Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK let's talk about it here...
Why the heck didn't someone tell me that tingling extremities can be a symptom of menopause. I got an MRI for it, and they found nothing. Then it hit me that this started happening right around 50, and so I googled it.
And the vertigo.
Seems like hotflashes and mood swings are taked about as it related to menopause but not the more obscure symptoms.
Anyone else?
Me! My feet were tingling yesterday and I was like wtf is this?!?! I'm glad I saw your post. I've also experienced cold flashes, in addition to hot flashes. No one told me about that and each time it's happened, I thought I have the flu/'rona/ a fever, etc. Nope, hormones!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Menopause was really being discussed for the first time in the 80’s as a non-taboo subject. That’s why it was discussed more. Also, hormone replacement therapy was big business.
Actually, it was discussed quite a bit in the 60’s and 70’s as well.
I think it's a few things:
1) Demographics. Back then the baby boomers were going through it. They're just a larger group of people. Now it's GenX. We're small, nobody listens to us anyway.
2) An opening up of the conversation. The 60s and 70s ushered in an era of openness about women's health that didn't exist earlier. Women in the 1950s didn't discuss these things in the media, so they just weren't there. The taboos fell away, so the conversation expanded then.
3) Big pharma had something to sell back then. HRT became big, so it was discussed alot more. Then they discovered a connection to hormone-fueled breast cancer, so that went away.
Anonymous wrote:OK let's talk about it here...
Why the heck didn't someone tell me that tingling extremities can be a symptom of menopause. I got an MRI for it, and they found nothing. Then it hit me that this started happening right around 50, and so I googled it.
And the vertigo.
Seems like hotflashes and mood swings are taked about as it related to menopause but not the more obscure symptoms.
Anyone else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like perimenopause issues are discussed much more.
I'm in a weird place at age 54. Most of my friends started experiencing perimenopause symptoms in their early to mid-40s and discussed them. I felt the same as always and had cycles like clockworks. Now, many of my friends are completely done and I am just starting with the symptoms, missing a period here and there. Am I going to still have periods when I'm 60?
In your honest assessment would you say you look younger than most 54 year old women? It would seem to me that women who go through menopause later, look youthful for longer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Menopause was really being discussed for the first time in the 80’s as a non-taboo subject. That’s why it was discussed more. Also, hormone replacement therapy was big business.
Actually, it was discussed quite a bit in the 60’s and 70’s as well.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like perimenopause issues are discussed much more.
I'm in a weird place at age 54. Most of my friends started experiencing perimenopause symptoms in their early to mid-40s and discussed them. I felt the same as always and had cycles like clockworks. Now, many of my friends are completely done and I am just starting with the symptoms, missing a period here and there. Am I going to still have periods when I'm 60?
Anonymous wrote:I remember it being discussed a lot in the 80's too, OP.
In fact, the episode I remember most of "The Golden Girls" is the one where Blanche goes through menopause. Do you remember that one? She doesn't get her period and thinks she might be pregnant, but it turns out she is going through menopause?
Anonymous wrote:I feel like perimenopause issues are discussed much more.
I'm in a weird place at age 54. Most of my friends started experiencing perimenopause symptoms in their early to mid-40s and discussed them. I felt the same as always and had cycles like clockworks. Now, many of my friends are completely done and I am just starting with the symptoms, missing a period here and there. Am I going to still have periods when I'm 60?
Anonymous wrote:Menopause was really being discussed for the first time in the 80’s as a non-taboo subject. That’s why it was discussed more. Also, hormone replacement therapy was big business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like perimenopause issues are discussed much more.
I'm in a weird place at age 54. Most of my friends started experiencing perimenopause symptoms in their early to mid-40s and discussed them. I felt the same as always and had cycles like clockworks. Now, many of my friends are completely done and I am just starting with the symptoms, missing a period here and there. Am I going to still have periods when I'm 60?
You may be one of the lucky ones who goes through the "change" in 18months to 4 years.
-49 yo in her 9th year of perimenopause
Anonymous wrote:It's just you. We still discuss menopause around the dinner table 4 or 5 times a week.