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"Hotter Than a Red-Assed Bee"

By Carol Leonard

Carol Leonard, a foremother of the Women's Spirituality movement, is a New Hampshire Certified Midwife and has been practicing midwifery for more than 20 years. She presents her workshops, "Women's Ordinary Magic," which explores women's blood mysteries of all ages and "Witches, Midwives, and Other Healers" to women's groups around the country.

So this was it. My cycles had definitely become erratic and much shorter and I had to finally admit to myself that "it" was beginning. The menopause I had always thought about as "in the future" was, well … now. So, with much excitement and some trepidation, I began to gather all the information I could find to help me make informed decisions regarding my health and well-being during this confusing, transitional journey. In addition to reading all I could get my hands on about mid-life transitioning (including some great stuff in the supermarket check-out aisles), I started to interview various types of health-care providers to see what they had to say. I resolved to keep an open mind, particularly when it came to drugs such as Hormone Replacement Therapy. Now, this was patently ridiculous. I am a quintessential Baby-Boomer. I am almost always passionately opinionated about everything. Also, I am a child of the 60's -- the pills we were supposed to take were never the more interesting way to go. Needless to say, my research took me from conventional, mainstream medicine to shamans. Oh well, so be it. The following is a couple of years worth of (blatantly biased) research on menopause in a nutshell:

At the turn of the century, the average life expectancy for women was 55; thus menopause coincided with women's final years. In the United States today, the average age at menopause is 52 and our life expectancy is 80! This means many of us will live a good 30 years after menopause. And yet, menopause is still viewed as a disease of the aging associated with disintegration and dying. Menopause is only the end of fertility, not the end of life or productivity. Now, with the approaching millennium, a Baby-Boomer turns 50 every seven minutes (an astounding statistic). There will be 50 million Women of Menopause by the year 2013. A planet full of Changing Women -- imagine the possibilities! It is up to us to de-pathologize this natural event and make our non-reproductive years the most powerful productive years of our lives.

It is ironic that fluctuating hormone levels have been blamed for supposed irrationality and instability, yet after menopause when our hormone levels are not longer cyclic, we are considered estrogen-deprived, and still abnormal. Has it never occurred to medical researchers to trust in our bodies' inherent wisdom, that perhaps women are supposed to have decreasing hormone levels at this phase of our lives? The medicalization of the menopause experience describes menopause as a "deficiency syndrome" or "ovarian failure" and teaches that something is lost or inadequate and needs to be replaced. The reality is that ovarian estrogen is already declining after about age 25, and estrogen made by the adrenal glands has already begun to increase. Estriol made by the body's fatty tissue is mainly what supplements the remaining ovarian secretions after menopause. Other body sites make the same hormones as well; these include the liver, breasts, hair follicles and the pineal gland. With adrenal secretions, all these body sites together supply all the estrogen needed by a woman who will not be bearing a child. In the truest sense, for most women there is no "estrogen deficiency" after menopause.

Unfortunately, in the "fast-food" mentality of our culture, we have come to expect immediate solutions to our troubles, preferably in pill form to make annoying symptoms disappear. For Changing Women, this means the "fountain of youth" in the form of Hormone Replacement Therapy.

The widespread use of exogenous (produced outside the body) estrogen began in the mid-60's (oh those drug-crazed years). By 1975, Premarin, a form of estrogen made from pregnant mare's urine (hence Pre-Mar-In), became one of the top five most prescribed drugs in the US. In December 1975, two studies were published which reported that women taking estrogen had a 5 to 14 times increased rate of endometrial cancer.(1) The risk was linked to dosage and the amount of time the estrogen was taken. Three years exposure to unopposed estrogen caused abnormal endometrial changes in 34% of women with a uterus. 6%of the women had to have hysterectomies during the 3 year study.(2) In 1977, the American College of Obstetrician and Gynecologists unsuccessfully sued the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) to block a requirement for patient information inserts for all estrogen products. Women now had access to information about the risks of estrogen. The drug companies reacted with increased media coverage, and by the mid-1980's, they were promoting "HRT" or "Hormone Replacement Therapy." This was prescribing progestogens with does of estrogen, the thinking being that the increase in risk associated with estrogen was diminished by adding progestogen.(3) This means in laywoman's terms, that when estrogen is taken with progesterone, the increased risk of uterine cancer is canceled out, and the two hormones taken together is called HRT. (Conversely, women without uteruses do not need to take progesterone.)

Osteoporosis

In 1984, based on osteoporosis studies conducted with white women only, it was concluded that estrogen use reduced the number of hip and wrist fractures and delayed postmenopausal bone loss. The use of HRT has been approved by the FDA only for the prevention of osteoporosis; none of the other claims for HRT have been substantiated enough to warrant FDA approval. And certainly, no study to date has proven that all women who don't take HRT are at risk for osteoporosis. Yet HRT is routinely prescribed as a matter of course for postmenopausal women. In fact, in a 1992 study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, the overall incidence of hip fractures in post-menopausal women was 9.2% as opposed to 11.2 in women who were not taking HRT.(4) This is a good statistic to consider if you are weighing the pros and cons of HRT. (See further information on osteoporosis.)

Heart Disease

Estrogen can increase good (HDL) cholesterol, an important risk factor for health disease in women. Several studies found that women who used estrogen were less likely to have heart attacks than women who didn't use estrogen. It is not clear whether estrogen itself is responsible for this protection, or if it is due to other lifestyle factors common in estrogen users, i.e. more health consciousness in general and also, the women who took estrogen in their early studies may have been healthier than those who didn't since doctors were wary of giving estrogen to women with existing risk factors for heart disease, like smoking. The package insert for estrogen (estradiol) itself states, "The protection shown may have been caused by characteristics of the estrogen-treated women, and not by the estrogen treatment itself. In general, treated women were slimmer, more physically active, and were less likely to have heart disease [to begin with] than the untreated women." (Berlex Laboratories, 1996) Although the evidence was much weaker than usually required for approval of a new drug intended for long term use in healthy people, in 1990 Wyeth-Ayerst asked the FDA to approve Premarin to prevent heart disease in post-menopausal women. The FDA refused to grant approval, but even so, many clinicians now recommend that menopausal women take estrogen to reduce the risk of heart disease.(5) No research was published on the heart disease rates of women who took HRT, even though this combination was common by the late 1980's. It is now known that the most commonly used progestin, Provera, "significantly interfered with the positive effect of estrogen alone on HDL cholesterol levels" and "these forms of HRT were also found to increase triglyceride levels which are a risk factor for heart disease in women.(6) In other words, progesterone has the opposite effect on cholesterol and the HRT combo negates any beneficial effect on the lipid profile -- that although progestogens protect the uterus, they also partially counteract the HDL cholesterol benefit of estrogen alone. Also, the statistics don't quite add up: in a recent study of the incidence of heart disease in post-menopausal women (published in the Annals of Internal Medicine), cardiovascular disease occurred in 64.4% of women who had been taking HRT compared to 71.3 of women not taking HRT.(7) Obviously not a highly significant difference. Perhaps we should refocus cardiovascular problems as a possible disease of aging, not of hormonal deficiencies.

Breast Cancer

Estrogen is also consistently associated with 30% increase in the risk of breast cancer in women who are currently using it and have taken it for 5-10 years or longer. In 1990, researchers for the Nurses Health Study, a well-done study of the most rigorous design, released their findings that women who use estrogen have a 36% greater chance of developing breast cancer than do other women. Soon after these troubling results, researchers at the Federal Centers for Disease Control (CDC) published a summary analyzing sixteen separate breast cancer studies, again finding a 30% increase in breast cancer.(8) These statistics received little attention from the main-street press, as the drug companies obscured these results by funding a huge media blitz publicizing the heart disease findings. But this is a known fact: with our breast cancer rates so outrageously high (one woman in nine!), the average woman who dies of heart disease loses 8 years of life, whereas women who die of breast cancer lose, on average 19 years.(9)

At this time, we know even less about breast cancer and HRT. The addition of progesterone to estrogen does not eliminate the breast cancer risk. Preliminary findings from a breast cancer study with large numbers of women on HRT were reported to the FDA in 1991. Women who used HRT had significantly higher rates of breast cancer, about a 70% increase over women on estrogen alone or those who switched from ERT to HRT.(10) Clearly, women who have already had breast or other cancers or have breast cancer in their immediate families should be discouraged from taking HRT.

And in the biased research department, to refute the anecdotal new claims that estrogen may prevent or slow the progression of Alzheimer's disease -- there is a glaring gap in the studies. Women on estrogen may be more likely to maintain healthy brain function throughout their life due to life circumstances, not hormonal help. A truly randomized, double-blind, prospective, case-controlled study with large numbers of women has yet to be conducted.(11)

The first and only large, long-term controlled study on the safety and effectiveness of HRT trial results will not be available until the year 2007.

So, despite the fact that some researchers point to the 50-year life expectancy common in the beginning of the 20th century and theorize that women simply weren't meant to live past menopause (oh, please…), some of us seem to have the audacity to be living past our natural life-spans. We need more information about the normalcy of menopause and clear instructions to guide us with self-care.

Normal Menopause

Normal menopause is just that - normal. It is a definite physiological milestone in a woman's life heralding the beginning of a powerful new phase of growth. It is a good idea to be well prepared for this journey. The following are definitions of the language used to define the menopause experience, to help you negotiate decisions regarding your health during this time.

Pre-Menopause - is the time of greatest hormonal fluctuation during the later reproductive years (can feel like horrendous PMS), when periods become irregular and other changes may begin to occur. The actual age at which menopausal change begins varies considerably from woman to woman; the norm is 45, with a normal range of 35 to 55. During the pre-menopausal years, menstrual periods may become noticeably different (closer together, further apart, scantier, more profuse). Changes in the menstrual cycle are often the first sign that menopause is approaching. Changes may be sudden and significant, or so gradual that they go almost unnoticed. Periods may be very different from what they once were. Menstrual cycle changes can affect cycle length an the amount of menstrual flow. Night sweats and/or hot flashes may come, if at all, only sporadically and are usually blamed on too many blankets, a sweaty partner, or a spicy meal.

Menopause - is the end of menstruation, defined after the fact, that is once 12 months have passed without a period. Meno (menstruation) pause (stops) is technically, the last menstrual flow of a woman's life. The menopausal climax years include the year or two before and a year or more after the very last menstruation. The average age of a woman in the midst of her climax is 51. During the 2-5 year climax period, the bones refuse to take in calcium (perhaps so we don't become too rigid in our resistance to change?) and bone scans will show lessening bone density; flashes, flushes and night sweats may be frequent; palpitations, emotional sensitivity and sleeplessness are common. Depending on the individual woman and her circumstances, other physical and emotional changes may occur with the climax. Or she may breeze right through. All symptoms are transient and correctable. However, it is currently the fashion for physicians to take blood samples and then diagnose "low" hormone levels in women whose hormone levels are perfectly normal for their age.

Post-menopause - the several years after the end of menstruation during which time the body completes its adaptation to its new stabilized hormonal state. After menopause, the ovaries continue to produce low levels of estrogen and androgens, as do the adrenal glands. Androgens can be converted to estrogen by fatty tissue. So, post-menopausal women have some, albeit lower, levels of estrogen present throughout the rest of their lives. Post-menopausal women who have not had their ovaries removed are not more estrogen deficient than are pre-pubertal girls. The post-menopausal years symbolically begin on the 13th new moon after the final menstruation, and continue -- obviously -- for the rest of the lifetime. Commitment to a healthy lifestyle in the postmenopausal years can halt and reverse the loss of bone density (the bones do accept calcium once again!) Being vigilantly health-conscious can prevent estrogen and progestone sensitive tissues in the vagina and bladder from weakening and drying out, and maintain a healthy, vigorous heart and circulatory system.

Surgical Menopause - is the menopause brought on by the surgical removal of a woman's ovaries or by radiation treatment or chemotherapy. If the woman has not already gone through a natural menopause when she has this surgery, radiation or chemotherapy, she will go through immediate menopause at that time and will skip the pre- and peri-menopausal stages.

Menopause is a very individual experience, but all women deserve accurate information about the normal changes of menopause, safe remedies for common discomforts, and medical intervention for the small minority whose discomforts are severe. The following information is a culmination of many years of working with women as their community midwife and practicing as an herbalist working with plant allies to create healthier living for women and their families. I offer simple common sense alternatives to conventional, allopathic medicines' drug-oriented approach. These natural treatments can be used as an alternative to HRT in all but the most sever cases. This drug-free approach preserves the time-honored knowledge of our grandmothers, as well as modern, alternative methods that work for alleviating and preventing symptoms of menopause.

Due to the constraints of time and space for this article, I will only focus attention on the two most common menopausal symptoms: hot flashes and vaginal changes. Other symptoms can include emotional instability, "fuzzy" thinking, insomnia, depression, stiffening joints, sore breasts, dry skin, and abdominal congestion (constipation, gas, bloating). I will cover self-care for menstrual cycle changes and lessening bone density in Part 2. All symptoms are transient and correctable. If you are experiencing any of these symptoms and would like more information on alternative therapies, call your local midwife, an herbalist skilled in botanical medicine, or nearest naturopathic physician for homeopathic remedies. They will refer you to the appropriate treatment.

Hot Flashes

Hot flashes (or "Power Surges" for women in the know) and night sweats occur in about 75% of American women; the frequency, intensity, duration of flashes is unique to each individual. They are the result of vasomotor instability. The vasomotor nerves are the body's thermostat controllers. It's their job to regulate body temperature by controlling the diameter of the blood vessels. A disturbance in hormone levels interferes with the signals transmitted to the vasomotor nerves, and prickly hot sensations, dizziness, and sometimes, heart palpitations result. As your system finally adjusts to the lower or different levels of hormones, the symptoms will stop. With the use of herbs and diet, it is possible to exert some control over the length and time of hot flashes and even, in some cases, eliminate them completely. The following suggestions have significantly reduced hot flashes for many women.

Homeopathic Remedies for Hot Flashes

by Susun Weed, 1992 (13)

Lachesis - For when the flashes emanate from the top of your head, are worse just before sleep and immediately upon wakening, and are accompanied by sweating, headaches, or easily irritated skin.

Sepia - When your flashes make you feel weak, nauseated, exhausted, and depressed.

Pulsatilla - If you flash less outdoors, but your flashes are often followed by intense chills and emotional uproar.

Valeriana - If your face flushes strongly during the flash, and you have intense sweating and sleeplessness.

Ferrum metallicum - When your flashes are sudden, your general health is good but ordinary activities bring exhaustion.

Sulfuricum acidicum - If your flashes include profuse sweating and trembling, and are worse in the evenings and with exercise.

Sanguinaria - when your cheeks are red and burning, and your feet and hands feel hot.

Belladonna - When the flash centers on your face, which burns and turns bright red, and you feel restless, agitated, and have palpitations.

Vaginal Changes

After menopause the walls of the vagina become thinner and produce fewer secretions. Vaginal lubrication with sexual excitement occurs more slowly. As the amount of estrogen decreases, the vagina becomes less acidic, making women more susceptible to vaginal infections, including yeast. If changes are significant, women may have a feeling of dryness or irritation. Severe dryness can cause vaginal pain. Women are most likely to feel vaginal discomfort during of just after sexual intercourse, especially without being wet enough. Thinner, more easily injured vaginal tissue combined with decreased acidity of the vagina can lead to infections. The usual symptoms are increased vaginal discharge, itching and burning.

The disrespectful, patriarchal name for menopausal thinning and associated symptoms is Atrophic vaginitis and Dyspareunia (painful intercourse), but this is not inevitable. These symptoms can be remedied with understanding and simple loving care. And, as with all of menopause, good solid healthy nutrition and exercise is key to preventing drying and thinning. Here are some important suggestions for self-care for a dry vagina:

Vaginitis

The walls of the vagina tend to thin as estrogen production falls off and this can lead to vaginitis. Vaginitis is a generally inclusive term that describes several conditions or causes of irritation and inflammation. The usual cause is irritating, alkaline (pH6+) secretions burning tender atrophic vaginal tissue, especially if it is abraded or cracked. The following suggestions should help reduce itching and burning and get you back into the pink.

Motherwort tincture (take 2 dropperfuls daily) quickly restores pliability and thickness to vaginal walls.

Caution: Anti-itch creams containing cortisone contribute to osteoporosis. Avoid them.

Yeast

Yeast infections, sometimes called thrush or monilia, can be curdy, profuse, sweetly odoriferous white discharge with itching and inflammation. Yeast infections are not really yeast nor an infection, but a yeast-like fungus, known as Candida albicans. The condition is known as Candidiasis when it proliferates. Here are some tips to take the yeast beasts:

Non-specific Vaginitis

Non-specific vaginitis is bacterial and characterized by burning and itching, usually with a discharge, odor, sometimes a rash and painful intercourse. It's probably a good idea to visit your local midwife or nurse practitioner and have her check it out under a microscope to see what kind of bacteria you're dealing with. To eliminate a mild bacteria infection:

Estrogen Replacement Therapy and Hormone Replacement Therapy

ERT and HRT have not been shown to be effective :

If you are interested in further information about healing and natural remedies for the menopausal years, I highly recommend these two books.

Womenspirit!

Just as important as maintaining a healthy "flora and fauna" physically, is the need for women to explore their spiritual selves during their mid-life transition. Menopause is the time to turn the profane into the sacred. In many cultures other than ours, elder women are respected for the culmination of their life experiences; they are revered for their wisdom. They are the honored Grandmothers who carry the keys of knowledge for their people. In our society, which worships youth, older women are considered dispensable, done with their usefulness, and discarded to infantile status.

There was a time when women's Blood Mysteries were honored and celebrated, and menopause was the culmination of these experiences, the last of the Great Rites. This Rite served to acknowledge this powerful change and to honor the woman's crossing over to "cronehood." (I realize there is a negative connotation to the label "Crone" but this wasn't always so. This was originally a term of respect and honor and was not derogatory in any way, another twist of our language brought to you by patriarchy.)

The Croning Rite which follows is a simplified version of the ceremony I wrote for my book, The Women's Wheel of Life: Thirteen Archetypes of Woman at her Fullest Power (Viking Arkana, 1996, co-authored with Elizabeth Davis, my friend and another midwife).(15) It is imperative that we reclaim the power of our biology, that we understand clearly what is happening to us physiologically, psychologically and spiritually so we can support each other through this tremendous, frightening, wonderful journey.

The Croning Rite of Passage is observed when the final physiological milestone is passed, when a woman has completed menopause and her bleeding time has come to an end, usually on the 13th new moon after her last bleeding. The post-menopausal stage heralds the transition to a new life experience. It is a time of celebration. (If a woman has undergone premature menopause due to surgical or chemical intervention, then approximate guidelines place Cronehood at 56 years old.) The body of the rite can take various forms, from partying with ribald humor to giving gifts of acknowledgement. I recall the rite we held for a Crone midwife, who was retiring from active practice. Each midwife in attendance shared some memory of working with this woman, and as they told their stories they wove red, white and black yarn, along with a special trinket to illustrate their tale into a "story belt." Some of the stories were hilarious, but the result was a poignant ceremonial object of inestimable value.

My favorite way for this rite to be done is a solitary experience. The new Crone goes off by herself to somewhere in the wilderness that only she knows to a place where there is a three-way crossroads. Here she leaves a gift of food to Hecate, Crone Goddess and Ancient Queen of Wisdom, and meditates on her life. She recalls all she has learned in life and the wisdom she still needs, and the things she must yet do to fulfill herself and complete her life's work. She concludes with a prayer of Thanksgiving:

I have traveled the road from my mother's breast to Cronehood. Thank you, Hecate, for the good seasons past and the good seasons yet to come."(16)

After the crone makes her offering, she must leave quickly and not look back, as an act of letting go of regrets while trusting what is yet to come. This aspect of seclusion is found in numerous rites, and is symbolic of rebirth and reintegration. It is best to do this particular ritual at the dark of the moon or the earliest crescent as this lunar phase represents a time of new beginnings.

Meanwhile back at the ranch, her friends have been feasting and making merry. They welcome her return with love and laughter, and all together they create a circle of lasting friendship and support for her in the crowning years of her life. She is invincible!

Footnotes and Resources

  1. Smith, D.C. et. al. "Association of exogenous estrogen and endometrial carcinoma." New England Journal of Medicine, 1975; 293 (23): 1164-1167, and Ziel, H.K. and Finkle, W.D. "Increased risk of endometrial carcinoma among users of conjugated estrogens." New England Journal of Medicine, 1975; 293 (23): 1167-1170.
  2. The writing group for the PEPI trial (Postmenopausal Estrogen/Progestins Interventions). "Effects of estrogen or estrogen/progestin regimens on heart disease risk factors in post-menopausal women." Journal of the American Medical Association (1995); 273 (3): 199-208.
  3. Grady, D. et. al. "Hormone therapy to prevent disease and prolong life in postmenopausal women." Annals of Internal Medicine 1992; 117 (12): 1016-1037.
  4. Northrup, Christiane. HRT Advisory. Phillips Publishing, Inc., 1996, p. 10.
  5. National Women's Health Network. Taking Hormones and Women's Health. 1995, p. 11.
  6. PEPI trial, Ibid.
  7. Northrup, Christiane. Creating Health Through Menopause (video lecture). Phillips Publishing, Inc.
  8. National Women's Health Network.Ibid. p. 25
  9. Miller, B.A. et. al. eds. Cancer Statistics Review 1973-1989. National Cancer Institute, NIH publication no. 92-2789, 1992.
  10. Mack, T.M. "Risk-benefit analysis of ERT vs. HRT" (presentation). Food and Drug Admnistration Fertility and Maternal Health Drugs Advisory Committee Meeting, 21 June 1991.
  11. Northrup, Christiane. Health Wisdom for Women. Phillips Publishing. Vol. 4 No. 1; January 1997, p. 2.
  12. McCord, Holly. "Menopause Naturally." Prevention Magazine, August 1996, p. 66.
  13. Weed, Susun. Wise Woman Way for the Menopausal Years, Ash Tree Publishing, 1992, pp. 58 & 133.
  14. Lee, John. What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Menopause. Mill Valley, CA.
  15. Davis, Elizabeth and Carol Leonard. The Women's Wheel of Life: Thirteen Archetypes of Woman at Her Fullest Power. 1996. Viking Arkana, pp. 191-194.
  16. Budapest, Zsuzsanna. Holy Book of Women's Mysteries. Berkeley: Wingbow Press, 1989. p. 86.
Carol Leonard, a foremother of the Women's Spirituality movement, is a New Hampshire Certified Midwife and has been practicing midwifery for more than 20 years. She presents her workshops, "Women's Ordinary Magic," which explores women's blood mysteries of all ages and "Witches, Midwives, and Other Healers" to women's groups around the country.

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