Rage over a dish in the sink. Brain fog mid-sentence. Crying on the kitchen floor for no reason. If you've been asking "what is wrong with me?" this episode explains what's actually happening, and it's not what you think.
You snapped at your partner over a bowl in the sink. Not irritated. Full rage. Over a bowl. And now you're standing there thinking, what is wrong with me?
Or maybe it was the meeting where your brain just... stopped. Mid-sentence. Words gone. Everyone waiting. And you laughed it off, but inside you were panicking.
I get it. I've been there. I sat on my kitchen floor one night crying over jeans that didn't fit, except it wasn't really about the jeans. It was about feeling like I was living in someone else's body and someone else's brain. And I'm a nutrition coach. I help women with this stuff every single day. So yeah, the "what is wrong with me" thoughts were loud.
Here's what I want you to know. Nothing is wrong with you. What you're experiencing has a name, and it has an explanation. And it probably started way before your periods changed.
In this episode I walk you through why perimenopause often shows up as emotional and cognitive symptoms first. The rage, the brain fog, the 3AM wake-ups, that feeling of walking around without skin. These aren't character flaws. Your hormones are fluctuating, not dropping in a straight line like we were told, and your brain is trying to function while the software updates in the background. Of course everything feels harder.
I also talk about why your doctor's basic bloodwork might come back "normal" while you feel anything but, and I give you a simple 7-day tracking exercise I call your compass calibration. Two minutes a day, max. The goal is to start seeing patterns instead of feeling like everything is random chaos.
If you've been quietly wondering what happened to you, this one's for you.
In this episode: