We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - Better Sex & Lives in Menopause with Dr. Jen Gunter
Episode Date: April 28, 20221. How to get your orgasm back. 2. Dr. Jen Gunter’s advice–and personal mantra–for surviving hot flushes. 3. How to differentiate between mental health challenges and menopause. 4. The one easy ...thing you can do at the doctor’s office to ensure better care. 5. Is menopause a reboot of the brain and an opportunity to reallocate mental resources? Resource: North American Menopause Society (NAMS)  About Jen: Dr. Jen Gunter is an OB/GYN and pain medicine physician and the author of The Menopause Manifesto, The Vagina Bible, and The Preemie Primer. She is the host of the podcast Body Stuff (TED Audio Collective) and of the streaming docuseries Jensplaining (CBC Gem). She blogs at TheVajenda.com and her writing can also be found in the New York Times, Glamour, DAME, and other publications. Her mission is to build a better medical Internet. She has been called Twitter’s gynecologist, the Internet’s OB/GYN, and a fierce advocate for women’s health. TW: @DrJenGunter IG: @drjengunter To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. We are going to jump right in today because we are lucky enough to have Dr. Jen Gunter back to answer all of our burning for many of us menopause a women literal burning questions about menopause because we are committing the feminist act of demanding to understand our own bodies.
And we are also going to talk about all of even the embarrassing things about menopause
in our bodies today because we refuse to allow the entire world to talk about women's bodies
and sit it out. Everything on earth is sold with a woman's body.
Everybody from companies to movies to everyone
earth religions to congresses gets to talk
it incessantly about women's bodies.
And then for some reason we are ashamed to take the conversation back.
So we're not just going to let the whole world talk about the
way our bodies look.
Today we're going to talk about the way our bodies function and feel.
And we're going to do that with the Dr. Jen Gunter, who is an OB-GYN and
pain medicine physician and the author of the Menopause Manifesto.
Can't recommend enough.
Also the vagina Bible and the preemie primer.
And Dr. Jen, I want you to understand that I have the menopause manifesto and the vagina Bible on my coffee table so that everyone who sits down
can feel more comfortable with the words menopause and vagina right up in their face. Okay.
She is the host of the podcast Body Stuff Ted Audio Collective and of the streaming
docu-series Jen Spleining. She blogs at theVagenda.com, and her writing can also
be found in the New York Times, Glamour,
Dame, and other publications.
Her mission is to build a better medical internet.
She has been called Twitter's Gynecologist,
the internet's OBGYN, and a fierce advocate for women's
health.
Dr. Jen Gunter, thank you for returning
to we can do hard Things. Thank you. We're going to talk today about the biggest
most important, most common questions that folks have about menopause. And our
first one is from Lynn. This is, I'm facing menopause.
And if I hear one more goddamn thing about a hot flash
or about all the sort of surrounding things for midlife,
no one is talking about orgasm.
I can't have an orgasm anymore, and I'm shouting it from the rooftop
because I'm so tired of
this being dismissed.
I listen to so many midlife podcasts.
Oh, just rub a little essential oil.
I don't need essential oil.
I need an orgasm.
Do you understand?
And I know you feel me.
So just please help me find a really good person that can come on your show, talk about orgasm, talk
about the brain event. I just need a bunch of professionals to figure out why I can't
have an orgasm at 50. It's not okay. Okay, I love you, I love sister, I love Abby, I love
the whole thing. I guess that's it. I think that's enough. I'm not angry. I'm just ready to get some answers.
Love you guys. Bye. I love her. I love her. I don't need essential oils. I need to guide you a more handsome. Can we call this episode that?
I was taken only speaking, you know, in generalizations because there are so many questions to ask an individual person.
And especially when you're talking about sex, you actually have to know what their sex life is beforehand,
leading up to it.
So if we're sort of thinking about somebody who said,
you know, I'm really having difficulty achieving orgasm
or I can't achieve orgasm now,
there are kind of a list of things to run through.
So the first is probably to start treatment with vaginal estrogen
to make sure that you have enough blood flow to the tissues.
So when we go through menopause, there's a decrease of flow of estrogen to our vaginal tissues.
And that affects how well things function.
And if you think about Viagra and those drugs, phosphodiesterase inhibitors for men, what
they do is they increase blood flow to the penis.
Well, vaginal estrogen increases blood flow to the clitoris to the vaginal tissues. It causes the tissues to basically have more
moisture and be back to how they should be. So the number one thing for someone
who's having a sexual difficulty would first of all be to make sure that
they're using vaginal estrogen and using enough so that the tissues are
kind of at the baseline. Now, what can also happen sometimes with the ege?
And sometimes even with menopause as well,
as the pelvic floor muscles get a little bit weaker.
And those are the muscles that wrap around the vagina
and when you cough or sneeze,
those are the muscles that hold your urine in
or if they're a little bit weak, they let the urine out.
And yeah, they sure do.
They sure do.
They sure do.
And so that.
Yeah, right now.
Yeah, exactly. So those muscles can actually weaken a little bit.
And those are the muscles that contract when you have an orgasm.
So if those muscles become weaker and you're kind of not getting that same feedback to the
system, a visit with a pelvic floor physical therapist might also help you to make sure
that those muscles are kind of functioning how they should be.
And some women actually find that working
more on the kegels can actually be very helpful from a sexual satisfaction standpoint. The other
thing is to think about sometimes with age, you need a little bit more input. So I didn't
need glasses three years ago. Now I'm like with like, I don't know, a gigillion progressive
things. And there's all age-related change, right? Like five years ago, I could read pretty much anything. And so I need glasses to help me. Some people
might need to use a vibrator or a stronger vibrator than they needed to use before. They
might need to just have a little bit more input into the system. And then another thing
to think about is there are medications that can actually affect orgasm. And so sometimes
people associate what's happening to them
with menopause, but something else might have happened.
If you were started on antidepressants,
that can also have an impact.
And so I would want someone to kind of get those baseline things
addressed as well, and also have a conversation with them
about what their sex life was like beforehand.
The other thing that I also recommend
is possibly the best book
on sort of libido and sex is Dr. Laurie Brottos book Better Sex Through Mindfulness. And it's about
cultivating desire and libido and you also want to ask this person, you know, is your orgasm problem
in a background of having desire issues and libido issues or is all
that working fine and the only thing that's not working is having is an orgasm.
So those would kind of be the basic level things to kind of get started with.
And then if all of those things are in place and you're still having trouble achieving an
orgasm, then I would recommend a sex therapist and also recommend seeing a doctor who specializes
in sexual medicine.
This might be a situation where a low dose of testosterone might be beneficial, not something
that's applied topically to the area, but these are things that really require more of an
in-depth conversation.
But that would be what I would get started with.
And bravery, they require bravery because you got to walk into your doctor and say, here
are my issues.
I want to have an orgasm.
Yeah, or and or. I want to up my libido, right? Because it's two separate things.
Yeah, yeah. And absolutely, if your doctor isn't someone that you can talk with sex about,
then they're not the right doctor to help you with this problem.
We're talking about taking hormones in Tuesday's episode.
Is vaginal estrogen like a topical cream like that you rub on as opposed to the hormone
therapy that you ingest?
Yeah, so when we say menopausal hormone therapy, we mean hormones that are getting into the
bloodstream.
And we didn't talk about this in the last episode, but the safest way is transdermal, meaning across the skin.
And that would be with a patch, with a gel, a lotion,
or they even make a vaginal ring
where you can deliver estrogen into the bloodstream.
So those are the safest ways.
You can also take a pill,
but there is a slightly higher risk of complications with that.
So we recommend starting with transderm.
The vaginal estrogen, and it gets a bit complicated
because one of the vaginal estrogens can get into the bloodstream, but there's also vaginal
estrogens that just stay vaginally. And those are, that's also, there's a ring for that as well,
and there's creams, there's tablets, there's suppositories, and there's also a product that's called
DHEA, which is converted in your body into estrogen. It's kind of
a pro-drug for estrogen. So there's lots of different ways to approach it. Some, you know,
some people love creams, some people love the idea of a ring that you just change every three
months, it depends. But for somebody who's having an orgasm problem, I would recommend the cream
because then you can also apply a little bit to the collateral area as well. It's not like a rubbing in, you just kind of apply it and I will get absorbed.
For people who are using transdermal estrogen, about 50% of the time they'll get enough
estrogen for their vagina, depending on the dose they use.
But a lot have to augment with vaginal estrogen.
So we don't really recommend taking it throughout your whole body just to treat your vagina
because you have to use higher doses.
And you don't need it everywhere if you only need it in your vagina. So try to think of
them as separate. So that's a problem. That helps with orgasm but not increasing libido.
Right. It wouldn't impact libido. Libido is very complex and the way that we talk about libido in
our society is also very sort of heteronormative, sort of cisgender male fantasy about the woman being ready at the
drop of a hat. All we just need is the male gaze and we're
ready to go, right? So, yeah, right. Like just twist an
apple and stick it in. I'm good.
twist an apple and stick it in. I'd also like to put that up
for consideration for title.
A lot of conversations that I have with people are just kind of explaining that libido changes
throughout our life cycle.
And sometimes people are really having a change in sex right related to menopause.
But sometimes what they're having is actually very normal.
And they've sort of assumed
that it wasn't. So it's, you know, some people have a receptive libido. It doesn't get going
until the right situation is there. For some people, desire can kick in after sexual
arousal. That's not abnormal. It's more complicated than just being kind of like cotton
horny. And that's only that's only one very small sliver of libido.
And shout out to all the lesbians.
Yes.
Very tricky.
Menopausal to women, libido, Netflix.
It's just all, you know, it's a women more problem.
No, actually not true. This is the only area of your life where you have more problem. No, no. Actually not true.
This is the only area of your life
where you have more problems.
The rest of it is better.
We love you.
Lynn for orgasms is what we're gonna go for.
And there's also a whole host of folks
whose problem is even in some ways like a precursor to Lynn's problem, which
isn't a very common symptom to have vaginal dryness, vaginal burning, sandpaper-like feelings.
So there's actually pain in penetration.
So can you talk about some of that because that is a very common issue that people are dealing with?
Yeah, this is very under-discussed. This idea that vaginal symptoms with metapods are very common.
Over time, about 80% of people will get them, so that's pretty significant. And one of the other medical consequences, besides sex is very medical and in my mind you deserve
to have good sex just like you deserve to have everything working with your body.
But low estrogen in the vagina can also increase your risk of getting urinary tract infections.
Vaginal estrogen can actually be preventative for that.
So if you're having vaginal dryness, if you're having lubrication issues, if you're having
some discomfort and you're in your 40s, then there is a very
good chance it could be related to menopause transition, menopause spectrum. There are other things
that can masquerade as that, so again, it's important to get an exam and get checked out.
But the great thing about vaginal estrogen is it's highly effective and it works really
quite quickly. You'll know in about six to eight weeks. Now, if some people don't want to use them,
there are fantastic vaginal moisturizers,
the products that I like contain high alluronic acid.
But there's silicone-based products, water-based products.
And so some people like the feel of the moisturizers.
Touch-and-feel is very personal.
And so what feels good to one person feels awful
to another in, you know, vice versa.
So, but vaginal estrogen is highly effective.
Over time, there will be a little bit of shrinkage
of the vagina with lots of estrogen.
So the length of the vagina might shorten a little bit,
the opening might tighten up a little bit.
And that's because we also lose collagen with age.
And estrogen also helps with collagen.
So you can have the double whammy of aging and low estrogen.
And so vaginal estrogen can really help protect
against a lot of that.
It's very safe.
It doesn't get in your bloodstream.
Almost every single person can use it if they need to.
It's also a great option for trans folks
because a lot of times when people are on testosterone,
they can get vaginal dryness from the testosterone
and the vaginal estrogen can counteract that. So for people who are suffering with vaginal dryness, so they want to have vaginal dryness from the testosterone and the vaginal estrogen can counteract that.
So for people who are suffering with vaginal dryness
or they want to have vaginal sex.
So Lynn might walk into the doctor and say,
because Lynn doesn't sound to me
like she's having a problem with libido.
She just wants the freaking orgasm.
So she could walk into her doctor and say,
I'm having trouble with orgasm
and I want to try vaginal estrogen. Sure, but you should
have an exam first to make sure that there isn't something else going on. For example, there's
skin conditions that can affect the clitoris. And so you need to have an exam to make sure that's not
going on. So it does require an exam to make sure there's nothing else. I start vaginal estrogen
over the phone all the time. Well, let's get you started and see what it's like when you come in. Unless somebody's
got a bad itch because these infections can sometimes present with dryness. So if someone tells me
they've got a really bad itch, then I might be like, oh, let's just check you out first. But
otherwise, you can start it. You know, we don't have to worry if you have high blood pressure. You
don't have to worry if you have high cholesterol. None of these things matter. You can be on vaginal
estrogen. So it's a totally different bucket than the other thing
we talk about Tuesday, which is the, okay.
But there are certain things that you advise
definitely not near your vagina.
So no fragrance products.
I think that you want to stay away
from fragrance products.
There are many reasons for that
when they're often irritating.
Too, they're really bad for the environment.
Everything that's made with fragrance releases
a volatile chemical, right? And that air pollution is as much a problem from all
of our personal care products that that release and everything that we have, like furniture
manufacturing, everything that releases sort of volatile synthesis, that is um, cars for air
pollution. Well, so nobody needs fragrance stuff. Like just ditch it, man, you don't need it.
It's not good for the environment. It's not good for your skin. It's not adding anything. So nobody needs fragrance stuff. Like just ditch it, man, you don't need it.
It's not good for the environment,
it's not good for your skin, it's not adding anything.
I see some of these people buying menstrual pads
with like that are impregnated with like essential oils
and stuff and then they get rashes
and someone told me that you don't need that. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, why not doing that anymore?
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing,
and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows
that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy, a new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay, let's hear from Deborah.
This is Deborah. I am clinging to the excitement in the middle of the special called menopause. And I was thinking it might be a really beneficial thing for you all to talk about what happens
to our bodies during menopause.
It is so effing hard.
I don't mean to cry.
It's really hard.
The physical changes, the emotional changes, and there is so much that we don't know.
There is so much that nobody tells us and nobody helps to prepare us for.
And it is really like having an alien move in and take over your body.
And I know I'm not alone in feeling the things that I'm feeling.
And I bet I'm not alone in the physical things that I'm experiencing.
Some nice, less hot flashes to making choices about hormonal placement therapies,
to vaginal estrogen creams,
and to all of these other things that no one tells you about.
I just learned about burning mouth syndrome.
It's a thing for women in menopause, and a habit.
And it sucks.
Anyway, since you all do such an amazing job
talking about the female experience,
what it is like to be a woman living in a patriarchal world, which I think withholds so much information from us
about these things and makes us feel like we're crazy.
I just thought maybe you could all talk about this.
Deborah, you are not crazy. You're just a goddamn
menopausal cheetah. That goes back to what we were saying about
you know spending your whole life, defending yourself against this kind of
caricature of what a woman is and then
feeling like you have to go somewhere to be vulnerable enough to say
This is actually my experience. Do you see that a lot?
This is deeply shaking her on an emotional level too. That's the whole reason why I wrote the menopause manifesto because I
Hear this over and over again.
I would do, be doing interviews for my book,
The Vigina Bible, and I sort of casually mentioned
I was on a hormones.
And then that's all the reporter wanted
to talk about.
They were talking about, they all wanted
to talk about menopause.
When I was on book tour, and it was really interesting,
creating a space where it was safe enough to talk
about vaginas seemed to create a space where you could talk about the last taboo in a pause.
And once one person asked him out of pause question, the whole thing, you know, became about
manopause. And so I really, really, obviously, there's this like simmering rage about why
don't I know what's happening to my body, this simmering rage about why am I being aged out of
society when I'm at my most productive. I really believe a lot of
the rage is the fact that, whoa, like I'm at my peak, I'm at my mental peak and now all of a sudden
you're telling me that I'm not worthy, that I don't belong. So I think there's a lot of that as well
and you're just fed up with being dismissed. I mean, we all have breaking points. You're dismissed
in puberty, you're dismissed with your menstrual cramps.
I think it's this nexus of mantez.
I think it's sort of, I'm mad as hell
and I'm not gonna take it anymore.
And I'm hot as hell too.
So that's not okay.
So I think that there are a lot of changes
that people need to know about.
Imagine if you were told you had to move to a new city.
You just, you got to move.
Sorry.
And you're told nothing about that city.
You know, you just dumped there.
And you don't speak the language.
You've got to figure everything out.
Versus if you were told a year, two years, five years
in advance, you know, five years, you're
going to move to that city.
You know, five years to learn the language.
You have five years to learn the lay of the land.
You have five years to maybe start
connecting with people on social media.
So when you get there, you've got friends.
You already know the good restaurants.
You know where there's a theater group.
You know the running path you're going to use.
Totally different experience, right?
So, and it doesn't mean there won't be challenges in this new city,
but you're more prepared for them.
And that's kind of what I like in that experience with menopause,
is you dumped into this rebooted body
and you don't have any information about it. And for me, because I got into medical school when I was really young,
I was 20 when I started. So I knew a ton about how my body worked for almost all of my reproductive life.
And what a difference that has made for me. And so that's kind of my mission to try to help people not be so in the dark.
Deborah mentioned burning mouth syndrome.
I know on Tuesday we talked a lot about the most common symptoms, the hot flesh is decreased
libido. What are some of the less common symptoms that we can kind of normalize for people.
So people like Deborah are not feeling so alone.
If they're not one of the folks that has the most talked about symptoms.
Well, I think some of the symptoms that are not as talked about would be heart palpitations,
anxiety, feelings, mild depression, burning mouse syndrome is pretty uncommon.
I've had a couple of people who've
reported it kind of worsened around menopause, and I just read a report that tonight as, you know,
ringing in the ears might be associated with menopause. But it is understudied when we're doing,
you know, when you do these large population studies, you know, people sort of, there's only so
many symptoms you can ask about, and that's not really an excuse, it's just kind of an explanation. And we definitely need more data.
Because the thing is, is the way your hormones affect you is a very individual way. We can sort of
speak in generalities, but for everybody, for every five people who tells me their mood is worse,
right, before their period, I'll get one person who tells me their mood is better.
worse right before their period, I'll get one person who tells me that it is better.
You know, so I'm always open to, that's possible. My patients who've had burning malsyndrome that sort of seems to be associated with a menopause transition, I've tried estrogen,
if they want to try it and see if it helps. I mean, you know, there are other treatments as well.
And it's not surprising to me that we see a lot of these other things starting in the 40s
because we often see a lot of autoimmune conditions starting around them too.
And so I always tell people we want to keep an open mind that this also could be the first sign
of something else. And so again, just keeping an eye on things. But for many of these things,
it's very reasonable to say, well, some estrogen make it better. Is it safe for me to try it? For most people it is. And you see, you give yourself a six-months trial
has that helped or not. What I hear most from her is that dismissal. And that's really sad,
because there isn't a reason that should happen. You should be able to come in, you should be able
to talk about your symptoms. But we also have to talk about the fact that in a lot of healthcare settings, people get 15 minutes with their doctor and that's just not acceptable.
I want to have a list. You're only going to get the 10 minutes. You're going to have a list.
Yeah, listen to the end of Tuesday's episode where Dr. Genter talks about your strategy for going to
talk to your doctor and the list you should have. Another strategy I'd like to add in is the follow-up visit.
So what happens is people go in and then they kind of get whatever started and then they
sort of head out into the ether.
And there isn't really any follow-up or check in to see how you're going to do or you
might then start to get worried that you're not going to be able to get to these other symptoms
on your list.
You make your first appointment and then say I I'd like to make a fall appointment in eight
weeks time.
So we can see how this initial treatment is going or three months.
If you're going to start a hormones, you generally want to give it about eight to ten weeks.
So then we can check in and then I can see if the other symptoms on my list are better
or not and then we can get to those.
And when you tell them you're coming back,
no matter what, maybe they're more likely to.
You're curious.
But that's one of the things that I do that I feel
is possibly the most undervalued thing in medicine
is booking the follow-up visit before you leave.
Because I think that tells people
that you are interested in what happens and that you have a plan.
So if my treatment A doesn't work, I want to know about it.
I set up my follow-up visits and I explained to patients why I'm not going to expect this to work before four weeks or before six weeks.
So we need to set up our follow-up with the appropriate time.
And I think it helps people also feel that they're being cared for.
Yeah. Deborah also says, I know I'm not alone in feeling the things I'm feeling and I'm not alone in the physical things.
Are there any communities that are existing now where women who are going through this can connect to other women?
Are you seeing communities that you think are valuable to let people like Deborah know they're
not alone in this?
There's a lot of support groups and groups that people have started.
It's always hard to recommend when if you don't know the person because unfortunately with
online stuff, there's also a ton of misinformation, right?
And sometimes, sometimes these groups are even sort of offshoots of practices that offer, you know,
scamming hormones or scamming tests or other types of things.
So a friend of mine, Amanda Thieb, is a trainer and she wrote a great book called Metapocalips.
And she has a pretty active Facebook community.
And she's really good at sorting through, you know, the evidence and science and really,
I think does a really great job in curating her community.
Apart from that, I think you got to ask your friends, you know, ask what kind of information
might be out there.
And also different people jive with different communities, right?
So, you know, what's a welcoming place for one person might not feel like a place for
others. So I think that unfortunately,
with a lot of online communities, you kind of have to suss them out and see what might work for you.
And eventually, hopefully, every group where women are gathered will become that. I mean, right now,
I was at a recovery meeting last night, and the woman next to you is talking about ringing her ears.
And the woman next to you is talking about ringing her ears.
Nobody was like, maybe that's menopause. Like just knowing this now, she's 50.
I would have said that could be menopause.
Like the more we know, the more we can just bring it into every group we're in.
Because there shouldn't even have to be a separate group.
But we're great. I mean, really, there shouldn't be.
It shouldn't really just be like everywhere.
You know, it should, it should be really readily accessible information. And that's why it's fantastic. You guys are,
you know, dedicating to podcasts to this and that people are really starting to spread the word
that, hey, this is a normal event, but it's also a normal event that can have problems, and we
should know about all of those. Absolutely. Let's hear from Shelley.
I was listening to the episode from what you were talking about in terms of each ranges of e-drages and when we sort of level up and go to level 1, level 2, level 3, and it correlates
a lot to a book that I just read about paramedicons and the regulation of hormones and the beginning
of going through your second puberty and how oftentimes a lot of women describe feeling more subtle and feeling like themselves after
they go through menopause.
And I have to wonder whether or not some of what you were talking about in terms of happiness
and issues of women who are the happiest and how that relates to what is actually happening
to theologically in our body.
So, just a thought that I would share. My name is Shelley.
Okay, I was so excited about this question
because all the hard stuff, yes,
all the symptoms, all the physical stuff.
But is there a correlation between what we describe
in the culture as like running out of fucks?
Running out of follicles and running out of fucks.
Another title of it.
Our follicles, our fucks, is what I'm asking you,
Dr. Jen Gedjok.
I would say running out of the estrogen
that you need for reproduction might be correlated with that.
Because we still have estrogen made by our brains
and our bones and our muscles.
So we do have some.
But yeah, I think that it's probably a combination of,
and I'm really glad that the listener brought this up
because there are really wonderful things
associated with menopause as well.
The menopause transition is kind of like the rapids.
This is sort of a difficult time for a lot of people,
not for everybody,
but a lot of women describe a sort of clarity
when they're through the menopause transition.
They sort of run the gauntlet and then you're like, ah, and like the heavens open up and
you know, whether it's because you've just accumulated all this life experience,
and so there's nothing to do with hormones, whether it's the fact that you've all that chaos
is gone, so you're super happy, or is it due to the fact that you've all that chaos is gone, so you're super happy,
or is it due to the fact
in this some really fascinating research
at the brain changes with menopause?
So when we go through the menopause transition,
people often have this mild depression
or they have brain fog, some people do,
where it feels like things aren't working great, right?
And there's actually a lot of changes
that are happening in the brain, some areas are shrinking. And people like, oh, well, does that, is that bad? I mean, we don't want
your brain to shrink. But some areas are growing. And parts of your brain that are using high
energy sort of shifts. And you could say, well, we're losing areas. But because brain fog's
temporary, and it goes away, it can't be a loss. And one of the theories is that your brain is remodeling itself now without estrogen,
because it doesn't need all the connections that were used for reproduction.
Do you remember how we're reallocating resources?
Yes.
Right?
So think about how I said, remember, all these things, reproductions linked to
temperature, it's linked to all these things every month, every cycle your body's like,
pregnancy, yes, pregnancy, no, am I okay, okay, because it's just waiting to like, I
got a retrofit, I got to get everything going, right? But when you don't have that anymore,
when your body doesn't have to have that kind of vigilance, when your brain doesn't have
to be doing that switchboard back and forth.
Well, you know what your brain does? It prunes pathways that aren't needed anymore.
I do sometimes wonder instead of causing it a brain fog, why don't we call it a brain reboot?
Because, you know, operating systems can be a bit glitchy when you get going.
But once you get going, you're like, oh, my new computer is working right now.
So there are a lot of people describe a clarity afterwards.
It hasn't been well studied, but now that we have some
of those really interesting data,
like I hear it from lots of women.
And it goes with all of my beliefs about the metaphors.
There's chaos first, there's destruction first,
and then there's new construction.
There's just something to it.
There's something to this idea that those pathways
don't have to be used anymore because of reproduction.
But also our brains are adjusting to not being prey
all the time, to not being looked at by the patriarchy
as an object.
There's a lot of upsetness about becoming invisible.
And I'm always thinking, dear God,
let me be invisible to the patriarchy.
Like if I got this much done while they were watching me,
what can I do when they're not watching me?
Like invisibility is a superpower.
Imagine the trouble we could cause
if we were invisible to the patriarchy.
To me, it's fascinating that perhaps there is this,
well pruning of things we had to care about that we don't have to
care about anymore. And then we get to decide what to care about for the rest of our lives.
I think that many of us carry this weight of the patriarchy telling us that we have an exploration date
and making us feel that it's over, you're done, you have no value, you're not a breed
or any more.
You're not attractive to the male gaze, you don't look like you're 20.
And I think that many of us, I've fallen, I've looked into that.
It's hard not to, it's everywhere.
It's, you know, I dated loser dudes because of that.
I ate all kinds of bad decisions I wish now I hadn't made, but you know, they've made me who I am. You just have to kind of take the good with the bad. But yeah, I think
that you have this combination of this cumulative knowledge. And, you know, maybe we have a better
operating system. But I think that we've only been taught to fear Manipaz because it's been
something that a patriarchal society has impressed upon us. Yeah. But really, we should be excited about anything
that patriarchy fears.
That means we're on to something.
It's also important, you know, I don't want people
who have symptoms to feel, well, how can this be normal?
I have horrible symptoms.
Well, you know what?
Lots of people have horrible symptoms and pregnancy,
and lots of people have horrible symptoms and puberty.
And we have modern medicine.
We can manage a lot of that.
We just need to keep talking about it
and keep normalizing it.
And keep letting people know the options that are available.
Wonderful.
Speaking of normalizing, some people
don't have any symptoms.
Is that correct?
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Is that a small chunk of people?
So about 25% of people don't have any menstrual shenanigans.
They kind of just like, you know,
maybe skip one or two periods than they're done.
And so 25%.
I mean, obviously that's not most, but yeah,
with hot flushes, 25% of people really aren't bothered.
My best friend had like two.
She's like, what are you talking about?
About 25% of people have got flushes for shorter periods of time,
but about 50% of people are going to be bothered by them.
I didn't have any brain fog.
I just had hot flashes.
I'm a super deep sleeper, so I don't think I probably, I woke my partner up
because of my heat more than I woke myself up.
Good for you.
See, menopause affects everyone.
It does. It does.
And the transition, you said once you're through the transition, it's temporary.
Once you're through the transition, people have clarity.
So we're pre-menopausal, we're paramanopausible.
Then our period stops.
When are we through that transition?
Are you talking about when our period stops?
So we don't really know you're sort of through the menopause transition
till you're a year past your last period.
Okay.
So it's kind of like the great period wait.
You're just kind of like waiting to see what happens.
Some people, absolutely, you know,
every 25% of people, their hot flashes will last
for very long time.
I mean, the average duration of hot flashes
is like seven to eight years.
So I mean, this isn't like a minor thing.
This goes on for a long time for people who have them. For some people, you know, they do persist for a long period of time. But the
that's sort of feeling off balance, I think, is what people associate with the menopause transition.
Daggeral dryness isn't going to go away if you're having persistent huff lashes, those might stay.
But that's sort of, I don't feel myself that sort of my body is
can't are levering all over the place. That's typically much more associated with the
menopause transition. Now, you know, obviously everybody's different, but that's typical.
And so what happens is a lot of people might start hormones in their menopause transition,
and then they become terrified to stop them maybe five or six years later.
And you don't necessarily have to stop them,
but some people do.
Some people want to say, well, maybe I'm through my chaos
and I don't really need it anymore.
But everybody's different.
And so we think it's safe to stay on,
but we also think it's reasonable for people
to say, I might want to go off of it.
And the one thing I would like to sort of impress upon people
is, if you feel really badly
during the menopause transition, that doesn't mean that that's how you're going to feel for the rest
of your life, that may just be these really bad rapids. Doesn't mean there won't be some symptoms
when everything settles out, but to kind of keep that in mind. When you say that people who go through menopause, notice that they feel off.
So to me, that implies that there's been a long time
when they've felt on, right?
When they like, there's a steadiness of people
and then they lose their steadiness during menopause.
But for people who struggle with mental health,
like for me, I don't know a long period where I've
felt steady, where then I will suddenly feel unsteady. Like my life is often a
balance of the unsteadyness, the fact of steadiness constantly since I was 10. And
for me, to be really honest, I'm doing this podcast and listening to everything
you say and it all makes sense to me for
someone who has a regular mental health life.
But for me, I wouldn't know what the hell to say to a doctor.
I wouldn't know what was my mental health issues and what was menopause.
Unless it was totally physical, right?
Unless it was periods, vaginal dryness.
But all the other things, depression, anxiety, libido, you know, crankiness,
all of those things to me, brain fog, those have always been part of my life.
I haven't been in menopause since I was 10.
So how do people with mental health sort out what is our brains, what is menopause, what
do we ask for for health?
How do we know what's what? So that can be a big challenge and when I say feeling off, I mean sort of off for you
You should have had to always compare yourself to your normal, right?
So where you're in your normal, maybe maybe a wild fluctuations all the time somebody else's normal might be steady
Someone else is in between
So it can be very challenging.
If somebody's having a change in your mental health status in your mid-40s, how do you
know it's menopause?
How do you know it's not a change in your depression?
How do you know it's not something else?
There aren't tests to tell us that.
And so, that takes, I think, a good working relationship with your physician and probably with a couple
of physicians, because most psychiatrists aren't sort of up on manopause.
I mean, if you are, if I have a patient who's got complex mental health issues, I'm not
managing that.
So I need to be in communication.
The team needs to work together.
The thing is, is what we can say is it's relatively low risk if people want to try a low dose of hormones to see if that makes a difference.
So you can say, oh wow, better yes, better no. And to see, and even if it's better no, that still doesn't mean it's not man-a-paws.
And so unfortunately, what we have are sort of the list of treatments that we can try and then we can say, well, does this help you?
Yes, or does this help you know?
And that's one of the really hard things about manopause
is sometimes people don't know and retrospect
that that's what it was.
Because a lot of things can happen at the same time.
I mean, when people are in their 40s,
they often have a lot of life changes
and those can cause symptoms.
I still remember watching something where someone was trying
to blame everything on their menopause. And they had just spoken before about saying how
they were neglecting what they were eating because they were too busy taking their kids
around. And they were really sad they just driven their kid to school. And like, well,
okay, but there's other things going on too. So, Metapost doesn't happen in a vacuum. And I think that's what makes it really challenging
because the more variables you have,
the more you have to juggle all these things.
And so, the best advice that I have is to sort of say,
well, if I'm gonna try something new
to think about what's the length of time
in which I should see a desired effect
and is it possible for me to stick
it out on that new treatment so I can say, you know, better yes, better no. And can we stay on our
antidepressants with hormones do they? Sure. Are there some? Yes. Yeah, and many of them actually
might even help with menopods. So some of them like venlo-faxine can help with hot flashes.
So some of them might be beneficial.
Now it's also important to point out that some people who have mental health issues actually
do not like how they feel on hormones.
They have the sensitivity and that very low doses just are bad for them.
And tyros like they just can't do it.
And that's we have non hormonal options as well.
I have a lot of success with
GABAPENTA and for hot flashes and night spots and sleep disturbances. So there are other things
that can be helpful as well. Cognitive behavioral therapies actually really effective for hot flashes
too. So there are these other other options to also think about. But yeah, it's the more you throw
into the mix with any medical condition or with any health issue
in menopause is certainly part of it.
The harder it is and the more your team needs to communicate to help you.
Tell us your mantra.
Don't you what you did cognitive behavior?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
A mantra for your hot flashes.
Oh, I have a whole bunch of different mantras for my hot flashes.
I can swear, can I?
Oh, yes.
Please, okay.
So I have just like, you're Dr. Jen fucking gun turret.
You could fucking get through this.
This is two fucking minutes.
You've had bad sex that's lasted this long.
You can fuck it up.
There's gonna be millions of women
looking in their mirror going,
you're Dr. fucking Jen Guncher.
You know, I'll tell you something funny.
So a few years ago, I took one of my sons to New Zealand,
and I had to drive on the other side of the road,
which is like one of those things that stresses me out
beyond belief.
I'm so stressed.
And so we're in the car,
and like that, whatever, the car rental place,
and we're because we have to, we're good at, and I want to drive. This is like a trip. I plan for him. And we're in the car, and like, whatever the car rental place and work because we have to,
we're good at going to drive.
This is like a trip I'd plan for him.
And we're in the parking lot.
And I have this like a moment of panic.
And I just like, I'm like, how am I gonna do this?
And my son, he must have been like 13 or 14.
He put his hand on my hand.
And he said, Mom, your doctor, Jen, fucking gunter,
you can do this.
The best thing I've ever heard.
Mama, good work, Mama.
God, I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
I love it.
You have been so kind to answer our three pods, water questions.
Knowing you've done this forever,
what questions does the rest of our pods,
what listening have that we haven't yet answered right now?
Yeah.
One thing which I would like to say is that
if you have bleeding after a minute of pause,
don't dismiss it as one sort of last raw
or one or last rodeo with your period. It can be a sign of cancer and you don't want to dismiss it as one sort of last raw or one or last rodeo with your period.
It can be a sign of cancer and you don't want to dismiss it and you want to get it evaluated.
And that's like one really important thing. So don't ever dismiss that.
I think another big question we said talked about earlier is brain fog. People, a lot of questions
about that. Estrogen therapy doesn't help brain fog going on hormones doesn't make a difference.
If you have a concern that you feel that your cognitive function is deteriorating,
you should be evaluated. And your doctor can do evaluations to make sure that there's no cognitive
decline. There was a study that compared women with brain fog to men of the same age and the women
still outperform the men.. Shock, I tell you.
Yeah, so it's a brain of bloom is what it is.
It's one of those things that feels worrying but isn't medically worrisome.
Kind of like if you've ever been pregnant, those contractions,
false labor contractions, they're worrying but they don't do anything.
Those are kind of two of the biggest ones.
I would say be very, very, very, very wary of people who are selling you compounded products and stay away from pellets.
These things are not recommended. It turns out it's making hormones is complex.
And having pharmaceutical people who make these in labs that are followed by the FDA,
so you know exactly what you were getting. Because if you get too much of estrogen
or you don't get enough progesterone,
you can get cancer.
You can get cancer of the uterus.
We haven't talked about that.
If I just gave somebody estrogen and they have a uterus
and I didn't give them hormone progesterone
or gave them an IUD that has a very similar hormone in it,
they would eventually over time get cancer of the uterus.
So it does matter.
You have to have those with the right combination of these two hormones together. We do not recommend compounded
products. We do not recommend the pellets. They do make a lot of money for a lot of providers because
they can order tests to sort of check your levels and follow you into all the special stuff.
And it's very hard because if you search for information about hormones, almost always these sort of cash practices float
to the top of your search.
So they're very good at search engine optimization.
So that's why I really recommend
looking at the guidelines from medical societies.
If these other medications were a value,
we'd tell you, it doesn't matter to me,
which hormone you take, but it matters to me
because I want you to have the safest one and the right one. So is there a link? Like, is there,
can we get that information? Because we have, we talked about bringing the information about
the menopause society into our doctor's office. Is there a place we can go to find the information
you just said to make sure it's FDA? Yeah. So if you go to the North American menopause society
and you put in search terms on their site,
a lot of that information will come up.
Just remember if people are overselling something.
When I tell people, when I put people on estrogen,
I don't tell them this is 100% gonna cure you.
This is gonna make your life perfect.
I say, you know, this is probably gonna help
your hot flashes a lot, but it's not gonna make them go away.
You might go from, you know, maybe having 10 a day 2 a day. It's going to improve your quality of life. So if people are selling
curus, I always say, except phasenestrogen, that's like an actual medicine.
Well, that's the problem in medicine. There's always exceptions.
Right. Right. Well, we know that we're not having a compounded product. If we are going to our doctor and getting prescribed something
or do we have to advocate even if we get a product
to search and make sure what's prescribed to us
is not compounded?
Well, if there's any neurocompounding pharmacy,
you're getting a compounded product.
So, compounding pharmacy.
The pharmacies that will make up the hormones for you.
So they'll go in the back room,
they'll put a little bit of this in,
a little bit of that in, and mix it all up. Oh, there might say, oh, we're going to put it
in this cream, we're going to put in this gel. But the problem is, is everything that it's in
makes a difference as to how it's absorbed. You need studies, so you can say, so if I'm on a patch,
I know I can open up the package and it tells me day two after putting the patch on, day three after
putting a patch on what my hormone levels would be, right? It's all been studied.
So it should come in a package like your,
your bottle of Tylenol, like your,
you know, it should look like it came
from a pharmaceutical company.
You should say to your doctor,
am I getting an FDA approved medication?
Okay, that's what you should say.
I want an FDA approved medication,
because that's the safest.
Wonderful.
So much of this advice is about an applies to people who have doctors that they can go
to whose insurance is working, who a million different things have to fall into line right
now for women to actually get to doctors.
What the hell do people who have uteruses do who are going through menopause and do not have the access to
doctors and prescriptions. If you have uterus and ovaries and vagina, it's basically a preexisting
condition. And the way our medical system and our insurance system is structured. And the lack of
access to, you know, to free healthcare or never mind affordable. Everybody should have access to, in my mind,
affordable, hopefully free healthcare.
But it's true, people who have less access
are definitely going to struggle.
We used to have more county health departments
where people could go and get care.
And we have less of those.
We don't invest in public health.
We don't invest in community health
in the way that we should.
And I wish I hadn't a great answer, except you can do a lot of work yourself.
My book's available at the library. Most libraries. You can get the book out for free. You can read it.
Try to start getting some information that way. Many primary care providers, if you have
availability and access through Obamacare, you might be able to get it get some basic help there.
But these are real areas that we struggle. And even for people with insurance,
vaginal estrogen is sometimes $300. It's ridiculous. It's ridiculous. You can go to another country
and it's free. So the barriers that we put up, you know, that you get your Viago with your $5 co-payment. So, you know, there's a lot of issues.
I'm acceptable.
I like to circle back to where we started
with being pissed off.
So thank you for that.
Before this two hours, if you haven't
before reading your book, I've always felt about men
and paws kind of like, I feel about geography.
Like, I missed everything.
I don't know anything.
And so I'm scared to talk about it at all,
because I don't know. And so I'm scared to talk about it at all because I don't know.
And so I will say that the book really helped me go get the book, buy it, get it from your
library.
It's just is a place to start where you feel a little, you feel like you have a little
bit more power to begin with, which is knowledge.
And I also think that social media, I know social back.
Following you on social media helps me.
Dr. Jen, thank you so much.
We can't imagine more important work.
We are just very deeply grateful
for what you've dedicated your life to.
Oh, thank you so much for having me
and thank you so much for having these conversations
and really helping to heal people.
You're such a positive force that you guys really do so much.
You bring a lot of light into people's lives.
So thank you.
Oh, thank you, Dr. Jen.
Thank you.
You are Dr. Fucking Jen Gunter.
You go carry on.
And then we'll see the rest of you next time
when we can do hard things.
Bye bye.
And talk to your friends about menopause.
Yes, and talk it.
Yes, and talk all this talk everybody.
Normalize it. Then this to your friends talk about it. Normalize it.
Have a menopause party. Have a party.
Hey, no party.
No party. No party.
Because a man no party. No, it doesn't.
It tops at 830 because we're all set.
It stops on average at 51.
Okay. Bye bye.
Bye.
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