How Perimenopause Shows Up Differently for Every Woman
Exploring individual journeys through the lens of genetics, culture, and lifestyle
We don’t all wake up at 3am.
We don’t all forget names mid-sentence.
We don’t all melt in a hot flash or cry in the pasta aisle (though, for the record — I’ve done both).
Perimenopause isn’t a one-size-fits-all experience.
It’s more like a deeply personal, ever-shifting landscape that shows up differently in every woman’s body, mind, and life — shaped by genetics, lifestyle, environment, and culture.
And yet… so many of us are made to feel like we’re doing it wrong if our symptoms don’t match someone else’s.
There’s No “Right” Way to Experience This
For some women, perimenopause tiptoes in. A little fatigue here, a skipped period there.
For others (hi, me), it kicks the door down with mood swings, soul-deep exhaustion, and a hormonal version of Jekyll and Hyde.
You may:
• Sleep like a log but lose your libido
• Experience memory fog but sail through emotionally
• Feel anxious, weepy, numb, or completely fine
All of these experiences are valid.
Why the Differences? It’s Not Random.
1. Genetics Plays a Big Role
If your mum, aunt, or older sister had a bumpy or smooth menopause transition, chances are you’ll see echoes of that in your own journey. Some women experience early menopause; others stay regular into their mid-50s. Hormonal thresholds vary from body to body.
2. Cultural Conditioning Matters
In some cultures, menopause is seen as a revered rite of passage — a shift into wisdom. In others, it’s shrouded in shame, silence, or the pressure to “stay young forever.”
How we were raised to think about aging, emotions, and womanhood shapes how we meet this transition.
Do we resist it?
Do we accept it with grace?
Do we even recognize what’s happening?
3. Lifestyle + Stress Load Impact the Ride
Our modern lifestyles — full of caffeine, screens, stress, and go-go-go — can amplify symptoms.
Add in emotional labor, caregiving, career demands, or grief (which many of us face in our 40s), and it’s no wonder our systems feel overwhelmed.
Women who have access to rest, support, good nutrition, and movement often navigate this phase differently than those who are burned out, unsupported, or just surviving.
Why Comparison Hurts More Than It Helps
Scrolling social media or reading forums can quickly make you feel like you’re “behind” or “overreacting.”
Someone’s thriving. Someone else is on hormone therapy. Another woman’s doing daily yoga and says she’s never felt better. Meanwhile, you’re struggling to brush your teeth or finish a sentence.
Your journey is not a failure. It’s just yours.
What’s common isn’t always universal. And what’s “normal” isn’t always helpful.
Let’s Normalize the Individual Journey
What would happen if we stopped comparing and started conversing?
If we said:
“This is what’s showing up for me. What about you?”
Instead of:
“Is this normal?” or “Am I crazy?”
Every woman deserves to feel safe enough to explore this phase in her own way — not to be reduced to a list of symptoms, or dismissed by cookie-cutter solutions.
A Pause That’s Personal — And Powerful
Perimenopause is not the same for every woman, and that’s exactly why we need more stories, more nuance, and more spaces that honor individual truth.
This isn’t just about hormones.
It’s about identity, power, legacy, and healing.
So if you’re feeling confused, disconnected, or even just curious — you’re not behind, and you’re definitely not alone.
You’re just unfolding, in your own time.
And that’s something to be deeply proud of.
Want to hear more personal stories like this? Subscribe to Her Mindful Pause — a gentle space for women navigating perimenopause with honesty, softness, and support.
This is really powerful! Very insightful article!!