Skip to main content

Article from the new york times : "Puberty for the Middle-Aged"

Puberty for the Middle-Aged

Forty-five-year-old women need a version of “the talk,” because our bodies are changing in ways that are both really weird and really uncomfortable.
By Lisa Selin Davis
Ms. Davis is a writer.
Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, spoke about perimenopause in a video from her company Goop last month.CreditRebecca Smeyne for The New York Times
Image
Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, spoke about perimenopause in a video from her company Goop last month.CreditCreditRebecca Smeyne for The New York Times
If only, on your 45th birthday, a doctor would sit you down, look you squarely in the eyes and say, “Here’s what’s going to happen: Eventually, your pubic hair is going to thin out everywhere but on the bikini line, exactly the opposite of what you’ve always wanted. The fat on your body will redistribute so that each of your thighs is the shape of Grimace, the McDonald’s blob monster. You will develop those wings of loose skin below your arms. You just will, no matter what you do. Also: Everything about your periods will change. They may become shorter, more frequent, more painful. And they’ll just get weirder until they desist.”
If only, in other words, someone told you, “You need to really prepare, emotionally and physically, for middle age.”
But of course, no one does.
We put a lot of time and effort into preparing teenagers for what changes puberty will wreak, but for women, midlife brings another kind of puberty — perimenopause, a road that we in our 40s navigate blind, without enough information from our doctors or often other women, wondering in silent shame at the intensity and seeming endlessness of the changes.
What is perimenopause, you might be asking? For one thing, it’s a term so underused that Microsoft’s word-processing program is telling me it’s not a word, a term that was new to many when Gwyneth Paltrow uttered it last month in a Goop video. “Peri” is Greek for “near,” and menopause is the ceasing of menstruation. So perimenopause is all the crazy stuff that happens on the way to that cessation.
ADVERTISEMENT
We need to have The Talk, but for 45-year-olds. Doctors should speak to their patients about the changes that could lie ahead and how to prepare for them. And we perimenopausal women need to talk to one another, and the rest of the world, about what’s happening. Because a lot of it, to me, is really weird, really surprising and really hard to sit comfortably through, from the stray chin hair — O.K., hairs — to the decreasing bone density. Some 40 percent of women have interrupted sleep during perimenopause. Between 10 percent and 20 percent have mood swings. Some have uterine bleeding or vaginal dryness and even that hallmark of actual menopause, hot flashes.
My desire to know the full story goes beyond my health: How am I going to make jokes about these symptoms if I don’t know what they are? (I will always fondly recall Joan Rivers joking about the surprising number of things that sag as you age, starting with your genitals.)
Informed opinions on today’s vital issues.
Subscribe to The New York Times
Recently I asked friends on Facebook what no one had told them about middle age. No post of mine has ever garnered so many responses, so equally divided between sad and funny. Or both.
There are the physical issues — the random acne, the skin tags, the cough that causes a little bit of pee, the long recovery time from minor injuries and how easy it is to get those injuries. “Doing something really banal like reaching for the remote can put my back out and leave me wailing like a child for a day,” one friend wrote.
And then there are the emotional issues: How will I feel differently about myself as my hormonal profile shifts, as I lose estrogen in the years just before my young children surge with it?
ADVERTISEMENT
The Talk doesn’t have to be all bad. Among the things my Facebook friends noted was that they felt better and stronger than they did in their 20s and 30s, and that they had become much less vain. One friend wrote, “I prioritize the things that are important to me and people I care about.”
She has arrived at the still-mythical (to me) moment when people stop caring so much what others think, the beginning of the upswing of the U-shaped happiness curve, which shows that people get happier as they grow old (often the 40s are the curve’s nadir). Older people are the bearers of wisdom earned by their years, or by the sheer fatigue that has overtaken them, forcing them to pick their battles more carefully. Along with those chin hairs, solace may come.
So your doctor might also say, “You will most likely find that you no longer sweat the small stuff (except at night, when you will sweat uncontrollably), that you care less about the approval of others and feel less attached to an iteration of your life that you haven’t achieved. And invisibility is a superpower that can be used to your advantage.”
If your doctor won’t go there, you can take it from me.
Lisa Selin Davis is a freelance writer and the author of the novels “Belly” and “Lost Stars.”

Comments

  1. Grâce à un puissant lanceur de sorts appelé dr. Ajayi, après 4 ans de séparation, j'ai pu me réconcilier avec mon mari, je ne crois jamais que nous reviendrons jamais ensemble, mais quand j'ai rencontré le Dr Ajayi, il m'a fait réaliser que rien n'est impossible, j'ai décidé de lui donner un essai , J'ai parlé au Dr Ajayi de mon mari et d'autres choses nécessaires qu'il doit savoir pour que mon mari revienne, il m'a dit des choses à faire et j'ai suivi ses instructions, après une semaine d'amour, mon mari m'a appelé et il suppliait de rentrer chez lui. depuis, notre mariage a fleuri et nous sommes en paix. Si vous avez besoin de l'aide d'un assistant pour tout type de problème, contactez dr. Ajayi Email: drajayi1990@gmail.com ou Whatsapp / Viber au +2347084887094 et vous serez la personne la plus heureuse du monde comme moi.

    ReplyDelete
  2. merci beaucoup DR.Ayo pour le merveilleux travail que vous avez fait pour moi et mes enfants pour ramener mon mari.J'avais de graves problèmes relationnels avec mon mari et il n'était plus engagé envers moi et nos enfants, quand je lui ai demandé quoi le problème était, il m'a dit qu'il était tombé amoureux de moi et qu'il voulait divorcer et que j'avais un cœur si brisé que j'ai pleuré toute la journée et la nuit, cela l'avait incité à emménager dans l'appartement de son ami. Tout a empiré parce qu'il a commencé à fréquenter les bars et les clubs de strip-tease fréquemment avec son ami, se saoulant et s'évanouissant. Il me menace toujours au téléphone chaque fois que je l'appelle à cause de tous les mauvais conseils que son ami lui a donnés. Je l'aime vraiment et nous étions mariés depuis 5 ans, ce qui nous a donné une belle fille et un fils. J'avais également perdu beaucoup d'argent en tant que thérapeute jusqu'à ce que je sois présenté à DR Ayo par un ami qu'il a aidé à épouser son petit ami d'enfance, cela m'a donné une confiance totale et la force de le récupérer. J'ai fait tout ce que DR.Ayo m'a demandé de faire et j'ai également suivi toutes les instructions qui m'ont été données par DR. Ayo à ma grande surprise après 72 heures, mon mari m'a appelé et s'est précipité à la maison avec une nouvelle voiture brune pour moi et nos enfants. Les choses ont juste changé entre nous émotionnellement, j'étais la femme la plus heureuse du monde ce jour-là. mon mari a maintenant un bon travail et a cessé de boire et il a cessé de garder des amis non pertinents. C'est un miracle que je n'aurais jamais cru possible car j'avais perdu tout espoir avant de retrouver DR. Ayo ... contactez-le aujourd'hui et récupérez votre amour, je peux vous assurer .... contactez-le sur son WhatsAPP +2347055691377 ou EMAIL: drayo47373@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete
  3. Bonjour mes amis, je m'appelle Aisha et je suis infirmière de profession, mon fiancé et moi sommes sortis ensemble depuis 6 ans mais nous avions de sérieux problèmes parce que sa mère ne voulait pas que nous nous marions, elle a utilisé une méthode différente pour s'assurer qu'elle mon fils ne me marie pas jusqu'à ce qu'il rompe enfin avec moi sans raison, je l'aime vraiment alors je recherche en ligne une solution rapide et j'ai eu la chance de rencontrer le Dr Ajayi, un grand lanceur de sorts béni par ses ancêtres avec des super pouvoirs, Je lui ai raconté par problème et lui ce qui cause la rupture entre nous et m'a dit les choses à faire pour que je retrouve la paix dans ma relation, j'ai suivi toutes ses instructions et aujourd'hui nous sommes heureux de nous marier et nous nous attendons notre premier bébé. Vous avez un problème dans votre domicile conjugal ou vous voulez que votre amoureux revienne après une rupture, contactez le Dr Ajayi dès maintenant pour une solution durable par e-mail: drajayi1990@gmail.com ou numéro Whatsapp / Viber: +2347084887094

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Article from "The New York Times" Madagascar and Vanila plantations Photographs and Text by FINBARR O’REILLY AUG. 29, 2018

 Comment:  I once found a bag near a shopping Mall in Paris ....  It looked like a girl owned it because it was full of makeup bits and pieces and there were a lot of cards in it , one of which belonged to a buisness school and this had her name on it.  The student was from Madagascar and i was sighing to myself when i called the school and the receptionist wasnt helpful in finding the person i was looking for.  I went to the consolate or Embassy one morning , spending money on a Taxi in order to give the bag to a safe person working there.  The consolate reminded me of  consolates or embassies representing very poor countries ...   .... where is  all the money and wealth going ? SAMBAVA, Madagascar — Bright moonlight reflected off broad banana leaves, but it was still hard to see the blue twine laced through the undergrowth, a tripwire meant to send the unwary tumbling to the ground. “This is the way the thieves come,” sai...

LA Republica : A Verona lo street artist Cibo combatte il fascismo e il razzismo con i murales

arti visive street & urban art A Verona lo street artist Cibo combatte il fascismo e il razzismo con i murales       By   Valentina Poli  - 31 luglio 2018 QUANDO L’ARTE PUÒ DAVVERO FARE LA DIFFERENZA NELLE NOSTRE CITTÀ: CIBO È UNO STREET ARTIST VERONESE, CLASSE 1982, CHE CON IL SUO LAVORO PROVA A CANCELLARE LE SCRITTE E I SIMBOLI D’ODIO CHE AFFOLLANO I MURI COPRENDOLE CON FRAGOLE, ANGURIE, MUFFIN E ALTRE COSE DA MANGIARE. LA SUA STORIA Lavoro dello street artist Cibo “Non lasciare spazio all’odio”  o  “No al fascismo. Sì alla cultura”  e ancora  “Se ci metto la faccia è perché ho la speranza che altri mi seguano nel rendere le città libere dall’odio e dai fascismi, qualsiasi bandiera portino oggi. Scendete in strada e non abbiate paura! La cultura e l’amore vincerà sempre su queste persone insipide!”.  Queste sono alcune frasi che si possono leggere sul profilo Facebook di  Pier Paolo Spinazzè , in ...

Abigail Heyman’s Groundbreaking Images of Women’s Lives (from The New Yorker)

Photo Booth Abigail Heyman’s Groundbreaking Images of Women’s Lives By Naomi Fry November 1, 2019 “Houma Teenage Beauty Contest,” 1971. Photographs by Abigail Heyman In a two-page spread featured early on in “ Growing up Female ,” a photography book by Abigail Heyman, from 1974, two black-and-white pictures are laid out side by side. The left-hand photo shows a reflection of a little girl, from the shoulders up, gazing at herself in a bathroom mirror. The child, who is perhaps four or five, with dark, wide-set eyes and a pixie haircut, is separated from her likeness by a counter, whose white-tiled expanse is littered with a variety of beauty products: perfume bottles, creams, and soaps. These quotidian markers of feminine routine are accompanied by an element of fantasy; gazing at herself, the little girl stretches a slinky into a makeshift tiara atop her head. Seemingly mesmerized by her own image, she is captured at the innoce...