Frazzled woman at desk feeling exhausted but anxious during perimenopause, illustrating wired but tired symptoms

Why You’re So Tired But Can’t Rest in Perimenopause:

January 29, 20265 min read

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Why You’re So Tired But Can’t Rest in Perimenopause: The “Wired But Tired” Nervous System Explained

"The changes, the highs and lows and the hormonal shifts, there is power in that. But we were taught to be ashamed of it and to not even seek to understand it or explore it for our own edification, let alone to help the next generation." ~ Michelle Obama

If you’re in perimenopause and feel tired but can’t relax, you are not alone.

Many midlife women describe this stage as:

  • Exhausted but anxious

  • Drained but restless

  • Wired but tired

  • Bone-deep fatigued… but wide awake at night

It’s one of the most confusing symptoms of perimenopause.

You’re so tired you could cry — yet when you finally lie down, your brain refuses to shut off.

This isn’t just “stress.”
And it’s not a personality flaw.

It’s often a hormonally amplified stress response driven by estrogen fluctuations, cortisol shifts, and nervous system dysregulation.

Let’s break it down.


Why Perimenopause Makes You Feel Exhausted But Anxious

Perimenopause is not a smooth hormonal decline.

Estrogen rises.
Estrogen drops.
Sometimes dramatically.

And estrogen doesn’t just control your cycle.

It influences:

  • Cortisol (your stress hormone)

  • Serotonin (mood stability)

  • GABA (calm and relaxation)

  • Blood sugar regulation

  • Thyroid signaling

  • Sleep architecture

When estrogen becomes erratic, your stress response becomes more sensitive.

That means your body reacts faster to stress — and takes longer to calm down.

So you can feel physically exhausted…
while your nervous system is still on high alert.

That’s the wired but tired perimenopause state.


Cortisol, Adrenaline & the Perimenopause Stress Loop

Cortisol isn’t the enemy.

You need cortisol in the morning to wake up, focus, and function.

But in perimenopause:

  • Sleep becomes lighter

  • Muscle mass begins to decline

  • Blood sugar becomes less stable

  • Recovery slows

If you’re under-eating protein, skipping meals, overdoing cardio, drinking alcohol to relax, or sleeping poorly, cortisol can spike more often.

Now layer fluctuating estrogen on top.

Your body starts interpreting normal life as threat.

So even when you’re exhausted, your system doesn’t feel safe enough to power down.

This is why so many women search:

  • “exhausted but anxious perimenopause”

  • “perimenopause adrenaline feeling”

  • “why am I tired but can’t relax after 40”

Your body isn’t broken.

It’s overstimulated.


The Afternoon Crash & Nighttime Second Wind

Sound familiar?

3–4 p.m.:
You feel shaky, irritable, depleted.

9–10 p.m.:
Suddenly you’re wide awake.

This pattern often involves blood sugar instability + cortisol misfiring.

When blood sugar drops too low earlier in the day, your body releases stress hormones (cortisol and adrenaline) to compensate.

You feel:

  • Tired

  • Jittery

  • Irritable

  • Emotionally fragile

Then at night, if cortisol doesn’t fall properly, melatonin struggles to rise.

Hello 2 a.m. overthinking.


Why “Just Relax” Doesn’t Work in Perimenopause

Bubble baths don’t stabilize blood sugar.

Positive thinking doesn’t rebuild muscle.

Breathing exercises help — but if your physiology is under-fueled and over-stressed, they’re not enough on their own.

The wired but tired feeling in perimenopause is a systems issue:

  • Hormonal fluctuations

  • Nervous system dysregulation

  • Muscle loss

  • Blood sugar instability

  • Poor sleep

  • High mental load

This is not a willpower problem.

It’s a physiology problem.

When Your Brain Won’t Shut Off at Night

Even when you understand the physiology, your thoughts can still spiral.

Perimenopause doesn’t just shift hormones — it amplifies mental load. The unfinished to-do lists. The “Did I mess that up?” replay. The 2 a.m. what-ifs.

And when your nervous system is already sensitized, those thoughts hit harder.

This is where structured journaling can be incredibly regulating.

That’s exactly why I created Dear Hormones, a guided journaling experience designed specifically for women navigating perimenopause. It helps you untangle racing thoughts, process frustration, and calm your system before bed — instead of lying there wired and exhausted.

👉 Learn more about Dear Hormones here.

Sometimes calming cortisol starts with calming the story in your head.


How to Calm a Wired But Tired Nervous System

You don’t need extremes.

You need regulation.

Here’s what actually helps calm cortisol imbalance in perimenopause:

  • Eating 30–40g of protein in the morning

  • Lifting weights 2–3 times per week (builds stress resilience + muscle)

  • Walking daily to regulate cortisol

  • Stabilizing blood sugar with protein, fiber, and healthy fats

  • Reducing alcohol (even slightly makes a difference)

  • Going to bed earlier than feels exciting

  • Working with a knowledgeable provider about hormone support

Small, consistent shifts regulate your stress response better than dramatic overhauls.


If You Feel Tired But Can’t Relax After 40…

If you’ve been thinking:

“I’m so tired… why can’t I just rest?”

You are not weak.

You are likely navigating the wired but tired perimenopause state — where fluctuating estrogen amplifies cortisol and keeps your nervous system humming long after your body is done.

Understanding this changes everything.

Because once you realize it’s physiological?

You stop blaming yourself.

And you start supporting your body differently.

If This Sounds Familiar, Read These Next

If you’re feeling wired but tired in perimenopause, these posts will help you go deeper:

Each one breaks down a different layer of midlife fatigue — from hormonal crashes to sleep disruption to the emotional exhaustion that no one talks about.

Because this isn’t just “being tired.”

It’s a full-system shift.

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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