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“Menopause is not a deficit, but a journey of empowerment and renewal.” ~ Dr. Jennifer Davis
There was a time when I could juggle a lot.
Not effortlessly. But competently.
I had systems. Routines. Mental shortcuts. I knew how to get myself back on track when things felt messy.
And then… somewhere in my 40s… those systems just stopped working.
Not in a dramatic way.
More like a slow, confusing unraveling.
I’d sit down to do something simple and feel weirdly stuck.
I’d make a plan, then immediately feel overwhelmed by the plan.
I’d be busy all day, exhausted by 3 p.m., and still wonder what I actually accomplished.
So naturally, I assumed the problem was me.
I tried tighter schedules. Better planners. More “focus.”
Spoiler: none of it worked.
Because the issue wasn’t time management.
It was perimenopause.
For me, this wasn’t just “brain fog.” It was the moment I realized something deeper was going on. I share more of that story, and what finally made things click, here.
→ ADHD in Women Over 40: A Midlife Diagnosis That Rewrites the Past
Here’s the thing no one tells you:
When productivity stops working in perimenopause, it doesn’t feel hormonal.
It feels personal.
You think:
Why can’t I focus like I used to?
Why does everything feel harder?
Why am I so tired and scattered?
I remember thinking, I know how to do this. Why can’t I just do it?
That question alone is enough to spiral a perfectly capable woman into self-doubt.
But here’s the truth I wish I’d known sooner:
If you’re googling “why can’t I focus in perimenopause,” you’re not failing.
You’re responding to a changing brain.
Perimenopause has a sneaky way of messing with things that used to feel automatic.
Estrogen doesn’t just affect your cycle.
It supports dopamine, memory, motivation, and mental clarity.
In perimenopause, estrogen doesn’t slowly bow out.
It spikes. Drops. Ghosts you. Comes back like nothing happened.
So one day you feel sharp and on it.
The next day you can’t remember why you opened your laptop.
That’s not inconsistency.
That’s hormone fluctuation.
Which is why “brain fog and hormones” is suddenly such a popular search term.
Here’s another piece that doesn’t get talked about enough.
If you’ve always been:
Sensitive
Mentally busy
Good at holding a lot in your head
High-functioning but internally overwhelmed
Perimenopause can blow that coping system wide open.
For me, things I used to manage quietly suddenly felt… noisy.
Decision-making took more effort.
Starting tasks felt heavier.
I needed more recovery time after mental work.
Many women aren’t developing ADHD in perimenopause.
They’re losing the hormonal support that helped them compensate.
Which is why “ADHD worse in perimenopause” resonates so deeply.
Add in:
Poor sleep
Blood sugar dips
Emotional load
Midlife stress
And now cortisol is running the show.
High cortisol is great if you’re escaping danger.
It’s terrible for focus, creativity, and follow-through.
So your brain locks onto urgency, noise, and other people’s needs…
And quietly drops long-term planning and deep focus.
You’re not unmotivated.
You’re overstimulated.
Most productivity advice assumes:
Stable energy
Predictable focus
A nervous system that isn’t already maxed out
Perimenopause says: cute theory.
When you force old systems onto a hormonally changing brain, you don’t become more productive. You become more tired, more frustrated, and more convinced you’re “losing it.”
You’re not.
You’re just in a different season.
This is where things started to shift for me.
Not when I found the perfect system.
But when I stopped treating my body like an inconvenience.
Protein. Blood sugar support. Hydration. Actual breaks.
One clear priority beats five half-finished ones.
Because focus doesn’t come from pressure. It comes from capacity.
That change alone made me feel more capable again. Not overnight. But steadily.
Productivity in this season might look like:
Doing less, but doing it better
Letting your brain work in shorter bursts
Measuring success by energy, not output
Protecting your nervous system like it matters (because it does)
You are not becoming less capable.
You are becoming more hormonally sensitive.
And once you understand that, everything makes more sense.
If time management used to work and now it doesn’t, that’s not a character flaw.
It’s perimenopause.
And the moment you stop fighting your biology and start working with it, the fog begins to lift.
If any of this feels uncomfortably familiar, you might want to read more about how ADHD and perimenopause collide, and why focus and energy can feel so much harder in this season.
→ ADHD Meets Perimenopause: Why Your Focus (and Energy) Feels Shot, and How to Get It Back
Hormonally yours,
Kimberlee Erin
Just a heads-up: I’m a Certified Menopause Coaching Specialist and Holistic Nutritionist, and while I love sharing what’s worked for me and my clients, this blog is for informational purposes only. It’s not a substitute for medical advice. Always check in with your healthcare provider before starting new supplements, hormones, or treatments—especially since every woman’s perimenopause journey is different. You deserve personalized care that truly fits you.
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