Chronic Stress and Menopause: What My Body Taught Me When I Finally Stopped Pushing Through
How two years of doing “all the right things” still wasn’t enough — until I found the real source.
Have you ever been so deep inside a stressful season that you didn’t even realize how bad it had gotten — until it was over?
Yeah. Me too.
If you’ve noticed things have been quiet over here at HealthyHerMidlife, I want to be real with you about where I’ve been. Not in a “here’s my dramatic comeback story” kind of way, but with authenticity — because I think a lot of you might recognize yourself in it. The connection between chronic stress and menopause is something we don’t talk about enough, and it nearly derailed my health completely.
When Chronic Stress and Menopause Collide: My Body Was Sending Signals
I recognized the stress, the panic attacks, the tightening in my chest, and the burnout. I had actively worked on it for more than two years. Journaling, movement, meditation, yoga, hobbies, supplements — they all helped move the needle slightly closer to healing, but it still wasn’t enough.
Honestly, it was a little embarrassing to be a certified holistic nutritionist and health coach and realize that what I recommend others do to reduce their stress wasn’t working for me.
So I decided to really look at the source of my stress, anxiety, and burnout. The answer was swift and clear: it was my 9-to-5 job.
The Scary Part: How I Responded
I decided to take a break from HealthyHerMidlife and focus solely on my hunt for a new job as my self-coaching prescription for finding a low-stress life again.
I had started my job hunt in earnest at the beginning of 2026, but it was time to ramp things up and focus on it like a second job. And it worked. On April 1 — yes, April Fools Day — I accepted a new position with the state of California and gave notice. April 15 was my last day at a job so overwhelming that they had to replace me with two people to fulfill the work I had been doing. On April 20, I stepped into my new position.
It didn’t take long to see what the previous job had been doing to my central nervous system. After only a few weeks, I came to the realization that I had been living in a low-grade, chronic stress state that I had completely normalized. The kind that doesn’t knock you over all at once — it just quietly chips away. Poor sleep. That wired-but-exhausted feeling I couldn’t shake. Tension I was carrying in my shoulders without even noticing. A mental fog that made everything feel harder than it should have.
I used to tell myself it was just a busy season. I told myself I’d reset “when things calmed down.” Sound familiar?
But here’s what I know now, and what I want to share with you: chronic stress doesn’t wait for a convenient time to affect your health. Especially in menopause, when our hormones are already in flux and our bodies are working so hard just to regulate — we simply cannot afford to keep running on cortisol and willpower.
Walking Away with Courage: Why I Finally Chose My Health
It wasn’t an easy decision to step away from a work situation I had been in for nearly 12 years. In fact, it was scary — it was the devil I knew best. But I realized nothing would improve at work, and nothing would have a greater impact on my health than walking away. I want to be clear: this isn’t about blame or drama. It’s about something much more important.
I had to get honest about what my stress load was costing me physically.
We talk a lot on this blog about diet, movement, sleep, and hormones — all the tangible levers we can pull. But chronic stress is the silent disruptor behind all of it. High cortisol messes with your sleep quality, your blood sugar, your weight, your hot flashes, your mood. Everything we’re trying to manage in menopause gets harder when we are chronically stressed.
And yet — how often do we just accept it? Push through? Tell ourselves we’re tougher than that?
I did it for way too long. And my body was keeping score.
What Really Happened When I Removed Chronic Stress from My Life
This is what genuinely shocked me: I didn’t know how badly my body was losing in that stress game until after I left.
Within just a few weeks of removing the primary source of chronic stress from my life, I started noticing things shifting. My sleep got deeper. That underlying hum of anxiety I’d stopped noticing — because it had just become background noise — started to quiet. I had more energy. Not the caffeinated, pushed-through kind, but actual, real, sustainable energy.
I started cooking again with pleasure instead of obligation, and moved my body in ways that felt good instead of punishing. I remembered why I started HealthyHerMidlife in the first place — because I genuinely love this stuff. The research, the recipes, the conversations with women who are navigating the same things I am.
My nervous system, quite literally, got to exhale. And most importantly, I started sleeping again. I’m talking Apple Sleep Scores in the 90s — and even a 100% — with seven-hour nights most days of the week.
What the Chronic Stress and Menopause Connection Means for You
Here’s why I’m sharing this with you — even though it’s a little vulnerable, and even though I spent some time wondering if I should.
If you’re in perimenopause or menopause and you’re doing “everything right” — eating well, taking your supplements, trying to sleep — but you still feel off, I want you to ask yourself honestly: What is your stress load really like right now, and what is the biggest lever you can pull?
Not the surface-level “I’m a little busy” version. The real one. The one that shows up in your body. The answer you know instantly but might not want to admit because the change feels too scary.
Because here’s what I know as a nutritionist and a coach, and what I’ve now lived through personally: the food plan won’t fix it if the cortisol keeps coming. Chronic stress in menopause is not just a mindset issue — it’s a hormonal one. And we can’t afford to treat it as an afterthought.
You deserve a life that actually supports your health — not one you’re just surviving.
What’s Coming Next for the Blog
I’m so glad to be back. And I’m coming back with a lot to share — including some things I’ve genuinely been excited to write.
I have two posts already in progress that I think you’re going to love. One digs into brand-new research on menopause and heart health — and it’s not the cholesterol story you’ve heard before. The other tackles something I know so many of us struggle with: sleep. Not with another supplement recommendation, but with an approach backed by research that actually retrains how your brain responds at night.
I’m also working on posts about why weight loss feels so much harder after 40 (and what actually works now), and one I’m especially passionate about after everything I just lived through — how to protect your wellness at work when your job is the stressor.
What’s Next for the Podcast
I’ve also made the decision to run HealthyHerMidlife in a way that works for the lifestyle I want for myself right now. That means you may not hear from me every week — instead, you’ll hear from me at least twice a month. And while I love YouTube and video production, let’s be real: it’s an entire job all by itself, and that’s not the season of life I’m in right now. But I am moving forward with my audio podcast and will be launching Season 2 soon!
More soon. And if there are topics you’d love me to cover, please drop them in the comments — I genuinely love hearing from you.
With so much love, Kristine Holistic Nutritionist & Health Coach | HealthyHerMidlife.com
Ready to look at what chronic stress might be doing to your health in menopause? Download the free Midlife Metabolic Reset Guide — it’s a great starting point. And if you want to talk through what’s going on for you personally, I’d love to connect.
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