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Perimenopause Power: Boston Women Ditch Bro-Science and Lift Heavy with Dr. Stacy Sims
Published 4 weeks, 1 day ago
Description
This is your Women's Health Podcast podcast.
Welcome to the Women's Health Podcast, where we empower you to own your body and thrive through every phase. I'm your host, empowering women just like you to navigate perimenopause with strength and confidence. Today, we're diving into perimenopause, that transformative time when your hormones shift, but your power doesn't. Let's get real and reclaim your vitality.
Picture this: you're in your 40s, juggling career, family, and that nagging fatigue, hot flashes, or mood swings that make you feel like you're losing control. Perimenopause, the transition before menopause, often starts in your mid-40s and can last up to 10 years, according to experts like Dr. Stacy Sims, exercise physiologist and author of Roar and Next Level. She reminds us women are not small men, and our biology demands a smarter approach to health.
Imagine sitting down with Dr. Sims in our Boston studio, just like Mel Robbins did on her podcast. I'd ask her: Dr. Sims, why do so many women exercise like men during perimenopause, and what's backfiring? She'd explain how male-centered research has led us astray, causing fatigue instead of energy. Fasted workouts? Skip them, listeners, they tank your metabolism when estrogen dips. Instead, fuel with protein and sprint intervals to build muscle and stabilize moods.
Next question: How do we sync training with our cycles in perimenopause? Dr. Sims would say power up in the follicular phase with strength training, then ease into recovery as progesterone fluctuates, preventing burnout and protecting bones. What about nutrition? Ditch the carbs overload, she advises, and prioritize 30 grams of protein at every meal to combat muscle loss and insulin resistance, key perimenopause saboteurs.
I'd probe deeper: Listeners are scared of weight gain and brain fog, Dr. Sims. What's the game-changer? She'd empower you: Strength train three times weekly, lift heavy, and eat for your hormones, not trends. Women like us in our 50s, balancing motherhood and careers, can roar through this by rejecting bro-science and embracing female physiology.
Key takeaways to own your perimenopause: One, strength training is non-negotiable, boosting metabolism and mood. Two, eat protein-first meals to steady blood sugar and energy. Three, listen to your body, not the scale, and track symptoms with apps like Clue. Four, talk to your doctor about options like hormone therapy if needed, as Dr. Jordan Robertson from Real Integrative Medicine emphasizes overlooked women's health truths.
You're not declining, listeners; you're evolving. Armed with this knowledge from pioneers like Dr. Stacy Sims, step into your power, train smarter, and thrive.
Thank you for tuning in to the Women's Health Podcast. Subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Welcome to the Women's Health Podcast, where we empower you to own your body and thrive through every phase. I'm your host, empowering women just like you to navigate perimenopause with strength and confidence. Today, we're diving into perimenopause, that transformative time when your hormones shift, but your power doesn't. Let's get real and reclaim your vitality.
Picture this: you're in your 40s, juggling career, family, and that nagging fatigue, hot flashes, or mood swings that make you feel like you're losing control. Perimenopause, the transition before menopause, often starts in your mid-40s and can last up to 10 years, according to experts like Dr. Stacy Sims, exercise physiologist and author of Roar and Next Level. She reminds us women are not small men, and our biology demands a smarter approach to health.
Imagine sitting down with Dr. Sims in our Boston studio, just like Mel Robbins did on her podcast. I'd ask her: Dr. Sims, why do so many women exercise like men during perimenopause, and what's backfiring? She'd explain how male-centered research has led us astray, causing fatigue instead of energy. Fasted workouts? Skip them, listeners, they tank your metabolism when estrogen dips. Instead, fuel with protein and sprint intervals to build muscle and stabilize moods.
Next question: How do we sync training with our cycles in perimenopause? Dr. Sims would say power up in the follicular phase with strength training, then ease into recovery as progesterone fluctuates, preventing burnout and protecting bones. What about nutrition? Ditch the carbs overload, she advises, and prioritize 30 grams of protein at every meal to combat muscle loss and insulin resistance, key perimenopause saboteurs.
I'd probe deeper: Listeners are scared of weight gain and brain fog, Dr. Sims. What's the game-changer? She'd empower you: Strength train three times weekly, lift heavy, and eat for your hormones, not trends. Women like us in our 50s, balancing motherhood and careers, can roar through this by rejecting bro-science and embracing female physiology.
Key takeaways to own your perimenopause: One, strength training is non-negotiable, boosting metabolism and mood. Two, eat protein-first meals to steady blood sugar and energy. Three, listen to your body, not the scale, and track symptoms with apps like Clue. Four, talk to your doctor about options like hormone therapy if needed, as Dr. Jordan Robertson from Real Integrative Medicine emphasizes overlooked women's health truths.
You're not declining, listeners; you're evolving. Armed with this knowledge from pioneers like Dr. Stacy Sims, step into your power, train smarter, and thrive.
Thank you for tuning in to the Women's Health Podcast. Subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI