needs review- Self-Care During Perimenopause and Menopause: Your Needs Matter
Is it normal to feel like your needs don’t matter during perimenopause and menopause?
Yes. Many women report feeling invisible, emotionally depleted, or taken for granted during perimenopause and menopause due to hormonal changes, years of caregiving roles, and shifting identity needs.
Why This Feeling Often Surfaces in Midlife
Did you grow up learning your needs didn’t matter or weren’t important (or as important as other family members)? Did you learn from an early age to take care of yourself because caregivers couldn’t always meet your needs? These early life experiences can turn into people-pleasing, over-functioning, and putting your own needs on the back burner while you attend to others.
But you know what happens in midlife? Which coincides with the perimenopause transition into menopause? Those once predictable, cyclic hormones estrogen and progesterone start to fluctuate and behave a bit more inconsistently and unpredictably. Estrogen and progesterone once served as a buffer against stress, anxiety, depression, and irritability, for example. But as estrogen and progesterone start to fluctuate more in the perimenopause years, that buffer starts to lessen.
During midlife and perimenopause, you may start to experience:
Caregiver, partner, and professional role fatigue
Emotional burnout becoming harder to ignore
Increased self-awareness and reduced tolerance for imbalance
How Hormonal Changes Affect Self-Worth and Emotional Capacity
hormone changes and fluctuations (especially estrogen and progesterone) can affect neurotransmitters in our brains like:
Serotonin, which helps regulate mood and emotional stability. Estrogen normally boosts serotonin production. Declining levels can lead to mood swings, irritability, anxiety, and depressive symptoms.
Dopamine, which affects motivation and pleasure. Declining estrogen directly affects dopamine activity, leading to reduced motivation, focus, pleasure, and energy. It can also contribute to "brain fog," irritability, and mood swings. These changes disrupt the brain's reward system and executive functions, making focus, concentration, organization more challenging.
GABA, the brain's calming neurotransmitter. Hormone fluctuations, especially progesterone, can reduce its calming effects leading to increased anxiety, insomnia, irritability, and mood swings.
Oxytocin, the bonding and well-being hormone. Levels tend to decrease during perimenopause and menopause, closely tied to falling estrogen levels. This decline is associated with increased anxiety, lower libido, vaginal dryness, and reduced feelings of emotional attachment.
What Self-Care Really Means During Perimenopause and Menopause
From a therapist perspective, self-care is doing anything that will maintain or improve your physical, mental, and emotional health. Behaviors like consistent sleep, feeding your body what it needs, moving your body regularly, and setting boundaries to manage stress and prevent worsening mental health symptoms during this time in life.
Self-care is:
Self-regulation
Filling your own cup FIRST so you can offer to others
Energy protection and nervous system regulation
Setting boundaries by taking rest or space when you need it
Here are some other self-care strategies to incporarot into your daily routine, especially when you’re feeling overwhelmed or overloaded:
Breathing practice. Why it works: Slow, controlled exhalation directly stimulates the vagus nerve and lowers cortisol. Try Extended exhale breathing (inhale for a count of 4, hold for a count of 4, exhale for a count of 6–8, repeat 5 times).
Gentle, rhythmic movement. Why it works: Rhythmic movement discharges stress hormones. Try Walking (especially outdoors), Yoga, tai chi, qigong, rocking, swaying, or slow dancing- by yourself or with your partner.
Temperature-based regulation. Why it works: Thermal input strongly affects the autonomic nervous system. When you’re feeling overheated, cold exposure to the face (cold water splash or cold pack on cheeks) can activate the dive reflex and slow heart rate.
Sensory grounding. Turn on soothing sounds (nature sounds, low-frequency music) or hum to yourself. Humming directly stimulates the vagus nerve. Or inhale the scent of lavender, which has been shown to reduce anxiety and improve sleep.
Have a bit more time? Go get a massage, facial, or pedicure! Treat yourself to a bubble bath! Sometimes these examples of self-care seem like flippant suggestions, but what are the actual scientific benefits?
These activities activate the parasympathetic (“rest & digest”) nervous system. Massage, facials, and pedicures can:
Reduce tension in the body
Allow the mind to turn off is vigilance temporarily
Slow the heart rate and breathing
Reduce cortisol (our stress hormone)
Massage in particular has been shown to:
Increase oxytocin (our bonding, safety, and well-being hormone), which tend to decrease during perimenopause and menopause, closely tied to falling estrogen levels. This decline is associated with increased anxiety, lower libido, and reduced feelings of emotional attachment
Increase serotonin and dopamine, while decreasing cortisol
They Provide Regulated, Predictable, Safe Touch. Safe touch is one of the most powerful—yet underutilized—forms of nervous-system repair. For many adults:
Touch can be absent, rushed, or emotionally loaded
For other, it can be associated with obligation, caretaking, or trauma
These services offer:
Boundaried, consensual, predictable touch
No requirement to perform, give, or reciprocate
Clear roles and time limits (which increases safety)
This helps repair attachment-related nervous system patterns, especially for people who are:
Hyper-independent
Caregivers, people-pleasers and those over-functionining in their relationships and out of touch with their own needs.
Those affected by grief, particularly partner grief, and consequently touch-deprived
They Anchor Awareness in the Body (Bottom-Up Regulation). Talk therapy can be top-down. Body-based care is bottom-up. During these services:
Attention naturally shifts from thoughts (racing, ruminative, preservative) → sensation
The brain receives cues: “I am safe right now.”
Body awareness increases, which is wonderful practice for those who live in their brains instead of their bodies.
This is particularly regulating for:
Anxiety and panic (both increasingly common during the perimenopause years)
Trauma responses and over-activated nervous systems
They Temporarily Reduce Decision Fatigue and Cognitive Load. A regulated nervous system requires periods of non-decision. Whether someone who is hyper-independent, a caregiver, a people-pleaser, or dealing with the grief of losing a partner, you likely experience decision fatigue. In these settings:
You don’t plan, produce, explain, or solve
You are guided, not in charge
The environment is intentionally calm
This is especially therapeutic for high-functioning people who are used to being “on” all the time, carrying all of the emotional labor, or in helper roles in life or career. This mental quiet allows the nervous system to downshift gears. And repeated care reframes the idea “I have to do everything for everyone” to “I am allowed to receive.”
They support body trust and repair disconnection. Chronic stress, trauma, grief, and hormonal transitions often create disconnection from the body. These practices:
Reinforce that the body can feel pleasure, comfort, and care
Rebuild trust in physical sensations
Support positive embodiment
This matters deeply in perimenopause, when many people feel betrayed by their bodies due to fluctuating hormones and their impact on the whole system - body and brain.
Pedicures & facials specifically offer grounding and face–vagus nerve pathways. Pedicures:
Foot touch activates grounding reflexes, which can help with anxiety
Improves proprioception (sense of being in your body)
Can be surprisingly regulating for anxious or dissociative systems
Facials:
The face has dense vagal nerve endings
Gentle facial touch can quickly reduce threat response
Being cared for while lying down signals deep safety to the nervous system
As an added bonus, some spas offer weighted blankets during your facial service.
A weighted blanket offers a firm, gentle, full-body pressure similar to a hug—to promote relaxation, reduce anxiety, calm the nervous system, and lower cortisol levels.
When to Seek Additional Support
Psychotherapy offers compassionate, evidence-based support tailored to this unique stage of life. With the right support, midlife can become not just something to survive—but a transition that leads to greater clarity, authenticity, and emotional resilience.
As a therapist and licensed clinical social worker (LCSW) with nearly 20 years of experience, I support women in midlife and the struggles that come with it- perimenopause, anxiety and stress, ADHD and inattention, depression, grief and loss, and those unexpected life events that throw you off course.
If you’re looking for support, let’s connect for a FREE 15-minute call to talk through how I can support you! I am located in Michigan and offer online therapy to women in CT, FL, IL, IN, MI, OH, SC, and WI, states where I am licensed to practice.