Live Like a Girl with Dr. Mindy Pelz - Create (Peri) Menopausal Confidence: Cut the Noise with Tamsen Fadal
Episode Date: August 25, 2025It's time to unlock the wisdom, power, and leadership potential that accompanies menopause. Join our guest, Tamsen Fadal, as we explore how this stage of life has transformed from a taboo subject into... a prominent conversation. The episode delves into social media trends, legislative shifts, and even the growing understanding among men regarding the implications of menopause. As Dr. Mindy emphasizes, "My brain goes crazy when I think about 1.2 billion women by 2030 who are gonna be in menopause." This episode offers vital insights and actionable advice for navigating this significant life transition. To view full show notes, more information on our guests, resources mentioned in the episode, discount codes, transcripts, and more, visit https://drmindypelz.com/ep302 Tamsen Fadal is an Emmy Award-winning journalist, New York Times best-selling author, documentary filmmaker, and host of The Tamsen Show podcast. After more than three decades as a news anchor, Tamsen pivoted her career towards women's advocacy, guiding her audience of 4+ million through midlife and beyond. She is the creator and executive producer of the PBS documentary, The M Factor: Shredding the Silence on Menopause, which has been viewed by over 1 million women across 350+ cities and 42 countries, and the author of instant New York Times best seller, How To Menopause: Take Charge of Your Health, Reclaim Your Life, and Feel Even Better than Before. Check out our fasting membership at https://esetacademy.drmindypelz.com. Please note our medical disclaimer.
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On this episode of The Resetter podcast, I am bringing you Tamzin Fidel.
Now, Tamzan is a force.
If you're not familiar with her, she brings such a cool perspective to the menopause
conversation because she's a journalist.
She's not a doctor.
She's not a health advocate.
She is really working to change the narrative around menopause.
And if you're not familiar with her work, let me tell you a little bit of,
about her and then I want to launch into what you're going to learn in this conversation because it is
truly one of a kind. So Tamsin is an Emmy award-winning journalist, a menopause advocate,
documentary filmmaker, a content creator who left her 30-year career as a news anchor to rewrite
the narrative in menopause. So she put out a really epic documentary called The M Factor,
which really became this groundbreaking movement across America of women finally standing up and saying,
yes, I have these symptoms of menopause and they are affecting my quality of life.
Tamson really gets a lot of credit for rallying doctors together, rallying women together
to open this conversation up. Now, what I wanted to do with this conversation was,
with her is I really wanted to take a 30,000 foot view of the menopause conversation.
Because as you've heard, it may say before, and you're going to hear it in this conversation,
that we've really gone from a cultural hush to cultural chaos.
And I know that many of us are confused.
We're confused as to patch or cream.
We're confused as to whether we have the right doctor or not.
we're confused as to how long these symptoms are going to last, what kind of lifestyles we should
change, what changes do we need to make? So in this conversation, Tamsin and I go through
what do we know in 2025 about the best practices for menopauseing? How do you talk to your spouse?
How do you talk to your doctor? How do you talk to your workplace? How do you know what type of
HRT you're going to need. Where does, where does lifestyle fit in? All of this is discussed in this
incredible conversation between Tamsin and I. And I'm really excited to bring it to you
because I know that a lot of you get stuck. And I've seen this with my patients. I've had this
experience with myself where we get stuck in, did I eat enough protein? Did I fast long enough?
Am I supposed to fast? Should I be doing a different type of workout? We get caught in those.
details. And what I wanted to do with Tamson is really give us a bigger framework to look at
menopause from. And that's what we do in this incredible conversation with this beautiful woman.
So Tamson Fidel, how to menopause, enjoy.
Welcome to the Resetter podcast. This podcast is all about empowering you to believe in yourself again.
If you have a passion for learning, if you're looking to be in control of your health and take your power back, this is the podcast for you.
Okay, well, Tam's in first.
I just have to welcome you to my podcast, which would be like me, the closest thing I could do to inviting you into my living room.
So I'm super excited to have you here.
So just let's start off with a big welcome to you.
Well, thank you.
I'm excited to be.
I like being in your living room.
Yes.
There's a lot of great conversations that have.
happen in my living room. But here's what I think is going to be really interesting to talk about.
You have such a unique lens to the menopause conversation, perhaps the most unique lens of
anybody out there. And, you know, my clinic was a lifestyle clinic. I took women to the grocery
store and taught them how to read labels. I helped families, you know, helped moms make good
nutritious decisions for their kids. We talked about detox. And when we, you know, when we,
were doing those kind of conversations, nobody was doing lifestyle for women, nobody was talking about
hormones online. There was like a cultural hush around menopause. And in just like three years,
like such a small amount of time, we've gone from not talking about it to everybody talking
about it. So let's start off with this. Where do you feel like we are in the cultural conversation
around menopause right now.
Like, what is it that is the tried and true?
What are people gravitating towards?
And what is it that women need to know right now?
Yeah, it's a good question.
And you're so right about it.
When I go and I think back to three years ago and even five years ago,
you know, we did a documentary.
We're working on another one now.
And we got a response like, there's no audience for it.
It's a niche audience.
Nobody wants to talk about it.
Now I feel like we're in a place where I don't know that a lot of people don't want
to talk about it. Because they want, you know, because, which is a great, is a great place to be,
as long as they're getting the right information, right? So I think that there's a lot of conversation
about it from a couple of different areas. Social media is one. The marketplace is another,
businesses and seeing how we can, you know, this is a big group of women that want a lot of answers.
And obviously businesses go, oh, what does that mean? And then I think that the third big place,
obviously is in workplace. And then we have, you know, politics and legislature and all those other areas.
But I do think that there is a lot of confusion out there right now. But then I also say,
okay, well, then let's, you, we can work on some of that, but at least we've got it like pulled
out into the, you know, culture or the atmosphere and the environment and men aren't afraid
to say it. I was in a meeting before I jumped on here. And I said, I literally saw the thermostat and
it's at 80 degrees. And I'm like, oh, no. I'm not sitting in a room like this. And I go, guys,
I said, my patch isn't going to cut through 80 degrees, so you've got to fix that AC.
And nobody felt weird about it.
Nobody was like, oh, gosh, Tampson again with the whole hot flash thing.
So I do feel like happy that we've got the words out there.
Not everybody, but we've got the words out there.
But I do think we need to tweak now a little bit.
Yeah.
So the conversation has been started.
And one of the things that I realized in, like, this is from the hundreds of thousands of
comments we get on YouTube and my socials is that women are confused. And we have like gone from a
place where nobody was to do HRT and now everybody's to do HRT. But then there's little nuances in that.
Like what if you don't get the right doctor? There's a learning curve for your dosage. Where does
lifestyle fit into this. So can you talk a little bit about what we know culturally, like the experts
right now, about HRT? When do we start it? How long do we need to be on it? What's the cultural
message on this? Understanding of it. Yeah. And I also, I'd love to talk about some of the confusing
parts because I think that that's what I, I'm seeing the same thing now, a repetition, right,
of the issues. So people don't really, people don't know where they got the fear, right, of,
of hormone therapy. I mean, we, we kind of all, you know it now, but there was a study in 2002 that
I know you've talked about many, many times, the Women's Health Initiative, that scared, the
headlines scared a lot of women. So in the back of our mind somewhere, we have estrogen
equals breast cancer, right? Because that's kind of what the media pulled from that, put into the
headlines, scared women, scared doctors, scared medical institutions. And, you know, I wasn't around
reporting on those things then, or that I don't remember it.
But I do know now, fast forward 20 years later, three years ago, everybody was afraid of it.
Today, we're talking about it openly.
You know, I just started doing a video like poster patch, you know, so we could just kind of
normalize the, you know, what that even means about it.
But I think the biggest challenges we have right now is what is HRT slash MHT slash HT?
You know, what is hormone therapy?
Because that can be confusing, right?
If you're just jumping into the conversation.
And I'm a regular woman.
So I feel like I'm almost a conduit.
between like, you know, understanding what the doctors are saying and then finding a way to
simplify it for a book or for the documentary. So I think, what is it? You know, what comprises of it?
Could you say there's nuances? So are we talking about vaginal? Are we talking about estrogen,
progesterone or testosterone? And then in lifestyle, where lifestyle plays. And then I think that
the next area of confusion is, is it that I'm at risk because my mom, my mom did have breast
cancer and died of breast cancer. Am I allowed to do that or am I not? And then I guess maybe the final
one would be, I have a doctor that, you know, is telling me this or telling me that, telling me it's not
safe for me, safe for me, or doesn't even want to have the conversation. So that's where all this
confusion happens. So if we talk about the guidelines right now, you know, most women are able to,
should be, should be able to go to their doctor when they're in pari menopause, that time of, you know,
before you're in menopause where your period stops, where you know, you're no longer having a
period. And it could be birth control or it could be a form of hormone therapy. That could be a mixed
hormone therapy. And you're 51 years old on average when you get, you know, when you go into
menopause, some women before, some women after. And the guidelines to my understanding, and you know
this better than me is that you can stay on hormone therapy for the rest of your life. And we have a lot
of the leading voices, doctors out there saying, like, that's the case. Now we have different
guidelines. The guidelines that most people refer to are the menopause society, which says
that if you're 60 or you're within 10 years of that post, that menopausal transition, then that's
another conversation for you to be having individually with your doctor. Yeah. When it comes
to breast cancer, then that's another conversation. So you're right. There's so many nuances now
in between things that are leaving women going, but what about me?
Because it's not clear cut.
Yeah.
And I think this is the downside of social media.
You know, I keep saying, stop organizing your health around a 90-second reel.
Like we've got to look at the experts and then ask ourselves how it fits for us.
And it's interesting because I'm sort of seeing two sides of the HRT conversation.
I actually, when I, the last leg of age like a girl, we brought in an editor who had worked with me on Fast Like a Girl.
And one of the things that came up is that she's, she's in her 60s.
She said, my friends and I are upset.
And we're upset because we weren't even given the option.
So what do we do now?
And she was like literally.
And I was like, that's a very valid point.
And then on the other side, we are getting messages from women that are like, I went
to the doctor, I put a patch on, and nothing's helping.
I feel worse.
And then another part of the conversation.
we have is people like Mary Claire who are getting up and saying, well, actually, doctors haven't
been trained in menopause. So it feels like the Wild Wild West still a little bit. And are there ways
we can engage our doctors in conversation that keeps it open? We don't get gas lit. We have,
we're in a collaborative experience. You've interviewed so many doctors. How do we know we're at the
right, doctor, and how do we have this conversation to get the nuance we need? Yeah, I love this question.
And you're right, you know, and Dr. Mary Clare is right, that we, a lot of doctors have not been
trained about this. When we go back to what that study was, a lot of the doctors that I've
interviewed, and especially for the last documentary we did, the M Factor, Shreding the Silence on
menopause, doctors were like, I got two hours, I got no training, I did it myself, it really
wasn't a conversation. We weren't even talking about paramedopause. And that's in the OBGYN
discipline. That's not saying, we're not talking about our, you know, our cardiologist or our, you know,
our other, you know, other doctor we're talking about. We're talking about our general practitioner.
We're talking about OBGYN, which is like, what? But, you know, there are a lot of incredible
doctors out there that that are learning on their own and that are educating themselves and are being
certified by the Menopause Society that says, look, we're doing these extra hours, we're doing
this continuing medical education so we can get them up to speed or beyond where a lot of the
other doctors are not willing to have the conversation. So when somebody says to me,
how do I even know if it's a right doctor? You know, my answer is, one, are they willing to have
the conversation? Right. Two, are they all or none with everything? Three, are they saying, okay,
maybe for you, hormone therapy is good, but maybe it's not okay. And maybe we need to incorporate
these other parts of lifestyle.
So I'm appreciative to the doctors that are willing to go out there on social media and talk
about this, and doctors that are willing to have the conversation and doctors that are willing
to have all the conversations.
Because I don't think that I have seen that there's this, here's the answer, and here's
the only answer.
And I think that everybody in this space will, most people in this space will tell you that,
that we are still learning, that we have a lot of things that we have to focus on, that
we're going in front of the FDA to say, like, why do we have a black box label on, you know,
localized vaginal estrogen when it's been deemed by now, even most of the organizations all
across the world to say it is safe for pretty much all women. So I think we're in the middle
of a learning curve. There's no question about that. And unfortunately, and fortunately,
the onus is on the woman. And that sucks in a lot of ways. Always. It's terrible to say it is.
It is. But the good news about that is, is.
those 90-second reels are giving women questions to ask. And so even if we don't have all the answers
with them, we do have the questions. And that's what I hope that they use it. So don't use it as your
diagnosis, but use it as a place to say, okay, Dr. So-and-so, will you have this conversation with me?
Am I at risk? Am I at risk? Here's what I've learned. Are you willing to talk openly about it?
And what other things do I have to implement? Because it's not, hormone therapy is not a, you know,
it's not the end all of everything.
It's going to handle a few of those symptoms, certain symptoms, very important ones,
and deal with a lot of long-term health issues that we want to talk about when it comes
to women's health and midlife, which is your heart and your brain and your bones.
And those are the things that we want to be talking about.
And thank goodness for, you know, doctors like Dr. Lisa Moscone, who is every single day
in a research lab trying to figure out, you know, how we deal with and tackle Alzheimer's and
women in menopause and what's going on next in our lives.
Yeah, at least is a great segue to my next thought on hormone replacement.
And when I brought her on the podcast here when she was doing, promoting the menopause brain,
she taught me about three areas, three times a woman's brain actually reorganizes itself.
And I found this so fascinating that I ended up down months and months in PubMed trying to really
understand. And so it left me with this burning question that I've now written a book about,
which is what is the purpose of menopause. And what I learned from Lisa was that there is a pruning
away. The drop in estrogen is causing a pruning away of neurons we no longer need in our
brain so that we can grow new neurons. And in all the research I've done, those new neurons are
built for leadership. They're built for purpose. They're not meant. This is. This is. This is.
wisdom, this is not your time to fade away. But what signals the drop in the change in the brain
is the drop in hormones. So when we put a patch on, we also need to make sure that over time,
there's an adjustment to the dosage. Is that also what you're hearing? Like should every year
women be doing less and less and less because we still want to be working naturally with what
the body is meant to do. Yeah, I don't know if it's less and less, but I certainly know it's being
aware of that. You know, so there's always the question about blood test and like, you know, my hormones
are here one day, here one day. But when you get menopause and then you're starting with,
whether you've decided to do hormone therapy or not do hormone therapy, knowing that's where
you can actually know where your levels are, right? Because you're not all over the place.
Like paramedopause is like this. It's just all over the place. So I just think like it's that
chaotic area of it. And so, you know, for me, I've had to go up in some of my
doses. Now I'm leveled out where I'm feeling good. But I will say I started out in a very small
patch. And then I had and then I was like, oh my God, so I've got, I've got these symptoms again.
They started me as low a dose as possible. And now we've moved around a little bit. Now I go in and I get
my consistent blood blood test. I'm on testosterone. Every six months I go in and I make sure that it's
not too much. It's not too little that it's still, you know, doing what it needs to do. So,
you know, I think that the jury's out for me anyway on whether or not I take that and scale it back.
right now I'm feeling good where I am and I don't want to go back to where I wasn't feeling good.
And I know that there's been a lot of talk of like you just stop it.
You're going to revert yourself back and it won't have been very helpful.
It's not going to keep replacing and replenishing like what you've lost, right?
Yeah.
Consistency.
But I know there's a lot of women that are concerned about that.
Like how long do I have to be on this?
You know, and it's not like it's an antibiotic.
I mean, that's just not how that works.
You know, where you do a 10, two, 10 days and we're done.
And you're over.
And you're over.
But it's also where I think that we have an opportunity when we talk about the pruning of the brain to put ourselves in that first position to say, what other changes can I make in my lifestyle?
so that maybe that is also helpful in this process. And maybe I won't need as much. And I don't know if that's the case or not. But right now, I'm where I am and I haven't gone up at all in two and a half years. And I feel like that's a win for me. You know, I feel like, okay, maybe my body is leveling out. My brain feels like I have memorization now. You know, and when I did an interview like this before, I had a conversation, I had a conversation. I have notes in front of me. Oh, God, yes. I remember my own name. I'm like, what does she ask me? But so I do feel different.
but I want to keep feeling good different.
I have a funny story.
So I, this is going to sound weird, but I sort of haphazardly ended up on Stephen Bartlett's
Diary of CEO.
Like, don't, like, don't tell him this, but when he invited me on, like, I didn't know who
he was.
I know.
Dr. Mindy.
I know.
And this is, I was like, okay, who's this guy from England?
And my staff was like, you get on a plane.
Yeah, we'll do it.
Yeah.
They were like, you're getting on.
a plane and you're going and I was like, I'm a little tired. They're like, no, like literally one of my
staff member was like, you're going to go. I'm not going to let you not go. So I go. Yeah, I go and I sit
down and like, about five minutes in, I'm like, oh, this is kind of a big deal. This guy's
kind of a big deal. And three and a half hours, a three and a half hour interview. And at the
And I wanted to grab his 31-year-old shirt and be like, listen, you don't put a menopausal woman
in a three-and-a-half-hour interview. I don't know who you are, but that is not okay.
Oh, my gosh. Oh, my gosh. Well, I got to say, first of all, I would have dragged you there
myself if I'd have heard you were like doing it and then you were like debating. And second of all,
you're so right about that. But I think, but I thank goodness for that because I can't.
even imagine what what people have taken away from that interview, you know. Yeah, we have,
it was a huge interview. There was like over 10 million views. I remember. I remember. It was,
it was quite a moment. Well, I mean, there better be that many of three hours of you, you know,
three hours of brilliant things said. But, you know, I do have to, I do want to say one thing is
thank you to, to doctors like you that take your time and do this, that take your time and get out there
and educate that, that are constantly speaking and are constantly learning and are constantly doing the
things you don't have to do, you know, once you're at this stage of your career and still doing it.
And I can't say it enough. And I think it's really why I, I think it's really why I decided, or I don't
I just felt this need and desire and understanding of elevating these voices because I could see very
clearly like, I feel like myself as a journalist has always been a conduit, right, between the
information and the people who need it most. And so, and so I've, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and,
in distilling it down so that it's easier to understand and simplified.
And like even with my book, I'd get information and interviews.
And I'm like, oh, I have brain fog.
So I have to write this for somebody with brain fog because I've got it right now.
And so I would go through that distill process.
And the same thing with the documentary.
You know, we would do hours of interviews and really have to distill down the areas that we
would, you know, pull out to make it understandable.
And so I think that that's been something I've been so grateful for with doctors like
yourself. So I know how many people that helped. I just do. So thank you. Well, thank you.
Thank you. There's a little behind the scenes.
That's okay. So which actually brings up a really interesting thing because several of my friends
who are doctors and helping women, we were really agitated for a long time that the only two
people that were talking about hormones were Huberman and Peter Atia. And they would not,
I mean, not to, I'm not dissing them, but what I want to point out is that,
for a long time, even our education was coming from men.
And I kept listening to those and thinking,
you can tell me from an educated point of view,
but you're not having the experience.
So it skews the way in which you can speak about this.
And then last week, two weeks ago, I interviewed Dr. Vonda Wright.
I know she was just on your podcast.
And she said something that I really loved,
which is she's like,
you need a doctor who can listen with her menopausal ears.
Oh, so true.
And I was like, that is important.
So do you feel like there's room, and this is just straight up, you know, let's just call it what is,
is there room for men to be educating us right now?
Or do we really need to be looking at going to female doctors who have been in the experience
that maybe have a different perspective?
Or do we need not to get that nuanced?
I mean, look, I think that at this point, we need all the help we can get, right, in terms of helping women that are suffering.
And so I don't want to pull anybody out of that conversation, but I sure do really understand how I move from a male doctor who said to me in his whole practice, and he wrote my patient portal in menopause, any questions.
And that was the end of the conversation.
It's where it began and where it ended.
That was it.
And I walked out of that place and I went, what in the, I mean, that was in my patient portal, those words when my tests came through.
blood test came through. And I went to, you know, I made my way around a few female doctors and
ended up with one that is, you know, is absolutely incredible. But I do feel like there is a reason
that when you walk into a doctor, or I've walked into the doctors that I've had that are
treating me for, for this stage of my life, they're around my age or they're close enough to
my age where they understand what's coming up, you know, because they're either paramedipausal
or menopausal. And I do feel like they understand. So I do think there's something to it,
my own experience was that I had had that kind of ear, and now I had this kind of ear,
and this kind of ear feels better.
Yeah.
So I don't, you know, look, I, I, I'm happy that I hear men talking about it.
I'm happy that men are willing to have the conversation and not going, really?
I don't know.
But I also do think that there is a lot of room for a lot more conversation coming from, from women.
And I think that that's when I got excited.
You know, I left my job of 30 years as a journalist doing new.
news to focus on this entirely, never thought it was anything I would ever, it never even crossed
my mind to do. And I do feel like that's where a lot of the doctors in this space have done the
same thing. They have kind of left, you know, not delivering babies as much and moved now into
this midlife care, which I have found very interesting or something around that area, whether it's
the lifestyle changes or strictly, you know, strictly hormones. Yeah, yeah. So you went out and did a book
tour. I saw you pretty short after that. And, um,
I have a couple quest. Yeah, I know. I was like, you did. But how did that go? Are you crazy?
Oh my gosh. I know. I remember. I was like, I think I was comatose and I saw you. I was like, I don't know what I just did. But it was great. It was great. Yeah. Well, book launching is a little, a little bit like that. Yeah. I'm actually, this is my fourth book in five years. And I told my gosh, I don't think I knew it was four.
Yeah, I told my publisher, I'm like, can we take a year break, please? Like, it's not just the writing
the book, it's launching the book. Like, this is a lie. So we're going to take a little break out
to this next one. Okay. But I think for the longest time, if you Googled menopause symptoms,
you would get hot flashes. And what I have now seen in my research is actually the number one
symptom is irritability. That seems accurate. Irritability and anxiety. Yeah. Yeah. So what did
you notice when you went out and you talk to people and women that are absorbed your book and they're
learning how to menopause? I love the title of your book. Thank you. Where are the biggest hurdles
they're coming up with? What are the biggest symptoms they're having? Yeah. Well, I think the biggest
hurdle is the confusion that you talked about early on. I really do. I go back to that. I don't think
we can, I don't think we can say that enough, right? And I think that that's the big hurdle. The second
big hurdle is where to find a practitioner. And so those are the two. And I think that, you know,
telemedicine and telehealth, I've done an incredible job of helping, you know, move that needle along.
I mean, but just move that along. The second area, which is interesting, so I went to, I started out
in New York and then I was in San Francisco and L.A. and Denver and Dallas and Miami and Chicago
and New Jersey. And so it was, you know, it was all over the place. And it was interesting, a couple of
things. The irritability is a big one and then not understanding all these other symptoms that came
together. But I think that one of the biggest symptoms that women are struggling with was the lack of
sleep and the brain fog. And I think it's because that we're seeing more of these women staying in the
workplace a lot longer, right, and being so aware of these symptoms in a bigger way because a lot of
them are moving into different kind of positions. A lot of them are dealing with that everything
that's going on that you and I've talked about before, dealing with elderly parents, dealing with
children, whether they're there, still or left the nest, and then also dealing with menopause,
perimenopause at the same time. So I think that those would be the two big symptoms that women feel are
impacting their lives the most. But I did find in every city, it was interesting to see how excited
people were to come out and get together and talk. So whether it was about the book or was about the
documentary, it wasn't so much those two things, but it was the coming together as a community and saying,
like, oh, wow, there's somebody here physically in person that can help me. So it was interesting when I got
off of the online and did that in person how women were just so grateful to be to be there
with somebody who could listen. And then that brought me to really understand community in this
space, because I don't think, I think I underestimated community a little bit, honestly.
Yeah. I was like, oh yeah, it's a couple of your friends that, you know, you go for walks with.
But that's not what this is. This is a whole different definition of community now.
Yeah. And I'm in need. And I think if you look, one of the things that I researched in my, for age like a girl,
was, you know, really what is the evolutionary reason behind menopause?
And, you know, of course, you find the grandmother hypothesis, which Lisa pointed out in her book.
So I actually brought Kristen Hawks on to this podcast, and I interviewed her.
And going towards more collaboration is actually our evolutionary design as we move through
menopause. And it's really crazy when you break it down, because I never felt like,
competition with other women. But primarily, when we're when we have a reproductive system,
if we were sitting around the cave waiting for a man to come back, this sounds so sexist,
and I'm just going to say it. No, but it is what it is. Right. If we were waiting for the man to
bring the animal kill back, and then when he, you know, he brought it back, he also brought his seed
back. And there was like, you know, the fertile women were sitting there, you know, vying for his
for him to reproduce so that the species can continue.
Yeah, it's horrible.
It's horrible.
Horrible.
But it's our primal design that you can't take out of us even in a modern world.
So I love what you just said because when we look at the menopause through the grandmother
hypothesis, we actually are meant to have three things returned back to us.
Fitness, cognition, and social connection.
And the grandmothers, according to Lisa, calls them evolutionary heroines, that they were the ones that were keeping the tribe alive.
So how do we create that in this online world, in this world that we're in isolation?
Is there anything you've seen?
I mean, you did 100,000 people for your book launch.
But, like, how do we bring women together so they can feel heard in this moment?
Yeah, I love that.
And I think that we're still looking at all different ways to do it the right way.
I think the way that I think how I realized it is this.
You know, we did the M Factor documentary.
We had no money.
We had nobody wanted to fund it.
You know, once we got into it and we actually talked to this incredible person
that helped us go through like the marketing of it, city by city.
And then that was very helpful.
But when we went into this originally, it was like there's no audience.
There's no interest.
No, no, no.
PBS wound up partnering and putting it on the air.
And that was great.
But we said, well, we want to, you know, that's like an airing of it.
We want more women to see it.
So we decided we're going to give it out to women and see what happens.
So we were like, oh, maybe like 25 different groups will come together, want to show it.
And they're saying, we've been in over 800 cities and 45 countries now around the world.
Wow.
The most exciting part of it is the women would take the documentary.
They would organize a group themselves of 100 women in their city, whatever city it was.
and then they would bring a panel up afterwards of other women to talk about their experience.
Maybe a doctor would be there.
Maybe a community advocate would be there.
What happened after those screenings?
It always gives me chills.
It was the most important part of it, which was the community aspect of it, of the women sharing information about the doctors in their community,
about the women sharing what their experiences were, of different groups that came together.
or one, somebody reached out to us recently,
I said, oh, there's a men's group that was started as a result of it,
of men talking about it.
Amazing.
So that's where that community part has happened.
Now, how to mobilize that into a bigger way?
I don't know that I've conquered yet.
But I have seen it now go from online,
which is, you know, it's always going to be there,
but seeing it go into these communities.
So the biggest thing I could say to somebody,
if they want to advocate for themselves or somebody else,
is to find a place to do that within their own community.
And I don't think any group is too small to feel good about that,
whether it's a walk group, whether it's a, you know, you want to go and, you know,
and talk to your local lawmakers about, you know, what kind of changes, whether you do it
in your workplace. So I think that that community, you know, might not be the big, large one,
but like we did see it for the launch party, the World's hottest menopause party.
I was like, all these people are coming together everywhere.
Let's bring them all together once.
So, yeah.
I feel like I want to leave.
I want to give you the job of figuring out how to rally us all.
I appreciate your, that answer.
but I also think you're the gal.
You're the gal.
All right.
Well, I might take that on.
Yeah.
Maybe we need an even bigger menopause party.
Don't you think, though, that that's where you see the actual change happen?
Like, I don't know about you, but like anytime you go to something, and even where you
and I met, you know, not to a few months.
When you bring that energy of women together like that, I feel like it's unstoppable.
And I don't know that I would have felt that at 30.
I mean, I was in a workplace.
I was working alongside women.
I would bring them up, you know, behind me or mentor or intern.
But I don't ever think that I saw that or felt that before, the desire.
Yeah.
And I think, again, I go back to there's like an undercurrent of competition, whether you're
in the workplace or you're out at the bar or whatever when we're in that reproductive
or even on socials.
Like I have a 25-year-old daughter and I've watched her at 19 years old completely melt down
because of something she saw on socials.
So I think there is something that's unique about when we start to lose our cycle,
we come together in such a beautiful way.
And I keep thinking, how do we amplify that?
That's what we need to be doing.
I'm picking it on with you.
Yeah, because you're right, though.
But I mean, when you think about it, you and I, I think we're around the same,
I'm probably older than you.
I think I'm older than you, right?
I'm 55.
Okay, okay.
of the same age. And so we've been around, right? We've been around. We met as a result of this,
right? That's how we met. We've probably crossed over in a lot of different areas, but we met as
a result of this and actively are working in our own, you know, in our own ways together and
in our communities to continue to amplify this message. I don't know that we would have done that
at 30. I think maybe we would have been like, oh, hi, hi, oh, yeah, I can help you with a book. I'm a
journalist and we want our merry ways. And so I do feel something, and I don't know about you,
but I feel like I could reach out to anybody that I've met within this community now and go,
hey, can you do me a favor? Can you help me out with this? Or I need, you know, can you explain this
to me? And so I'm hoping that women are starting to do that in their pockets, too. And I'm starting
to see that. And that's what was exciting to me on that book tour. We did 11 cities and then we did
Vegas to start it off. So 12 cities. And I saw that everywhere. And it was cool. Yeah, it was really,
it was really cool to say.
So one of the other things you said to me when we met that really sat with me because
I was in the final stages of writing age like a girl.
Yeah, you were.
And it was something I really thought about in the book is you had a woman come up to you
at one of the book tours and say, thank you so much for your book.
It gave me the courage to divorce my husband.
And I spent a lot of time with my collaborative writers saying, I don't want this to be a
divorce book.
But there is a transformation that's going on where a lot of women are standing up and saying no more.
And the husbands will just stay on heterosexual relationships here, that they are like, what is going on?
I liked who you were.
I don't know who you're becoming.
Talk to me a little bit about what you've seen because you address divorce in your book.
How does a woman know if it's just a life shift?
if it's her husband, does she need to leave? Like, there's a lot of confusion around that as well.
Yeah, I agree with you. I'm so glad you brought that up because I don't think we talk about it quite
enough. I, you know, I hesitated too. I was like, am I putting relationships in this book and dating?
Like, does that go in a menopause book? Like, that doesn't make any sense. And even, you know,
when I went to my publisher and they were like, what, you're doing the whole chapter on it? And I was
like, yeah, I think we need a whole chapter on it. And there was a couple of reasons. One, because we
certainly have seen that most, you know, there was a study out a few years before I wrote the book
that was essentially that women in their, you know, mid-40s, those are the ones that are initiating
the divorce, right? Yeah, like 70 percent. Yeah, it was a ridiculous number. It was a ridiculous
number. It's huge. And so, so that one thing, I'm like, that's not just a coincidence. Like,
that just didn't just happen. There's not been a lot of, you know, of research on it. There was
a study out of the UK that they kind of just survey and looked at some of that. But what I think
is the part that was important to me was to say that, okay, the book that I wrote,
how to menopause was it starts in the doctor's office, but it doesn't end in the doctor's
office. And I'm sure, I mean, that's what you're talking about. It goes to all different
aspects of our lives, right? And so we can't ignore this relationship part. So we've got to deal
with what's happening with us physically and, you know, what's going on psychologically,
because that's really happening. And then I think we move into that relationship part. So a lot of the
conversation I had on the road and even now is like, don't just,
jump and make any of those decisions right this second. Like get this part stabilized a little bit.
Like I don't say like balance all your hormones first and be perfect. But get this part worked out
first. The you has to be the most important first and then figure that out because there might be
a reason that you don't want to have sex. Look, the person could just be a jerk. But it also could be
that like your body just doesn't feel like it. You know, I got married again at 50. I went on my honeymoon
and I was like, you want me to have sex with you? No. You know, I couldn't. Is that what we're doing?
I thought we were just hanging out.
I was like, what?
I thought we're just in Hawaii for fun.
And so I understand that part of it.
But I also say that like there was so much going on with me physically.
I couldn't even make that decision then.
You know, if I had made a decision, it would have been a not the right decision for me.
That's also to say if you go back to what you were saying with Lisa Mascone and, you know, and really kind of clearing out your head and what's important.
What I want now and if I had been married to the same person, I'm not sure that that.
that shift would have been, I would have stayed with that same person.
So I think it depends.
But I think it's very, very important to get this other part, you know,
figured out first because hormones can really wreak havoc.
But it's not surprising to me that we see this divorce rate really increase.
And women getting back out there and going like, I don't even know if I want to date again.
I want to just, I just need me for a little while.
You know, that's what I'm looking for.
I'm not even looking for somebody else to come, you know, to be near me.
And we're also learning what else we like with our bodies too.
And so I think that that's where the communication part, you know, that's like sort of that in between of, hey, I never even like that. I don't know why I thought I liked that. But this is what I like now. So I think that those are hard. There's not always easy conversations to have, but well, that's, that's part of losing our filter. We're willing to say what we want to say. Right. And so if we're going to have sex, we're not putting up with bad sex. I need to be more descriptive as to, you know, what my needs are here. So I do think that could be the upside of a low libido is maybe you're going to.
need to talk differently to your spouse about what your needs are.
Me too.
Which is a really interesting conversation.
You know, there's a lot of connection that I'm seeing right now between the menopause
conversation and the relationship conversation.
And, you know, we were with Julie Gottman together at Lisa, Belu's house.
And one of the phrases she has that I really have used in my own menopausal journey is
that women get depressed.
when they are in relationships where they are saying yes and they really want to say no.
And when you say yes and you really want to say no, it builds resentment.
I'm the queen.
Me too.
Me too.
It's really, yeah.
But we were trained to do that in so many ways.
Like that was societally like, you know, I work with so many younger people now and they're like,
what do you mean?
Like they can't even fathom that that's, you know, how it.
But we were really kind of taught that that's the way to go along to get along, be the good girl, be the this, be that person.
Right?
One of the moments I learned that we were really grew up in a misogynistic time was when I watched fast times at Ridgemont High with my children.
And they were like, what did they just say?
Why?
I'm like, oh, that was the 70s.
That was the late 70s.
You were allowed to talk to us like that.
You're allowed to. Isn't that funny? I saw it on, I don't know why I was even watching this nine to five. And I'm like, oh, God. What? Because I, I watched a documentary and the nine to five was brought up into it. And I went back and I watched it. And I'm like, oh my gosh, how did I think that this was funny even to watch this as a comedic show? You know, I can't even. And that change has only happened recently.
So fast. And when we say,
was like that was then but the changes only happened recently i mean i when i got into my career you
know i was like thank you for letting me be here and you know get your coffee and report your news for
you know it was really like it was very very different and so i do so i do think that that's why we're
seeing this i'm sure there's a lot of men that are like wait what but but you know we're seeing women
in the last three years be so vocal about you know everything feet my algorithm i don't think it's
just my algorithm anymore, talking about hormones and nutrition and fitness and fasting and
and aging better, longevity, and menopause and perimenopause. And now I'm seeing men put up
paramedopause videos and menopause videos. And so I'm like, okay, I guess, I guess it's not a
taboo topic so much anymore. Remember taboo? We were calling it taboo constantly. And I'm like,
if we could never call it taboo, I'd be so happy. So I feel like we're getting there. But we still have a lot
to do. There's still a lot of confusion, you know.
Exactly. And so where do you think men, you know, fit into the conversation? I did, in age like a girl,
I have an appendix to men. It's actually written to men directly to them. And I have a husband
that has been willing to see my changes, try to understand my changes. We have conversations
a lot about like the new you. The other day, I bought a baseball cap with a butterfly on it. And I told him,
When I put the cap on and I had you, that way you know which version of me you're talking to.
You're talking to the butterflyed version of me.
And so he's been amazing.
Yeah, he's been amazing.
But I had to kind of pull him into.
I know there were things that, that I was okay with before and I am no longer okay with them.
And that was hard.
That was a hard conversation to have.
So where do you see?
Yeah, because there's no roadmap for it.
No.
There's no roadmap for that conversation.
I mean, there's a roadmap for a lot of other ones, not that one.
Right.
I mean, I love that he's willing.
And my husband is too.
I kind of met my husband in the middle of all of this, you know.
So he's only known me screaming the word vagina across the dining room table to somebody on the phone while we're both sitting there working.
I say, I think men come into the conversation in a couple of different ways.
Like, first of all, I love that you're, you know, that you have that conversation with your husband and can have that openness.
and I like the symbolic part of it with the butterfly.
You know, I think men have to come in in the workplace is one place,
but, you know, whether they like it or not,
because I think we can't ignore that in that area because we're working alongside them all the time.
And I do think it's incumbent on them to learn some of this.
I mean, this is just stuff that wasn't taught.
We didn't know.
So I think it's important for them to just have a understanding of it that it's not just a joke all the time.
Because unfortunately, that's how we all grew up.
We grew up with the hot flash being a joke. We grew up with the women being the butt of most jokes. We grew up with this time in life being just the annoying woman that was anxious and moody and hot and sweaty. And so I think that men have to come into that conversation in a lot of ways. And because we'll be like this if they're left out of it. You know, I, you know, so if you put that word in and I think it's important, we did find that when we did these screenings of the documentary, it was all women. And then after about,
six months, men started trickling into them. So we'd shout them out and be like, hey, for the 10 men in
the room. And then it'd be like, hey, for the 15 men in the room. So I do think they're interested
if they're the kind of guys that care enough. And that's who you want to be with, isn't it?
Right. Like the person is proactively going in there saying what's going on, not, I don't know,
fix it and then come back to me. Yeah. Yeah, it's interesting. The one message I wish I could get out
to men. And I recently was interviewed on Rich Ruhl. And I,
I, he kind of played, he sort of played this like, I'm a dude, what do I know? And I was like,
here's what I'm going to tell you, Rich, is that, and please take this with love. But you men need
to step it up right now and get to understand what we're going through. I have two of my closest
friends. I have sat in my sheeshid on my couch at ladies nights out. And they are both divorced.
and they both said, I tried.
I tried.
I took him to therapy.
One's husbands wouldn't go to therapy.
The other husband was like, everything's fine.
Why are you so upset?
And I think if there are men listening to this podcast or if there was a message I could get to men,
is just try to understand what we're going through.
Because you wanting the status quo is no longer around.
That is not women are rising up.
And we need to be heard. Menopause is being looked at differently. And that divorce rate, I think,
could be changed if men were willing to see us different. I do too. I do too. And acknowledge that this
change is happening. And it's not just, all right, that's what you're going through. But not everybody
could be going through this. And I think unfortunately, there's been so much silence around this,
that that was really, you know, along with the damage that it did to women's health, long-term health,
The other damage that it did was just the acceptance of all this, right?
The cultural acceptance of you get through that your own problem and let us know when you're,
when you're, you got that sorted out.
And so I, yeah, so it is incumbent on men to do that.
And I also think that it's interesting.
And I've seen it go a couple of different ways.
Like I think I've seen it go from like, oh, the eye roll.
Like the first time I went to the Capitol, we were out in front talking about, you know,
we were with the Let's Talk Benipuzz organization.
and we were holding a press conference the first time we'd gone there.
And we had a couple of people walk by like men, you know.
And then recently I was in a TV studio and I was talking about the book.
And one of the camera guys came over to me afterwards.
He goes, my wife is really suffering right now.
Is there a place I can go to for more information?
So I'm seeing men step forward.
But I don't think that they, I don't think that any of us have the luxury any longer of saying like,
oh, not, you know, let's not talk about, oh, figure it's out of that, especially men.
Yeah.
So we dove, we dove, we dove, my husband and I dove into Esther Perel's teachings.
And one of the things that I love that she says is you will fall in love with two to three
people in your adult life.
And some of us that will be with different people, some of us that will be with the same
people.
So I'll throw in what has been working in my marriage is we actually looked at marriage before
kids as marriage.
1.0. We looked at marriage with kids as marriage 2.0. And now we refer to our marriage as
marriage 3.0, which is after kids and Mindy's and Mindy's postmenopausal. And it's been a
beautiful way to say, hey, can we talk about this through the lens of marriage 3.0?
Yeah, that's great. And it just sort of shifted it. It was really, it was really beautiful.
So, or it has been. I mean, we're still working on it, but it's, at least the door is wide to open,
was really a wonderful experience to have a spouse that was willing to do that.
Well, I have to imagine it made both of you feel safe in coming forward with any changes
or thoughts or fears or acknowledgments of something that maybe worked before but isn't
going to serve me now. Yeah. You know, and that's nice to feel that safe zone in there where
you're not like, oh gosh, what's the reaction to this going to be versus, okay, I have a sounding
board, a safe place to go with that. Right.
I was divorced in my early 40s and did menopause contribute to it?
I couldn't say.
I mean, I was definitely in that stage of it now that I look back, but I don't even know.
He wound up being not the right partner for me, period, inside or outside of that.
But I will say that to go back to where I am today, you know, I started dating in my later 40s,
then wound up getting married a second time at 50 years old.
what I expect and what I would tolerate, right, in a relationship is very different than it was before.
And I think it's, and I also think I give a lot less pressure too.
Like I think I'm a little, like, now I'm like, this is my life, this is your life where I say I walk the world with him.
Like he's what I want to walk the world with.
But I don't feel like I'm looking to him for all of these answers to my life, right?
But I certainly do expect both of us to understand each other during this time because we're getting older together, right?
So we started our marriage 1.0 at 50, me 50 and 60.
And so I'm seeing, I see how we dance with each other a little bit differently, even from my mid 40s to where we are now to where I assume we're going to be as we as we get older.
But it's nice because he talks, you know, he's like, he talks about it.
He's open about it.
people come up to him now and they're like, oh, your wife talks about menopause all the time.
And at the beginning, he was like, oh, gosh, Tampson, you know, it's a lot.
And now he's like, yeah, yeah, she's working on another, whatever.
So it's become more of his, you know, in his zeities too, not just in mind.
Right.
I'm laughing because that sounds very much like a few of our conversations, like I'll walk around and be like,
I think my estrogen's off today.
Like, I'm sorry, I'm a little bitey, blah, blah, blah.
I tried adapting, you know, my creams.
And some days I'm like, I start to say something.
I'm like, do you not want to hear about hormones today?
And he's like, yeah, I'd like a break.
Thank you.
I like a break.
I know.
I know.
So I totally get that.
Every once in a while, he'll be like, I'm changing my patch and the video.
And he's like, you're putting that online, huh?
And I go, yeah, I am.
And now, you know, I've got a 14-year-old nephew.
I'm an 85-year-old father.
So my father's like become this, he's become all of a sudden this.
advocate for menopause, but I'm not sure if he knows the boundaries of it all. So he goes,
because I've normalized it now. So, you know, when I lost my mom, I lost her from breast
cancer and we assume that she went into a medically induced menopause as a result of a double
mastectomy and chemotherapy and everything else. And I remember her just being pouring sweat all
the time. But I, but we were young and we would like all laugh about it together and didn't
know why she was so hot. And never, menopause was never brought up. And I was young then.
And so when I started, you know, going into researching all of this and then in talking about it more openly, my father said to me, do you think that your mom was in menopause?
Like I think she might have been a menopause. And I said, yeah, I'm pretty sure, dad, that she was.
I mean, this is, you know, years ago, she died in 1990. So fast forward to today, you know, I published the book. I sent my dad a couple of copies. He's, he's in a superager's group, like a super ageers group in the morning as they meet. I was so cute.
And so I said, hey, do you want to bring some books to your superager?
So I'll send you some more.
And he goes, oh, look, those women aren't menopause.
I'm like, but their daughters probably are.
So if you want to do that, I'm going to bring this up, Tamson.
I'm not going to bring.
So long story short, I guess some of the conversation happened.
And so now the women are coming to him like, can we get a copy of the book for our daughter?
So my dad thinks he is like the coolest.
He's like my menopause distributor in, you know, in his superager's group.
And then he recently, he was in physical therapy and the woman's like, oh, I'm so hot. And he goes,
do you think it's the menopause? And I go, Daddy, now you can't, you can't do that to a woman.
You can bring it up subtly, but you can't ask her if she's in menopause.
Yeah, that's a whole other generation that needs to be taught how to talk to women.
So I applaud you. That's pretty funny.
I'm like, oh, no. Yeah. But it's interesting to see, you know, it's interesting to see.
I love that everybody's coming in the conversation.
It's just really beautiful.
What advice would you give a woman about talking about menopause in the workplace?
What are we seeing in trends?
I know, I'll give you an example.
I was in London over a year ago doing some interviews and promoting Eat Like a Girl.
And I was asked to go into Amazon and speak to a group of women.
It was a menopause group.
And I was like, of course, I'll come speak to you all.
So I go into Amazon, London, and I'm talking to hundreds of women.
And the leader of the group tells me that what she decided to do was she saw the trends of when women leave the workplace.
And it's usually around 45, somewhere between 45 and 50, they leave.
And then she figured out what that was costing the company.
And so she went to the C-suite and she was like, we need to be doing something different here.
And they said, well, we'll let you have a club.
And she, her thing was, if I can show them the cost of losing a menopausal woman,
maybe they will help us through this process a little different.
And then on the flip side of that, in the research I've done of Lisa Mascone's work
and even some of the grandmother hypothesis, we have.
actually, our brains have the ability to get stronger, to be more focused, to bring more to the
workplace. So what do we need to do to change that conversation? Yeah, I think it's one of my
favorite conversations in all this as we keep going forward, because I think it's kind of that
next frontier that we're going to tackle that is not necessarily, is really been touched because
we all come from different workplaces, right? One person might be working in a classroom, one's working
in a C-suite, one's working, you know, doing, you know, driving. And so I, so we have all different
workplaces. So it's difficult to say, like, we're going to implement a workplace policy,
you know, everybody should be doing this. But there's enough of these little nuggets to take away
from what we could do, whether it's changing uniforms, if you've got somebody that's working in a,
in a factory or a distribution center, or it's being able to have a conversation like that,
or it's being able to provide, you know, a coaching or telehealth services via insurance, right? Or making people,
at least feel comfortable about the conversation. So those kind of accommodations. What we don't want is it to ever work against women so that we're penalized or that it's working against them where we say, oh gosh, okay, we're not going to hire this person because of that. But I think that we're able to show financially that retaining this level of woman, this age of woman, this experience of woman is helpful for the organization. So I don't think businesses can afford to ignore this now. I think that that's pretty clear. I did an article for Harvard Business Review a few years ago.
And we had a hard time finding companies that had been implementing policy, which was very interesting.
When we did the documentary, we worked with Genentech, who realized that they had a need for this.
And so they implemented workplace policy.
And so that's encouraging to see with some of the larger ones.
I came from a media company, and I brought this in like three or four years ago, and they said to me,
you can have a group if that's what you want, but we're not going to do anything on paper like that.
And so that was a real disappointment.
You know, I've worked, I was like, they said, what is a menopause policy?
And I said, women need help.
Right.
So I do like seeing it in the workplace.
I think if I was talking to somebody and said, like, how do you want to implement that, however you can?
And if that means it's two to three women that are meeting about it, or it's something where you have a big enough company where you can say, I'm going to go into the HR department and say, we need something where even if it's access to coaching, even if it's access to bring somebody like you or me into a workplace to have a conversation.
Talk about it.
Because I don't think it's always easy for a workplace to say, okay, everybody that's menopause.
You want to understand menopause, come in here and do it.
I think it's easier for a third party to come in and say, hey, if anybody wants to have this
discussion, we're here and open to that discussion.
And I think that's the easiest thing a workplace could do, honestly, for themselves
and for the women that they're trying to help.
And what if you're a woman in a workplace that doesn't understand you?
Are there advocacy groups right now?
Yeah, what are they?
Oh, having different advocacy groups?
Yeah, like, do we have like a general, like we need like advocacy?
I feel like I saw one.
We have guidelines.
We have guidelines for it.
Did you see a group,
group itself for workplace?
Yeah, there's some, yeah, and I forget the name,
but I started to follow them on Instagram
that they are actually helping,
like a company could hire them.
Oh, yes, they have those.
Put a policy in.
Yes, there's a few of them.
If they're an advocacy group for women themselves,
but what we hear a lot is that women just feel gun-shy
to say anything.
They still, of course.
Yeah, still don't want to,
So how do you know when you should say something and when you shouldn't and when you're being
mistreated?
Like we don't have a solid advocacy group like that, do we?
We do not.
Menopause societies put some guidelines together that can be helpful to have four HR
directors and resources that are in place.
We have some on the website, the M Factor, which is like these are for employees and these
are for employers to understand your rights.
And, you know, I think there's a company called Adobe that is able to do that, is able to go
into an actual workplace and implement policy.
Yeah.
So you just have to do a little bit of homework on it.
Yeah.
You've got to do homework on it.
And also decide if, you know, what you can do inside or outside of there.
But I do think that HR is becoming more aware of it.
And there's even some state-by-state lawmakers that are talking about this and they make sure
that women are not penalized, you know, if they are dealing with menopause or they're
menopausal.
So I think that that's promising too.
I just don't rely on that for every state.
or for every business because I think that makes it hard.
So again, it's funny, I found myself when I was doing all the interviews for the book
going, well, the onus is on the women.
So unfortunately it's on us.
Unfortunately, it's, but it really is right now.
But if that's what it's going to take, we're up for the task as usual.
You know, I had, right, as usual.
As usual.
Let's point that out.
Yeah.
Sorry.
I had a strategy when my kids were little.
I decided to create a team of doctors that I would go and ask opinions of, knowing that as a mother,
a lot of times you're skewed, you know, you can't quite doctor your own child.
So it was everything from really alternative to super conservative.
And what I did is anytime my children were sick, I would pull this team.
And then I would sit back and I would listen and I would decide what felt the best to me.
And I think there needs to be some, that might be the moment where,
at is if you're in a sticky situation in work, you need to sort of look at what your options are
and then figure out what fails right because you're right. Again, the onus is really up to us.
And it's a workplace. Every workplace is so different too. And I think that's what you have to take
into consideration. You know, what might feel comfortable to one woman walking in and bulldozing
into the HR office and saying, like, this is what we need. It's not going to feel comfortable to
somebody else that might be at an age where they go, oh, I'm so grateful that I'm still here, you know,
because I did go through that myself in the workplace.
Like I was very like, oh, you know, I was in television and that's a very youth, you know,
forward-facing youth industry.
I'd be like, oh, thank, you know, yay, my key card still works, you know.
So I understand that mindset of feeling appreciative.
Like, I'd be like, okay, one more day.
So, yeah, I understand it.
I do understand that it's not quite as easy as everybody feels that same level of boldness
depending on the situation.
Recently there was something that came out a couple months ago that really excited me and it was a conversation with Sophia Bush and Michelle Obama on Sophia's podcast.
And what excited me was not what came from that because really what the zeitgeist did when Michelle started to beat to her own drum is they started to assume she was leaving Barack and basically she didn't show up at Jimmy Carth.
She didn't show up at a couple inaugural things. And so everybody assumed she was leaving Barack. And
she went on the podcast and said, I'm finally doing life for me. And we are seeing, it was so great.
I was like, I was like clapping from my living room at 10 o'clock at night when I saw it come out in the New York
Times. When you were out doing book tours, all the experts you were talking about, how much of
menopause, do you think is a transformational moment where we finally start to do life the way
we want to do it? We start listening to ourselves and not pulling everybody around us. I think she's
just a small little piece of a microcosm of women that are finally saying enough. What are your
thoughts on that? I love that you use the word polling everyone around you. My brother used to say like
Tampson likes to take a poll before she makes a decision. And I did forever. I bet what
You think? A lot of women.
Hey, hey, hey.
And yeah, but I didn't even realize it at the time.
I just knew that, like, I wanted to everyone to be happy and be happy with my decision.
And I actually didn't even have the confidence in myself to do that.
And now I'm like, no, that's not what we're doing.
Right.
And I always thought, like, man, I can't wait to be like her.
You know, I'd see an older woman.
I'd be like, she's so brave.
And hopefully one day I'll be brave.
I didn't understand where it came from.
And I, too, was like, oh, yes.
If Michelle Obama is doing that, then I'm going to do it my way too.
And so I think that those kind of conversations and hearing that admission, and I loved it myself for the same reasons, gives us permission slips to do those kind of things.
And I think that this is a time in our lives where we just get them.
You know, I mean, I think that we've got to give them to ourselves.
I don't know how quickly it happens because I do still think that what happens early on during this period of time is,
is all consuming, right?
You're not feeling right.
You're not sleeping.
You feel like you're gaining weight.
You're anxious.
You have rage.
You're dealing with a relationship at the same time.
And then all the other things that we know happen in this especially sandwich generation.
And so, you know, I get excited when women kind of get to the other side and start feeling a little bit better and even better than before.
And I really do believe that.
Like, I do believe that you feel even better than before.
Great.
Because you've got that grounding of who you are.
And then you have permission to do.
that. I don't know that she would have done that at 40 years old. I don't know that she would have done
that at 43 years old by her own admission, you know, but I do think now it's like if I'm not,
if I'm not doing it now, when the heck am I doing it? Right. And so I do, I do feel like we're
done waiting for someday. Yeah. And if when I, where my brain goes crazy is when I think about
like 1.2 billion women by 2030 are going to be a menopause, who we could take over the world,
women. I know. I know. I understood how powerful we are. And this was such a big part of age like a
girl. It was like how like if you understood that your brain reorganized itself so that you were
supposed to you're living 42.5% of your life to stand in a leadership position that we could
change the world. That's what I'm trying to get out there. I am convinced of it. And I know you
will and are because you're right.
I mean, 1.2 billion.
Can you, I mean, imagine this.
And I also think what's interesting about this whole period of time is that it's not just the U.S.
Like, we're talking about women all over the world that are part of this now.
This conversation has really, like when I go on social media for any given day,
there are women all over the world having a very similar conversation with me.
And I think that part's super fascinating.
Like, I think it's fascinating and it doesn't have these boundaries right now, you know,
that we're seeing it all over the place.
And we're all speaking the same language about this part of our lives.
Right.
Which leads me on this final thought, which is, can we talk about Melanie Sanders?
Holy shh.
That is like, to me, that woman, I mean, from a journalist angle.
Yeah.
She stood up one day because she had had enough.
I know.
I know.
I love it.
And everybody, everybody was like, I don't care either.
I don't care.
Yeah.
What do you?
Hey, has anybody checked in to see how she's doing?
Because she.
Fascinating.
I emailed back and forth with her just a little bit.
And, you know, because she had done a, she had done a video with my book.
And I was like, oh, my gosh.
That was so kind.
But I, look, I think that she voiced what all of us have been feeling and maybe just didn't
know how or just weren't brave.
enough to do it. But whatever it was, it was, it really struck a nerve. And you can't, I mean,
it's just been phenomenal and how it, how it took root. Like, you know, Kristen Chenoweth just did
one. And it was, it was just, I really smile. And so anytime one of her video pops up, I'm like,
like, heart, heart, heart, like, love you. Because I, I do think that it's pretty special and it's a,
It's really, really the theme where we are and what we're talking about right now.
It's everything we're talking about with the female brain.
It's everything we're talking about about this transition and getting rid of some of the dusty
stuff and kind of renovating our heads and our inner lives.
Yeah.
I keep saying, I hope somebody's helping her navigate this career moment, which she found herself
in because I don't think she signed up for this.
No, no, but it's an exciting time, that's for sure.
Yeah.
Where do you think the conversation's going?
Like I have watched it go from nothing to chaos to a little more into empowerment and transformation.
We all need to be talking.
Where do you think the conversation's going and will it eventually settle in where this is just a normal process that everybody understands?
What's your vision on that?
That's where we're winning when that happens.
When it goes into that normal process where it's not this thing,
Right. That's where we know that we've kind of hit our sweet spot, I think. And that's where we know also, I believe, that real change is being made, right? Because it becomes something that we're not having to point out. It's part of our lives. Everybody is real clear of what it is. So we're not, you know, the learning curve is, you know, we don't talk about a learning curve of pregnancy anymore, a learning curve of periods or a learning curve of so many different things. I do think it's going into the longevity conversation.
there's no question and not to like overuse that term but like but but maybe from a woman's
point of view not just you know not just from guys and and then I also think it's I also think it's
like coming into our own I always said like these aren't our golden years or our bolden years
and I do think that there is something about that that that happens for women because we really
haven't had that opportunity yet you know we we've we've made very swift changes I went back
And I watched the Gloria Steinem documentary.
And it wasn't that long ago.
You know, we were like, hey, we're here.
And we're not just, you know.
And so to see where we are, where we've gone since then,
I think that we still have a lot of work to do.
And so I think that that's going to be that next part of the conversation as to owning that,
understanding what empowerment really means, not asking for permission.
Right.
You know, not being like, oh, well, you know, there's two women.
charge now, oh, great. But there's 51% of us. So I'm hoping that we settle first into that,
and then we move into that next thing to seeing what women are even more capable of,
getting the help that they need, getting a sleep that they deserve to get, feeling like their
bodies are functioning in full capacity because we've got another how many decades, three to four
decades. We got some time. We got a lot of time that we, I wasn't prepared for. Yeah, and some things to do.
We have some things to do.
Yes, we do.
One of my favorite comments that my literary agent made to me that I just adore her.
She's like, she's like, I got to stick around so I can see what's going to happen to the world right now.
Because, you know, there's a lot of belief that the misogyny is actually in an extinction bubble,
that it's rearing its ugly head before it goes away.
And when we look at the 1.2 billion women going into menopause, it's like, hey, this is getting exciting now.
We don't know where we're going, but I have a feeling as good.
going to be really good. Yeah, I do too. I do too. And I'm excited for it. And I'm proud to be standing,
you know, with women like you leading this charge and the conversation with the knowledge
and education that we need. And we need it. Like we can't. I hope I never see that part slow down.
Because I think that we're learning a lot. And luckily, like now we're mandated to be in research studies.
And, you know, we've got some incredible women at the forefront doing that research. And that's exciting
to me. Amazing. Amazing. Well, Tamsan, I love this. Thank you. I too. I'm coming to the shed next.
Yes. Yes. You need to come to the she shed and sit in on my couch with me next to my womb,
crystal. I would love that. In your pajamas and have a great conversation. So, but I really appreciate
what you putting your hat in the ring, the menopausal ring and bringing the journalist perspective
and all the interviews you've done.
And when your book came out, by the way,
I was like, that is a brilliant title.
And I love titles.
And I love phrases because they stick.
But yeah, we need to know how to menopause.
How do we do this?
And it is so dense with information.
So, you know, where do people find it?
Or let me ask it this way.
Where's your preferred place that people don't get it?
Gosh, anywhere.
How to Menopause.com.
And of course, wherever you buy books.
Like, you know, if you do it, if you do it.
Amazon, it's on sale there right now.
But any of your local bookstores, that's why we did the tour all around to hit the local
bookstores because that's always important to me.
Great.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah.
So thank you, Tamza.
I appreciate your time.
I know, agreed.
Agreed.
Thank you so much.
Let's do it in New York.
I'm your girl.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Appreciate you.
Thanks.
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.
