Mushroom in Winter by Melina Meza
Nina and I were talking a while back and we realized that we hadn't yet written any posts on menopause. Well, considering that this physiological episode is a major event in every woman's life, we thought it was about time to take this on, and decided that I should start the ball rolling so to speak. Although each woman’s experience of menopause is very personal and individual, there are certain similarities that we all experience, which is the end of the ability to give birth! Now this is not to imply that all woman make the decision to become pregnant and raise a child, but the physiological ability to become pregnant is age related.To begin our exploration of menopause, I read the book Yoga and the Wisdom of Menopause. A Guide to Physical, Emotional and Spiritual Health at Midlife and Beyond by Suza Francina. This book was published in 2003 but the information it contains is still pertinent. It provides good background information about what menopause is, and how yoga can be applied in all the stages that lead up to menopause and during menopause to help alleviate some of the more common issues that woman have to deal with. The usage of yoga was the unifying theme throughout the book.
Moving to specifics, I'll start by defining what menopause is and how you know you are in it. "Meno" means "month" in Greek and "pause" comes from the Greek "pausis" for stop. So menopause is the cessation of menstrual periods, an end to the monthly cycle. There are three stages:
- The first stage is perimenopause which means “pre-menopause," is when the change in hormonal functions leading up to menopause occur. Typically perimenopuase begins around age 40 (but remember this is a rough estimate) but can begin in one’s 30’s. This stage typically lasts around 5 years, but sometimes lasts for 15 years. In perimenopause women may notice changes in their menses where they are lighter and longer to heavier and more frequent. There are many hormone fluctuations and sometimes this time is called “puberty in reverse”
- The second stage is menopause itself because the menses stop. Menopause is considered official 12 months after the last period. The average age of women whose menstrual periods have stopped is 52. Though a woman’s period has stopped, it doesn’t mean that the hormonal levels are stabilized and this period is categorized by emotional shifts, hot flashes, hot surges or flushes.
- The final stage, which lasts the remainder of a woman’s life, is post-menopause when the woman’s body has adjusted to its hormone levels.
My particular interest in reading this book was the author’s theory of the usage of yoga and its effect on the endocrine system and easing menopausal symptoms, especially the management of stress. She frequently has illustrations of restorative poses to counter the stresses of a body adjusting to widely fluctuating hormonal levels. Supported Relaxation pose (Savasana), Supported Child's pose (Balasana), Supported Backbends with a bolster, Legs Up the Wall pose (Viparita Karani), and Supported Reclined Cobbler's pose (Supta Baddha Konasana) are highlighted repeatedly in personal vignettes as a prescription for health. (not necessarily in this order). Standing poses, inversions, and twists are also recommended but they are presented as supported, with the woman using a wall or a chair to prevent overly exhausting herself during asana practice. A guiding principle that is cycled back over and over again is that our practice of yoga changes as our body changes. This is not just due to physical aches and pains or the limitations in mobility or strength but in how our intuitive self begins to guide us more in our asana practice.
What I liked most about this book was its celebration of the cycles of a woman’s life. Throughout the book there is joy about entering into an initiation that all women are a part of. The usage of asana is as a guiding tool to help us navigate this unknown territory. The author presents her book as a way to nourish one’s soul through the practice of asana.