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Home » The Menopause Nobody Talks About

The Menopause Nobody Talks About

Author:

Joanna Cismaru

Last Updated: 5/25/26
88 Comments

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Jo sitting on a black leather chair with two fluffy dogs, one white and one black and white, both draped across her lap and the armrest.

I prepared for the fire. I got something much weirder.

Jo sitting on a black leather chair with two fluffy dogs, one white and one black and white, both draped across her lap and the armrest.

For years I had a very specific picture of what menopause would look like. I would be hot. I would be fanning myself dramatically at the dinner table. I would throw the covers off in the middle of the night while Remo slept peacefully beside me, wrapped in blankets, completely unbothered, which is honestly the most realistic part of that whole fantasy.

Except Remo and I sleep in separate bedrooms, which is probably the best decision we have ever made as a couple. I say this without a single drop of irony. It is genuinely one of the pillars of a happy marriage and I will defend it to anyone who raises an eyebrow. I sleep with both dogs instead, which has turned out to be a perfectly reasonable arrangement because dogs are warm, loyal, and they do not steal the blanket with intent.

I was ready for the hot flashes. I had mentally prepared. I had a plan. A good fan. A very specific way I was going to describe it to people so they would understand what I was going through.

Instead I am cold. All the time. I wear a sweater in July. I sit in my sunroom most days with two blankets on me like a person who has forgotten what season it is. I have a sauna, which is genuinely good for me and I use it regularly, but I will be honest with you: half the time I go in there just to feel like a warm-blooded mammal again. The only warm things in my life at 2am are two dogs who have arranged themselves on top of me like a weighted blanket with opinions about personal space.

I am on Mounjaro, which I believe is responsible for the cold situation, and I am not complaining about it because the alternative was apparently being a human furnace. But the point is that my menopause looks nothing like what I was told menopause would look like. And the symptoms I do have are the ones nobody seems to want to talk about.

So I am going to talk about them. You are welcome.

My sister is two years older than me and is having a considerably worse menopause than I am. We talk on the phone almost every day. At some point these calls stopped being regular conversations and became something closer to therapy sessions where we take turns reporting symptoms, complaining loudly, and reminding each other that we are not in fact dying, just hormonal and deeply inconvenienced. It is the most useful relationship I have right now and I highly recommend finding your person for this specific purpose.

The Brain Fog

I want to start here because this one caught me completely off guard and also because I cannot remember what I was going to say next.

I am kidding. Sort of.

The brain fog is real and it is strange in a way that is hard to describe until you experience it. It is not forgetting things. Forgetting things I understand, I have been forgetting things my whole life, that is just personality. This is different. This is standing in the middle of a sentence and watching the end of it just float away. This is walking into the kitchen with a very specific purpose and arriving there as a complete stranger with no memory of the mission.

I have started a notes app on my phone. I have started narrating my intentions out loud. I walked down the hall the other day saying “going to get my glasses, going to get my glasses, going to get my glasses” like some kind of tired mantra, and I still got distracted by the dogs on the way.

The glasses were on my face.

This is my life now and I have made my peace with it mostly.

The Joints

Nobody told me my knees would have opinions. My knees did not used to have opinions. They were knees. They did their job quietly and without complaint. Now they have things to say about stairs. About sitting too long. About getting up from the floor, which has become an event that requires planning and occasionally a hand to hold.

My hands have joined in. My shoulders. My hips on certain mornings feel like they belong to someone older and considerably less optimistic than me.

Interestingly this is one area where Mounjaro has helped, which I did not expect and am deeply grateful for. The inflammation that apparently comes with the territory has quieted down considerably. I mention this not to sell you anything because I am absolutely not qualified to do that, but because when I was in the middle of it I would have given anything to know that it could get better and that there were different ways to get there.

It got better. Your version of better may look different from mine. But it gets better.

The Hair

I am going to say this plainly: the hair situation is not fun and anyone who makes it sound like a gentle transition is either lying or very lucky.

I noticed it in the shower first. Then in my brush. Then everywhere, constantly, in a way that made me do math I did not want to be doing about how much hair a person can reasonably lose before it becomes a problem worth panicking about.

I have not panicked. I have bought better shampoo. I have taken the supplements. I have had several stern internal conversations with my hair about loyalty and the years we have spent together.

And then I gave up and booked hair extensions because I simply cannot take it anymore and life is too short to mourn hair when there is a solution available. I am not ashamed of this decision. I am in fact very pleased with this decision. Sometimes the answer is not acceptance, it is extensions, and that is a completely valid path forward.

My sister, for the record, is in a worse situation than me on this front and our daily phone calls have included at least three separate conversations about hair alone. We are getting through it together, one complaint at a time.

What I will say is that this is the one that hit me emotionally in a way I was not prepared for. Hair feels like yours in a particular way and watching it thin is a specific kind of grief that is small but real. I am allowed to say that and so are you. And then go book the extensions. Mine is booked for June, I can’t wait!

The Emotions

Close up selfie of Jo smiling with a fluffy grey and white dog nuzzling against her cheek by a window with white blinds.

I cry now. At things. Many things. Things I would not have cried at before. Commercials. Songs that come on in the car at an unexpected moment. Anything involving a dog in any capacity whatsoever.

I cannot watch movies with dogs in them anymore. I do not mean sad dog movies. I mean any movie where a dog appears on screen for longer than thirty seconds because my brain has decided that all dogs are in peril and the appropriate response is immediate tears. I had to stop watching a perfectly cheerful film recently because a golden retriever ran across the background of a scene and something in me just broke open.

I have banned myself from dramas entirely. Anything with a sad storyline, a difficult relationship, a sick character, or music that builds emotionally is completely off limits. My viewing diet is now essentially cooking shows and reality television about people decorating houses and I am genuinely fine with this because my nervous system cannot handle anything else right now.

I asked my doctor about this and he said the emotional volatility is completely normal and related to fluctuating estrogen levels. Which is useful information. It does not stop me crying at the dog food aisle when there is a picture of a cute beagle puppy (we used to have a beagle) on the packaging but at least now I know why.

The Tiredness

Not regular tired. I want to be very clear about this distinction because regular tired I know. Regular tired is solved by sleep. This is a different category of tired that exists independently of sleep, does not respond to coffee the way it used to, and seems to arrive at completely random intervals with no warning and no apology.

I can sleep eight hours and wake up and need to sit down. I can have a perfectly reasonable day with nothing strenuous in it and hit 3pm like I have just run something I definitely did not train for. The dogs at least understand this. They are available for napping at all hours and do not judge the frequency.

What I have learned is that fighting it is pointless and resting is not weakness, it is just information. My body is doing something enormous under the surface, hormonally and chemically and in ways I do not fully understand, and the tiredness is a side effect of that process. It is not a character flaw. It is biology.

I repeat this to myself often. Some days I even believe it.

The Cold

Jo reclining in the sunroom with two large fluffy dogs draped across her legs in a bright room with floor to ceiling windows overlooking fields.

I promised to come back to this one. I am cold. Permanently, inexplicably, medically improbably cold. The only warm things in my life are the two dogs who sleep on my bed and they take their responsibilities very seriously. One is a full body situation pressed against my legs. The other is exclusively interested in the pillow area. Between the two of them I am adequately heated through the night, which is something I never anticipated needing from a dog but here we are.

I want the women going through the hot flashes to know that I see you and I understand why you look at me with a very specific expression when I mention the sweater situation. My sister is one of you and she calls me from the parking lot of a grocery store some days because she needs to stand next to the frozen food section just to feel like a normal temperature human being. I listen. I sympathize. I am wearing a cardigan while we talk.


What I Actually Wish Someone Had Told Me

Jo and her sister smiling together at an event, Jo wearing a red cowboy hat and her sister in a denim jacket, both laughing.
back when neither of us had any idea what was coming

Menopause is not one thing. It is a collection of things that are all slightly different for every person and that do not necessarily look like the version you were expecting. Some women have hot flashes. Some have cold. Some have the brain fog so thick they could cut it. Some have the joint pain. Most have the tiredness. Almost all have the hair thing to some degree. And almost none of us were given a complete and honest map before we got here.

Find your sister, your friend, your person, whoever she is. The one you can call and say the real things to and who will call you back from a grocery store parking lot at 4pm because she needed the frozen food aisle and also someone to tell. That relationship is worth more right now than any supplement or any article or any list of tips from someone who has not been in it.

Get the bloodwork done. Talk to your doctor. Be honest about what you are experiencing even when it feels embarrassing or dramatic or like something you should be able to handle quietly. You should not have to handle it quietly.

Get the extensions if you want them. Cry at the dog commercial. Wear the cardigan in August. Sleep with the dogs.

And call your sister.

Read this next:

  • Thursdays at My House
  • Why Willpower Was Never Enough
  • I Didn’t Know There Was Noise
Joanna Cismaru Avatar
Joanna Cismaru
I’m Joanna Cismaru, the cook, writer, and professional taste tester behind AllMyCravings. I traded software code for cinnamon rolls years ago and never looked back. These days, I’m sharing the recipes I actually make in my own kitchen. The cozy, crave worthy, everyday kind that doesn’t need a culinary degree or twelve trips to a specialty store. If it’s easy, flavorful, and makes you want seconds, you’ll find it here.
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88 responses

  1. Tori S.
    May 25, 2026

    Menopause is no joke and everyone’s is unique to them. I got hit hard young and it lasted forever, or so it seems. At it’s worst hot flashes every 15 minutes, and icy chills between. Out of curiosity I actually took my temperature at the height of the hot flash and the depth of the freeze and it was noticeably above and below normal. None of the menopause medications worked, and I could go from zero to homicidal at the drop of a hat. I learned the fine art of walking away before talking. I got through it finally, but would only wish it on no one. It will teach you patience, endurance, forebarence and the ability to realize all those little things you thought were so important really aren’t. You are a survivor, you will endure.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      The fine art of walking away before talking is honestly wisdom that should be taught everywhere, menopause or not! Thank you for sharing your journey and for the encouragement, knowing there is a finish line means everything! 😊

      Reply
  2. john skinner
    May 25, 2026

    Hi Joanna, I follow you faithfully and feel for your pain. I have three of your five issues and I’m a male. I hope you get thru this soon. Looking forward to more recipes after you recover.
    God bless you and your family.
    Your faithful subscriber, John S.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      John, the fact that you read and related to this means so much, menopause symptoms do not discriminate and you are very much seen here too! Thank you for your faithfulness and kindness, it truly means the world! 😊

      Reply
  3. Dorothy A Shull
    May 25, 2026

    I went through Menopause at 47, it ended at 50. I thought great, no big deal. Wrong. I’m going on 82, and now I have night sweats, I’m so hot I can’t stand the sheet, much less a blanket on me. Not every night, thank goodness, but way too often.

    My doctor thinks I’m crazy. My friend think I’m crazy. Who has flashes at this age? Me. And the worst part is, women don’t discuss these things. So, thank you for telling us about your situation.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      At 82 and still dealing with night sweats, you are absolutely not crazy and your doctor needs to do better! Thank you for sharing this because it is such an important reminder that this journey looks different for every woman and we need to keep talking about it! 😊

      Reply
  4. Kelly
    May 25, 2026

    I laughed, agreed and I teared up.
    It resonated so much with myself. I’m also recovering from a mastectomy because of Cancer. Thank you so much for being honest as I often find articles try to sell something or are all medical language. Thank you 🥰

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      Sending you so much strength and love through your recovery, you are incredibly brave! So glad the article felt real and honest, that is always the goal, no fluff and no agenda! 😊

      Reply
  5. Lillian
    May 25, 2026

    Hello Jo from sunny Brisbane Australia.
    I have to say I absolutely love everything you post. All your recipes are fantastic, well explained and turn out pretty great. The menopause journey is an interesting one, you seem to be managing it on your terms.
    The dogs are gorgeous.
    Wishing you nothing but the best, to you and your beautiful family. 🥰

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      Hello all the way from Brisbane, thank you so much for the warm words and sunshine! So happy the recipes are working out for you and yes the dogs are absolutely the best part of every day! 😊

      Reply
  6. bonnie 1016
    May 25, 2026

    I have the knees, and the hair, and sometimes hot flashes, and sometimes cold spells. And the forgetfulness.
    Thanks for saying it. It helps me know I am not alone.

    Wish I had a sister!!

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      You are absolutely not alone in any of it and that is exactly why I wanted to talk about it! And for what it is worth, this little corner of the internet feels like a pretty wonderful sisterhood! 😊

      Reply
  7. Gail Zacharchuk
    May 25, 2026

    I bear you and your sister completely. But i can’t tell if menopause made me cold or not because i have been cold all my life. Maybe it’s colder now lol.

    The brain fog is horrible. Sometimes i wonder if Alzheimers is kicking in.

    All my joints hurt and maybe because of the instant 15 lb weight gain. And you are very correct in saying no one told is about this and why not?!!

    And crying about animals in general and dogs in particular…ohhh yaaa 😭.

    Hang in there. That is all any woman can do. And yea i have my own room and i love it.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      The crying over dogs and animals is absolutely real and completely uncontrollable, we are all right there with you! Hang in there too, and enjoy that room of your own, honestly it sounds like a dream! 😊

      Reply
  8. Chris W.
    May 25, 2026

    I totally get the cold – however, mine is from my blood pressure medication. Right after starting on it, I called my nurse practitioner and was told “that’s your new normal”. Goody, right? So I just deal with it because it’s meds I have to take and they work well for me. I always get strange looks from those who aren’t feeling the way I do – cold always. I know how fortunate I am at my age to only have to take what I do. The aches are also a major pain but the way I deal with them is to go on the treadmill. Sounds weird but the exercise works for me to keep the joints working. My hips were so bad that I was sure they needed to be replaced but I don’t even have any arthritis in them – I was lucky. A week or so ago I was in to see my nurse practitioner and she was talking about always being cold and having the brain fog thing. She’s 57 and this was her way of going through menopause according to what she told me. It seems to me that you’re doing what you have to do to manage the symptoms and I think that’s all you can do..so lucky to have the dogs! They’re furry, warm, and cute… Assuming that picture is of you and your sister – you both have beautiful teeth. I wish I would have had someone to talk to when I was going through that; it would have helped a lot. Oh – and make sure that you have lots of really pretty sweaters so that you always feel like you look wonderful – it’ll help.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      The pretty sweaters advice is genuinely the best tip I have received through all of this, and yes that is me and my sister and thank you so much for the kind words! So glad you found ways to manage and that the treadmill is keeping those hips happy! 😊

      Reply
  9. Charley
    May 25, 2026

    OMG! Been there. Done that. Joanna, did you know that 7% of people on Ozempic and similar diet meds suffer from hair loss. I also thought my hair loss was menopausal
    but when my eye brows fell out as well as my eye lashes I began looking into other causes. It was the drugs!!! I loved losing weight but my sweet husband asked me …”What’s more important to you, losing weight or losing your hair?” Of course I said “losing my hair”. I said I would rather be fat than bald. Truthfully Joanna, those of us with Slavic origins are nature’s St Bernards. In our wildest dreams we will never be Greyhounds no matter how much we struggle to lose weight. I quit taking the diet meds and I am happy to say that my eye brows are almost filled in, my eye lashes are slowly restoring, and best of all, my hair is starting to grow in again. As a life long St Bernard I have finally recognized that I will never be slender but I enjoy having hair, eye brows and eye lashes so what if I’m fat. As long as I am loved by those who matter most to me who cares what everyone else thinks of my appearance. I hope you can find a solution to your dilemma. More importantly, ask yourself what matters most to you.

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      The St Bernard versus Greyhound analogy is absolutely brilliant and honestly so liberating to read! Thank you for sharing your experience with the hair loss, that is such an important thing to be aware of and I am so glad your brows and lashes are making their comeback! 😊

      Reply
      1. Charley
        May 25, 2026

        Joanna, the point I was trying to make was that your hair loss could be from the diet meds. Don’t wait to lose your eye brows and lashes as well. If you stop your meds for awhile and see your hair start to come back you’ll have your answer.

      2. Joanna Cismaru
        May 25, 2026

        Thank you so much for following up and for caring enough to make sure the message landed! It is definitely something I am keeping a close eye on with my doctor and I truly appreciate the concern! 😊

  10. Rodger Caramanica Sr
    May 25, 2026

    Hormone therapy works wonders

    Reply
    1. Joanna Cismaru
      May 25, 2026

      Thank you so much for the suggestion and I am so glad it has worked well for you! It is just not the right fit for me personally but I appreciate the kindness behind the recommendation! 😊

      Reply
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We’re Joanna and Remo, a wife and husband duo obsessed with good food, simple ingredients, and turning everyday cravings into recipes you’ll actually want to make.

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