What's Happening to Me

What perimenopause actually is, who it affects, and why you might not feel like yourself.

Pair-Reviewed · Concord Method
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Understanding Your Condition

Many women don't walk into a doctor's office and say "I think I'm in perimenopause." They say something closer to "I don't feel like myself."

In a study of over 1,500 women in the US and Canada, 63.3% reported not feeling like themselves at least half the time over the previous three months (38). That feeling has a name in the research — "not feeling like myself," or NFLM — and in that study, the symptoms driving it were not the ones most people associate with menopause.

What Actually Drives That Feeling

In that study, the strongest predictors of not feeling like yourself were fatigue, feeling overwhelmed, and anxiety — not hot flashes. Fatigue correlated with NFLM at r=0.491 and feeling overwhelmed at r=0.463, while hot flashes came in at r=0.277 and vaginal dryness at r=0.205. Five symptom groups — anxiety and vigilance, fatigue and pain, brain fog, sexual symptoms, and volatile mood — together explained 41.8% of NFLM scores.

This matters because many women don't connect their fatigue, brain fog, or mood changes to perimenopause. There is anticipatory guidance for puberty. There is anticipatory guidance for pregnancy. Many women do not receive an equivalent kind of guidance for perimenopause — and so when the symptoms arrive, they often lack a framework for what is happening to them. They don't know that what they're experiencing has a physiological explanation.

What Perimenopause Actually Is

Perimenopause is the menopausal transition — a distinct physiological phase where ovarian function fluctuates, hormone levels become unpredictable, and menstrual patterns change before eventually stopping. It is not simply "early menopause." By 2030, over 1.2 billion women worldwide will be in menopause or postmenopause (120).

During this transition, fluctuating hormones affect multiple systems simultaneously, which is why symptoms span mood, sleep, cognition, and physical function rather than appearing in isolation. The Mood, Sleep & Cognition section explains how these pathways work.

Perimenopause also involves ongoing contraception considerations. Guidelines recommend contraception for 1 year after the final menstrual period for women over 50, and for 2 years for women under 50. This is one of several ways perimenopause involves its own management considerations, distinct from postmenopause.

Your Experience Depends on Who You Are

Symptom duration and severity vary across populations, and studies show important differences by race, ethnicity, stress exposure, and healthcare context. The commonly cited "average duration of 2-5 years" does not apply equally to everyone.

Across 41 low- and middle-income countries, the prevalence of , joint pain, and sexual concerns appears comparable to high-income countries — but data on severity and burden are scarce, and most studies used methods that make direct comparison difficult (69).

The Workplace Gap

In a survey of 1,642 US employees, 83% had current or prior experience with menopause. The symptoms with the most workplace impact were sleep changes (63%), memory changes (49%), hot flashes (39%), and anxiety (39%). Nearly half (47%) reported difficulty concentrating, and 41% reported increased stress. Only 9% received any workplace support. The estimated annual cost in lost US workdays is $1.8 billion (71).

If Your Situation Is Different

Premature ovarian insufficiency (before age 40) and early menopause (ages 40-45) are clinically distinct situations where hormone therapy serves a different purpose — it functions as primary prevention for cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and osteoporosis, not merely symptom relief. Dosing, monitoring, and management logic all differ from standard menopause care. See the Special Populations section for full guidance.

Questions to Bring to Your Doctor

  • "Could what I'm experiencing — the fatigue, the brain fog, the mood changes — be perimenopause?"
  • "I've been told menopause symptoms last 2-5 years, but mine have lasted longer. Is that within the range of what's expected for someone like me?"
  • "I'm still having periods — do I still need contraception? For how long after my periods stop?"
  • "My symptoms started before age 45. Does that change how we should approach this?"
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The Concord Method

Multiple independent AI agents work in coordinated teams. A research pair analyzes published medical literature and compares interpretations. A writing team translates findings into patient-accessible language. An editorial review verifies citation accuracy. A verification swarm traces every claim back to its PubMed source.

Cooperative AI agents working in pairs, using a notation system that forces uncertainty to be visible — they can’t hide what they don’t know from each other.