can bring BDNF
back. Movement is one. That's what the grandmother, that's what our primal postmenopausal women
did is they they moved their body seven hours every day. So they were getting that BDNF. Also, longer
fasts. So when I spent so much time researching fasting, like years and years and years, 20, 30, 40 hours a
week, like I was obsessed understanding everything I can. A lot of the studies were initially that
came out were around BDNF and how fasting can start to stimulate BDNF. Anybody who's been on a longer
fast. To me, a longer fast is something that is about 17 hours in this situation. And I do believe that
the grandmothers walked, they fasted about 17 hours every day from my conversation with Christian
Hawks and my conversation and just my research. They went into these long fasts every single day,
the primal postmenopausal women. And the longer fast stimulated BDNF along with the movement every single
day. Now, they were also out moving in sun. You have receptor sites in your eyes for serotonin. So when you're out
midday, getting midday light, you stimulate these receptor sites and tell your brain to make
serotonin. They also were walking with other postmenopausal women in collaboration of a purpose. And so
they got oxytocin. So they got BDNF, they from the longer fast and the movement, they got serotonin
from the sunlight, and they got oxytocin from doing it together in a group. So when I look at BDNF,
it often comes together with other members of the girl guy. Now, when we look at this, that,
at these three, these, the memory, estrogen memory collection, we also have to,
to look at a neurotransmitter called glutamate. You probably know glutamate because monosodium glutamate.
It's in, you know, in some foods as food enhancers. And so, you know, some people have a reaction
to monosodium glutamate. And the reaction is very excitatory. Those, you know, one of my biggest
pieces of advice for any menopausal woman is get off the ultra-processed foods. It is, it is stimulating
glutamate. And when it stimulates, it makes it more excitatory. And with estrogen going down,
progesterone also stimulated GABA. Those two, as they start to change, GABA goes down,
and GABA is the calming neurotransmitter. So you can listen to the podcast interview that I did
with Georgia Eadie. She is a metabolic psychiatrist. It was phenomenal. One of my favorite interviews
this year. She talks about when you go into these fasted states, you get a ketone. And when the
ketone kicks in, you get GABA. And GABA helps to balance the glutamate excitatory brain.
So if you've gone into your perimenopausal years and you know you've been eating a lot of
ultra-processed foods, starting to understand how to put these fasting windows into your day.
Maybe it's a 12-hour fast. Maybe it's a 15-hour fast. You're going to get some key.
And the ketones are going to make GABA, and it's going to balance that anxious part of the
menopausal experience because the ketone has the ability to balance that glutamate GABA neurotransmitter
balance out.
So we also know that ketones are highly protective.
So we want ketones, ketones, ketones.
We'll talk about that more in a moment.
So when we're looking at things like boosting memory, yeah, puzzles are great.
Yeah, crossword puzzles, yeah, reading, but let's not lose sight of some daily activities like
storytelling and going for a walk with friends and fasting and changing the way, getting off the
ultra-processed foods. These are core foundational ideas of helping these members of the girl gang
that are also going to boost your memory. Again, I have a lot more in age like a girl.
I'm just giving you the highlights right now.
Okay, the mood boosters.
What are the mood boosters that estrogen stimulated?
Well, there are three in particular.
The estrogen stimulated dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin.
So when you were drugged on estrogen, I just love that because I think so many of us
resonates.
It's like, woo, yeah, estrogen was awesome.
And then she went away and she took all those friends with her.
and all of a sudden I just feel like yelling at everybody,
well, we have to come back to the pieces of the menopausal puzzle.
And what we know about dopamine is dopamine is the molecule of more.
It is the molecule of motivation.
It is the neurotransmitter that gets you to go do something.
And I've heard sat with a lot of women who just felt like their motivation tanked
when they went through the menopausal experience.
Well, that's because dopamine goes down.
So we got to go find it somewhere else.
I'll share a couple ideas.
Serotonin, serotonin is that beautiful neurotransmitter that just says everything's going to be okay.
Now, I don't know about you.
When I went through menopause, nothing in my body said everything's going to be okay.
And that's because serotonin left the building.
And there's some ways you can bring that back.
And oxytocin, phenomenal, such a powerful neurochemical, made us feel like connecting.
And we actually have, women's brains have more oxytocin receptor sites in the amygdala.
Check that out.
Women have more oxytocin receptor sites in the amygdala.
And there is research from a woman named Shelley Taylor who said that it gives women
access to a whole other stress response called tendon befriend. And so when we had estrogen,
all of a sudden, oxytocin came with her and we felt this desire to connect with others.
Well, when estrogen goes away and oxytocin starts to decline with her, then all of a
sudden the way we connect is different. And the women I've sat with, a lot of us say it like this.
I can't do superficiality anymore.
I need to go deep.
I can't be around relationships that don't feel safe anymore.
I need my relationships to be rich in oxytocin.
And all of a sudden we go seeking oxytocin in new ways, not in caregiver ways, but in human
connection ways.
This is the moai of the Okinawa women.
They come together to share resources, A, because that makes sense.
But they come together to share resources because they're all getting oxytocin from each other.
Estrogen doesn't give it to them as much.
They've got to have oxytocin.
So when we look at these mood, if you're going through this process and you're just like,
want, won, I don't feel really good.
Start asking yourself, how do I get more dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin?
And here are some ways.
So dopamine loves novelty.
So what can you do that's new?
You're creating a new identity, a new life.
How do you get something new so you can get more dopamine?
I can tell you, I have a friend who, one of my closest friends, literally called me on
her way up to Lake Tahoe and was like, hey, I'm going fly fishing today.
And I was like, she's 58 years old.
I was like, do you fly fish?
I've never heard you fly fish.
And she was like, no, but I read about it.
and it excited me, and I wanted to go try it.
So she hired a guide, and she went out and went fly fishing.
And I will tell you, those two days, she was on the river.
She came home and called me.
She was lit up.
She was so excited because she did something new and novel and that upregulated dopamine.
Personally, for me, I've been trying, I've taken on a new sport of surfing.
And I just stumbled on to it because another post-menopausal woman told me about it.
And so I went surfing with her and all of a sudden, and I, and I'm not great at it.
But I was out in the water.
I was connecting with my friend.
And every day was this dopamine hit of trying something new.
So I got oxytocin from being with my friend.
I got dopamine from every day being new.
And I got serotonin because I was out there without sunglasses on getting these receptors
through my eyes, getting sunlight into my.
my brain stimulating serotonin. So trying to do something new, having a purpose can bring dopamine and
serotonin in, having shared experiences, like think about the grandmothers, think about the Okinawa women.
What do they do? They did things together because that neurochemically connects us and upregulates
these neurochemicals that started to decline as estrogen declined. This is why I'm like such a fan of
women collaborating in their post-menopausal years, not competing.
We were designed for collaboration because when we collaborate, we upregulate the girl gang,
specifically dopamine, serotonin, and oxytocin.
Okay, let's talk about the next set of the girl gang.
Why did the primal grandmothers not gain weight?
Well, that's because they relied on a different fuel system.
specifically the fat burning fuel system.
So now I'm going to bring in a little bit of fast like a girl
where we knew that we had early, like years and years and years ago.
I mean, it's been a known fact that there are two metabolisms.
We have one that we initiate when we do the sugar burner and eat food.
And one when we are fasting and we are burning fat to make a ketone.
And I taught you all that we are meant to metabolically shift
between these two. Now, what I want to bring forward is that the fasted state, let's really talk about
this because I don't want to confuse you, but moving into the fasted state was your primal design
as you go into your post-menopausal years. You were designed to fast longer. And this is what we see.
I have a community of millions of women. And these over 60 to 70 percent of,
them are postmenopausal. And they can rock their fasts and they can fast like a queen.
And their mental sharpness, they all talk about, oh my God, I am so mentally clear when I fast.
So they move in to the fat burning system so that they can start to make ketones so they can get
their mind supercharged. Now, I want to bring something up before I dive into the short.
sugar burner system and what we should be eating. And I want to just say that a lot of you have
reached out and said, but Stacey Sims says that menopausal women shouldn't be fasting.
Stacey Sims is looking at the menopausal woman through an endurance athlete. And you can hear her
podcast. I brought her on to the Reset her podcast. We had a great interview. And she talks about
what she does for breakfast, which is a loaded coffee with coffee.
collagen powder in it, creatine.
She's plant-based, but with a little bit of, I can't forget which milk she uses,
but a plant milk.
So she has what we all often use for our fasted state.
There's some overlap there, but she's looking at fasting through the lens of the endurance
athlete.
When I'm bringing forward in age like a girl is when we look at a ketone and
fasting through the lens of mental clarity.
It makes sense that we would want to go into a longer fast so we could get this ketone
to supercharge our brain.
Our brain is remodeling.
Our brain energy is changing.
So it's really important that we also look at fuel sources that can help with this brain
energy change.
Your brain is less sensitive to glucose.
It is less sensitive.
glucose. So you've got to rely on the other fuel source, which is ketones. And you need to also
make sure that your diet is in alignment with not raising glucose too high because your body
doesn't really know what to do with all that glucose. This is Alzheimer's. Alzheimer's has been
labeled as type three diabetes, and that is largely happening because your brain doesn't know how to
use glucose as much. Glucose is a part of the girl gang, and you're not as insulin sensitive.
So you've got to rely on this ketone to supercharge the mitochondria in these neurons so you can think
straight. And you can bring your brain back online. The chapter I did in age like a girl called
Changing Your Fuel Source, it's powerful. I show you the research behind a ketone and why it's so
important for the menopausal brain. So I'm really excited to get you that. Now, the food we should
be eating is what we call the prime, or I'm referring to as the primal menopausal diet. And it's, it's not,
it's not challenging. It's not hard. It's literally like the Mediterranean diet with a focus on these
tubers. There's something really miraculous about these tubers for the postmenopausal,
women. They're high in magnesium. They're low in the glycemic index. They can give you that
starchy carb energy that you need to be able to do your activities. So I really want us to start
talking about tubers and their tubers are sweet potatoes and potatoes and sun chokes and there's turnips
and there's a lot of really cool tubers in the book. I have list upon list upon list.
But what we want to start doing less of in this primal menopausal diet is we want less grains unless it's an ancient grain.
We want less paste dairy unless it's a grass-fed dairy.
We want less refined sugar unless it's something that came out in nature like honey.
And we want less processed oils.
We want to lean more into the positive oils like olive oil and avocado oil and MCT oil.
So I put a bunch of lists in there, but there are two changes that we look at from a fuel source
because you are more insulin resistant when you go into those menopausal years, because when
estrogen declined, your insulin resistance went up. So eat different and start tacking on
these longer fasting windows so you can get those ketones and your brain will come back online.
Now, one thing I thought a lot about when I looked at this girl gang was, why did the primal
grandmothers not get hip replacements? Why did they not get osteoporosis?
Well, when I looked at collagen and creatine specifically, I love that we're making creatine this
hero right now because there's some really cool information out about creatine.
And creatine is really this huge boost.
that can help fuel your muscle and your brain.
Your brain's a muscle, by the way.
So when you do higher amounts of creatine,
I have tons of protocols in the book.
You start to give your muscles more muscle juice
and you give your brain more energy.
Collagen is protecting your joints and your skin.
And so when estrogen started decline,
those two start declined.
So yes, adding in collagen and creatine-rich foods,
which, by the way, are mostly,
animal-based. So if you're not getting enough protein, you know you're not getting enough animal
protein or you're a vegan or a vegetarian, then yes, you're going to want to make sure you
supplement in with collagen and creatine. But the other side of that conversation is one,
we need to talk about changing the way you work out. I am a competitive athlete. I played competitive
tennis. That was my university experience. And I love to push my body, but I couldn't push it in the same
way when I started to go through my perimenopausal years. I kept getting injured over and over and over again.
So changing and doing things like hiking, I'm starting to surf. It's less pounding on the joints.
And yes, we should be strength training. And we need to think about flexibility and balance. And we need to
Think about grip strength.
These are all things I wrote about in the books so you can see it.
I'm a big fan of rucking.
I love the research on rucking and osteoporosis.
Really cool information that I mapped out for you all.
But for the sake of this conversation, everything changes.
Estrogen needs to change.
You need to add in collagen and creatine.
And you need to think about what you're going to do as an activity now that gives you
the same endorphin rush, keeps you fit the way you want to stay fit, and follows your
biological change that's happening as you went through menopause.
Okay.
The last one I want to talk about is sleep, because estrogen had a powerful influence on
melatonin.
And so when estrogen kicked in, she stimulated, whenever she was around, she stimulated
a part of the hypothalamus called the supercosmatic nucleus, which is the clock inside your body.
That part of your hypothalamus is sensing where you are in the day.
And then it tells the pineal gland that it needs what it needs to do as far as secreting
melatonin.
So that estrogen had a huge influence on your circadian rhythm.
Well, as she declines, now you need to.
to find other ways to map to your circadian rhythm.
So a couple of my ideas, the first one is light.
You got to get that morning sunrise with the red hues.
You got to get the midday light and you got to get the sunset with the red hues.
Those are three pivotal times that tell your body where it is within the day.
If you can't get the red light at those times, this is where red light therapy has come in handy.
Movement.
I already told you they get up in the primal design was to get up.
up and move in the morning. I do believe we are meant to move more in the morning. The cortisol kicks in the
morning. Testosterone kicks in the morning. So we have a lot of these these neurochemicals that actually
are meant to make us move in the morning. So I highly agree with that. I also believe in food timing.
I've talked a lot about the importance of making sure that we are eating in the light. If you
eat in the light, then melatonin, it helps with the melatonin production. So that would mean taking your
fasting window and maybe it would be 10 to 5, or I'm sorry, your eating window would be 10 to 5,
leaving the rest for fasting. But when you eat in the dark, we start to throw circadian rhythms off.
So that's melatonin. Now, that's just a little nugget of what I put in age like a girl,
but what I really wanted to go into this book was understanding these neurochemical changes
so that you can then use your lifestyle to balance out whatever you needed.
This is not saying you don't do hormone replacement.
I'm not saying that.
I'm saying let's tack on a lifestyle that works with the estrogen's girl gang.
I'm also not saying get on an antidepressant or don't get on an antidepressant.
I've just seen a lot of people get on antidepressants that it doesn't work.
Well, that's because your neurochemical system changed and you're perhaps seeing things in
your life that need to change.
So change them.
That's the part of menopause that is a gift for you.
So what I want to go into next is I want to talk about the transformation.
I specifically want to talk about five phases of transformation that you may recognize
yourself in.
And this is part three of the book so that you can start to step into this most authentic version of you.
You can step into this new identity that you were designed to have.
Okay, here we go into part three.
So part three of age like a girl is really how do we use menopause to initiate ourselves into a new version.
And I spent a lot of time, like I mentioned at the beginning of this podcast or wherever you're listening to this,
Really trying to understand the heroines, the hero's journey, understanding people who have mapped out transformational journeys like Clarissa Pinkola Estes.
And I saw a commonality.
And it's basically five steps.
And the five steps really look like this.
Step number one is the hunch.
I'll talk about this in a moment.
There's like an inner knowing that we're not, we don't want to be doing the same thing anymore.
The second step is what we call the shedding.
And this is where like pieces of old you are coming off.
And so whether you like it or not, a lot of them are coming off.
Some of us are peeling those pieces off.
The third step is called the grief.
This is where we're like mourning it.
I mean, it's not easy to transform into a new identity.
I mean, we got a lot of worthiness.
We got a lot of love from pleasing everybody.
And now we have to turn that on ourselves.
and become love for ourselves and self-love that needs to come towards us.
And we need to get love and worthiness through our being, not disappointing ourselves
and starting to be our most authentic selves, which is what the shedding is.
And then the last, and then we go into this initiation where we come out a new person,
and then we go into what we call the return, which is you as a new identity.
Stick with me as I go through this.
Somewhere along this year, I came across a podcast that rocked my world.
And it was put out by Michael Mead.
He's a he's a mythologist.
And he was telling a different version of the butterfly that I had never heard.
And the version goes like this, that a caterpillar is born with what we call imaginal cells.
They are the genetic blueprint of the butterfly.
It's in the caterpillar.
And it's purposely, these imaginal cells are there so that they can go and become the butterfly
when the time is right.
The caterpillar goes along and munches on grass all day long.
And when it gets bloated and tired of just consuming, there is this key hormonal, yep, the caterpillar has hormones.
there was a key hormonal moment that a shift that tells the caterpillar it's done being the caterpillar
and it needs to be something else now.
And this hormonal change tells the caterpillar to build a chrysalis around it,
which is like a hard shell to create a container in which it can transform.
And within this container, the caterpillar starts to dissolve itself.
And it literally goes into a goo that it no longer resembles the caterpillar.
But in order to completely put itself into this goo into dissolving itself,
what it needed to do was actually resist its own transformation.
I love this part.
So it had a hunch, that's step number one of my five-step process, is that I don't want to be this person anymore.
I don't want to be the caterpillar anymore.
I don't want to make, you know, a lot of women are like, I don't want to make your dinner anymore.
I don't want to balance work and family anymore.
I don't want to be in this relationship.
I don't want to be at this job.
I don't care what size I am.
These are all hunches that are starting to percolate in women.
And so like the caterpillar, we start to shift and change and we shed these old identities.
And then inside the caterpillar, inside its chrysalis, what it does to make sure it can completely dissolve is it has to resist its own transformation.
I wish I could see you all right now because how many of us have resisted change?
We don't want to change.
We don't want to move away from the old.
version of us that got so much worthiness, but we can't do it anymore. And so the caterpillar resists
its change, and that resistance is necessary. Because when it resists its change, it amplifies its own
immune system so that the immune system can start to attack the caterpillar so it dissolves into
the goo until the only thing left is the imaginal cells, its original blueprint.
of who it was supposed to be.
And what's fascinating, I thought, as I was listening to this podcast, was like, wait a second,
the caterpillar goes into the chrysalis, resists its change, and there's an autoimmune reaction.
It leaves me wondering, those of you knew, Dr. Sarah Zazal, as soon as I found this, I sent her a message.
I was like, Sarah, what if all the autoimmune conditions that are out there in the world,
or why they're happening to women is because we're resisting our own transformation and so our body
is attacking itself. How much of the autoimmune experience is a resistance of our own change.
And so it resists itself, it dissolves, the imaginal cells then become the genetic blueprint for
the butterfly and then the butterfly emerges. So with that in mind, when we have the hunch,
That is the point where the caterpillar is like, I'm done eating all this grass.
I don't want to eat all this grass anymore.
I'm bloated.
I'm tired.
I have a hunch.
Maginal cells.
I have a hunch.
I'm supposed to be something different.
How many of us feel that?
Somewhere in our 40s.
We're like, I'm going to be something different.
I don't want to do the same thing over and over again.
Then it moves into the shedding.
Second stage.
The shedding would be analogous to the caterpillar,
a chrysalis. It wraps itself up in a container in which it can start to dissolve into goo.
And I like the idea. I call it the shedding because I think for us when we go through menopause,
we just take pieces off. We just start taking pieces off so that we can just like,
I'm not going to be the one that, that, you know, makes dinner every night. I'm not going to be
the one that cares what everybody thinks about me anymore. We just start taking these pieces.
off because we're dissolving like the caterpillar dissolved inside the goo. Then inside that
goo, the resistance is the grief we go through as we let go of these identities. I think a lot of
us grieve the loss of being, you know, the primary person that our children relied on. They don't
need that anymore. Some of us are grieving our younger bodies. Where did my, I don't know if a lot
of us had six-pack abs, but we might have had two-pack abs. Where did my abs go? Why can't I
fit in my clothes anymore? There's like a grief in that. Where did my, where did my filter go?
I've heard so many women that are like, I don't know, I just say it and I can't, I can't hold
myself back. But there is, we need to go through grief. Grief is really important because grief
starts to rewire the brain. It brings the default mode network down and it tells the brain to ask
the question of who am I now. When we're in the hunch phase, when we're listening to that
inner part of us that is like, I can't do this anymore, we're actually activating our prefrontal
cortex, which is pulling us out of that fear center of the brain and we're like, I don't know what
this feeling is, but I can't do it anymore. When we go into the shed,
what we're doing is we're creating these new baby neurons where our brain is like,
okay, we're not that, but what are we?
And then we go into the grief where we're like, well, I don't know what I was,
but I know I don't have a sense of what I want to be.
And that's when the default mode network, which is that part, it's a belief system.
You know, default mode network is the part of the brain that has all the beliefs everybody
told you about who you should be or how you should stand up.
that comes down and goes away and all of a sudden we start asking ourselves, who do we want to
become? And that's important in the griefs. Like I'm grieving this old, old version, but I'm not yet
the new version. And the prefrontal cortex tries to make sense of that. And then we go into what I call
the initiation where we're like, I kind of think I'm a new person. And I want to show the world what I am and who I
am and how I'm showing up now. This might look like I always say that I lived in a house where
all children were welcome. Everybody could come. I didn't care if my house was messy. I just loved
having kids around. And then I went through pari menopause and all of a sudden I was like,
I can't take a messy house. And so there became the hunch of like, I'm not even feeling great
in my own home. And then it became, I'm shedding the identity of the supermom that just let every kid
show up at her house and spend the night and do, and we were that place. I had to shed that
identity. And then I had to go into grief because I really loved the kids that grew up in my household.
I loved them, but I could no longer take the messiness of the house. And then I initiated myself
into a place of, this is who I am now. I'm a woman who likes a clean house. And then I went into the
place of what we call the return where I came back as a new person. And the language became, I love having
you here in my house, I just need my kitchen to stay clean, and I can't have you sleeping on my
living room couch every night, and we started having new conversations. So that's an example.
Some women are, I can't stay in this marriage anymore, but it's the shedding of that life
and the grief that you go through in that process. I have several friends who have gone through
that, and it's really hard. And then you go into these dark nights of the soul, and then you come into
this place where all of a sudden you're a new person. We all do it different. You don't have to
blow up your life to become a new person, but menopause is asking you to become something different.
And the process looks something like that. I actually spent some time really trying to understand
if we have any research on what wisdom looks like. And when I started to look at what
what parts of the brain light up with wisdom.
And when we know somebody is wise,
I started to see that they map to each one of these five steps,
that we had to listen to that inner calling, the hunch.
We had to start to go through a phase of difficulty
where we let go of old things that we no longer wanted to be attached to.
And with that came a lot of pain.
We had to go through the grief.
We have to go through the resistance.
We have to start to come into this new version of us.
And then we land in the return.
And that is how we create a wise brain.
So when I look at the conversation that's happened in the menopausal world,
we went from, I don't want to talk about this to, oh, my God, you've got symptoms.
I've got symptoms.
This is bullshit, this process we've gone through.
And then we went to a phase of, oh, you don't need to suffer through it if you just do hormone
replacement.
And I strongly feel like we're now at a phase where we can integrate all of those thought
processes.
And we're at a phase where we can stand up and say, oh, shoot, after 40, my brain remodeled,
my neurochemical armor came down.
I crawled into the chrysalis.
I let go of what didn't serve me.
And I came out a butterfly.
And that process can take 10 years.
And you can do that with or with that HRT.
You can do it with or without some of the lifestyle tips.
But that's where you're going.
You're going to be a butterfly if you allow the menopausal moment to lead you there.
And that is the whole premise of age like a girl,
is how the heck do we butterfly ourselves?
How do we take this what feels like a very daunting experience
and make it work for us because menopause is working for us.
When I've given this talk that you all have just heard, when I've given this talk at
retreats and I gave it to a group of doctors the other night, so many women in their
early face late 30s come up to me and they go, I can't wait to go through menopause.
And if we can reframe it that way, if we can see it as our freedom moment, the moment
it to come into our most authentic version of ourselves, then we will stop suffering through it.
So there you go. That is a synopsis of age like a girl. It shows the world that we're ready to
change the conversation and make menopause one about how do we not suffer through it and make it a
conversation around how do we fully step into it so we can finally be our most authentic
powerful selves. That is the purpose. That is the conversation I'm hoping to open up with
age like a girl. And I am so excited to bring to you something that I have been living and I have
been researching and I finally found words for and I can't wait for us all to be on this journey
together. Thank you so much for joining me in today's episode. I love bringing thoughtful
discussions about all things health to you. If you enjoyed it,
we'd love to know about it so please leave us a review share it with your friends and let me know
what your biggest takeaway is
