Midlife woman working at kitchen table on laptop next to dog

The Blog

Latest on the Blog

BREAST HEALTH, BREAST CANCER, HEALTHY LIFESTYLE JILL CHMIELEWSKI BREAST HEALTH, BREAST CANCER, HEALTHY LIFESTYLE JILL CHMIELEWSKI

The Neighborhood Inside Your Tumor: How Your Daily Life Affects Cancer Biology

If you have been told that endocrine therapy, such as tamoxifen or an aromatase inhibitor, is the only answer after breast cancer, you are not alone. Many women leave oncology visits with a treatment plan, a prescription, and very little discussion about anything else.

What you eat, how you move, how you sleep, your metabolic health, your stress levels, your muscle mass, your inflammation, your alcohol intake, your insulin levels, your relationships, and your overall internal environment are often barely mentioned, if they are mentioned at all. Lifestyle is rarely presented as part of cancer biology in a meaningful way. It is even more rarely discussed as part of recurrence prevention.

That's what I want to talk about. The neighborhood. The terrain.

Read More

Peptides & Healthy Aging: Replacing What We Lose to Live Better, Longer

Peptides are rapidly emerging as a major tool for healthy aging. While I’m not a peptide expert, I care deeply about how we can proactively stay healthy, strong, and clear-minded as we age. The core idea here is not just to live longer, but to use targeted therapies—like peptides—to live better by replacing what our bodies lose with age.

Read More

Why Progesterone Deserves More Respect

If you've ever been told that progesterone “doesn’t matter” unless you have a uterus… or that your symptoms after starting progesterone HRT must mean “your dose is too high”… or that transdermal progesterone doesn’t work—then this article is for you.

Read More

What the Heck is Methylation—And Why Should You Care?

Methylation is basically your body adding a small chemical group (one carbon + three hydrogens = a “methyl group”) to another molecule. Sounds tiny. But that little shift can completely change how your body functions.

Read More

Estrogen Metabolites: What They Are, What They Mean, and What You Should Know

You’ve probably heard people talk about estrogen like it’s either the hero or the villain when it comes to women’s health, especially breast cancer. The truth is, this area of women’s health is full of complexity, outdated research, and evolving science. But it’s also important. Because the way your body breaks down estrogen—your estrogen metabolism—can influence everything from mood and energy to long-term risks like breast cancer.

Read More

When Your Cycle Feels Like a Crisis: Breaking Down PMS and PMDD

PMS (pre-menstrual syndrome) refers to a group of physical and emotional symptoms that a woman may experience in the week or so leading up to the beginning of her menstrual cycle (when she starts menstrual bleeding) and subsides within a few days of menstruation.  

Read More

Tired of Hot Flashes? Here’s What You Can Do About Them

80% of women will experience hot flashes, flushing, and night sweats as they transition through the menopausal years. The medical community refers to these symptoms as vasomotor symptoms or VMS.  The hypothalamus triggers hot flashes and night sweats in the brain to release heat built up in the body in response to a surge of adrenaline, one of our stress hormones.  While the sudden drop in estrogen is thought to be the primary trigger of the cascade that causes a hot flash, high cortisol, low cortisol, low progesterone, or low serotonin can also be drivers for hot flashes.  

Read More

The Hormone-Brain Connection: Why Cognitive Changes in Midlife Are Not 'Just in Your Head

Estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone modulate different aspects of brain function through several pathways initiated ONLY after hormones bind to receptors on our brain cells.

Read More

Nonhormonal remedies for perimenopausal and menopausal symptoms

I'm often asked whether nonhormonal remedies are an effective alternative to hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for women transitioning from perimenopause to menopause (and beyond).

Read More

Midlife Wake-Ups, Hot Flashes, and Racing Minds: Your Guide to Better Sleep in Menopause

Chances are, if you’re in your perimenopausal or menopausal years, you’ve had your fair share of sleepless nights. I know I have. And most of my clients and patients have too.  Sleep is critical for hormone balance. Hormones are made when we sleep.  Hormones are detoxified when we sleep. Sleep affects ALL of our hormones, so we need to prioritize a good night’s sleep. 

Read More

Search the Blog

Wondering what to expect during perimenopause and menopause?

Download the FREE Pausal Timeline so that you know what to expect during the perimenopausal and menopausal years.

And receive The Peri to Menopause Monthly Round-Up —a newsletter for busy pausal women