Maureen – Interview 27
Despite hot flushes and eighteen months of erratic periods, Maureen feels she sailed through the menopause. She describes it as a liberating experience bringing relief from the pain and inconvenience of periods, as well as increased self-confidence.
Knowing little about the menopause, Maureen thought she might be pregnant when she first noticed her periods becoming irregular in her mid-forties. Relieved when tests proved negative, she was delighted when eighteen months later her periods stopped completely, thus freeing her from the undignified; monthly routine of aches, pains and the messy stuff; of heavy bleeding and sanitary pads.
Maureen feels that she sailed through; the menopause, despite having hot flushes which continued for 6-12 months after her final period and made her feel really uncomfortable, niggly, moody and tired;. Initially embarrassed in public, she soon realized that although she felt like a Belisha beacon;, nobody really noticed her hot flushes. In keeping with a life-long aversion to doctors, Maureen preferred not to seek medical advice or treatment for her symptoms. Instead, she coped during the day by discretely wafting a piece of paper, and at night by using a fan, opening the windows and searching out cooler places in bed.
In retrospect, Maureen wishes that she had had more information about the menopause to prepare her for the symptoms she experienced and to advise on possible treatment options. She believes that as they approach the menopause, women should be sent information by their doctor, with recommendations for reading and an invitation to come in and talk about it;. She also feels that chemists should provide leaflets about the menopause, as they currently do for other conditions.
Since her periods ended, Maureen has felt younger, happier, freer and more confident. She is reluctant, however, to freely admit her age, preferring to think of herself as sexy, feminine, youthful and pretty; rather than old. She does not identity with society’s image of the older women who acts old and dresses in old woolly cardies and sensible shoes;.
Maureen was interviewed for Healthtalkonline in March 2009.