Open linen-bound journal with a fountain pen, dried herbs and a ceramic cup of tea in warm window light

Journal

Field notes from the second spring.

Coach-written essays on training, hormones, and what we're learning from the women in our community.

June 2026

6 min read

Jennifer Aniston, Pvolve, and the science behind the 30-minute workout.

A Boxlife profile of Jennifer Aniston's "bulletproof" core training landed this month. Beneath the celebrity headline is a real University of Exeter trial — and it says something quietly important about how women in midlife should be training.

A Boxlife profile making the rounds this month describes Jennifer Aniston, at 56, training with Pvolve for thirty minutes a day — low-impact, functional, resistance-led — and her trainer calling the resulting core "bulletproof." It's easy to scroll past as celebrity content. It shouldn't be. Underneath sits one of the first proper trials of resistance training across the full menopause transition, and the result is worth paying attention to.

The study, in plain English

The research was led by Professor Francis Stephens at the University of Exeter Medical School and published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise (2025) — the flagship journal of the American College of Sports Medicine. Seventy-two healthy, active women aged 40–60, none on HRT, were randomised into two groups: one followed standard physical activity guidelines (150 minutes a week), the other completed a 12-week, whole-body, low-impact resistance programme from Pvolve, four 30–35 minute sessions a week, using resistance bands, light ankle and wrist weights, and dumbbells, paired with single-leg balance, hip hinges, planks and rotational work.

It's the first trial to compare the effects of a resistance programme on strength, balance and lean mass before, during and after menopause in the same study — and to ask whether the menopause transition itself blunts the response to training.

What they actually found

After 12 weeks, the Pvolve group — compared to women following standard activity guidelines — saw measurable, repeatable improvements:

  • 19% increase in hip function and lower-body strength.
  • 21% increase in full-body flexibility.
  • 10% increase in dynamic balance, mobility and stability.
  • An increase in lean muscle without increasing total body mass, with some markers shifting after just four weeks.

The finding that quietly matters

The headline result isn't the percentages. It's that the improvements were comparable across pre-, peri-, and post-menopausal groups — and on some balance measures, post-menopausal women actually gained the most. That is the first direct evidence that the menopause transition does not blunt your ability to respond to well-designed resistance training. The body still adapts. The stimulus just has to be right.

That matters because the dominant story women are told in midlife is one of inevitable decline: bone thins, muscle slips, balance goes. This trial pushes back on that story with numbers. Strength and balance are trainable through menopause, not despite it.

Why 30 minutes, four times a week, was enough

The Pvolve sessions in the trial weren't long, and they weren't brutal. They were short, progressively loaded, and consistent — four times a week for twelve weeks. The protocol is closer to what Aniston describes in her own interviews ("you can get as good, if not better, of a workout in 30 minutes") than to the high-intensity, sweat-soaked aesthetic that still dominates a lot of midlife fitness marketing.

The mechanism is unglamorous: enough mechanical tension to signal muscle and bone, enough balance and rotational work to defend joint integrity and proprioception, and enough frequency that the nervous system actually learns. None of it requires you to crawl out of the gym. It requires you to show up.

What we take from this at Ember

We're not endorsing a brand. We are endorsing the principle the trial validates, because it is exactly what Ember is built on: short, consistent, progressively loaded resistance work, paired with balance, mobility and pelvic-floor-aware cueing — three to four times a week, in 30–40 minute blocks — is enough to defend strength, bone, and balance through and beyond the menopause transition.

  • Consistency beats intensity. Four 30-minute sessions a week, done for twelve weeks, produced measurable change. A perfect 90-minute session you skip half the time does not.
  • Progressive resistance is non-negotiable. Bands, ankle weights and dumbbells worked because the load went up over twelve weeks. Light forever is not a stimulus.
  • Balance and rotation belong in every week. Hip hinges, single-leg work and multi-planar movement are what protect you from the falls and fractures that decide how the second half of life actually goes.
  • Post-menopause is not too late. The women furthest into the transition responded just as well — and sometimes better — than those earliest into it.

The bigger point

Jennifer Aniston gets the magazine cover. The quieter, more useful story is the one underneath: a peer-reviewed trial showing that the right kind of training — modest in duration, intelligent in design, sustained over weeks — measurably changes the trajectory of a midlife body. That is the work Ember exists to support. The science is finally catching up to what your body has been asking for all along.

Reference: Stephens, F. et al. "A novel low-impact resistance exercise program increases strength and balance in females irrespective of menopause status." Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2025.

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May 2026

10 min read

The new science of menopause: why this decade demands a completely different approach to training.

Dr Stacy Sims PhD has spent her career proving one simple truth: women are not small men. As oestrogen drops, the old fitness rules don't just stop working — they start working against you.

Menopause is not a disease. It is not a decline. It is, as Dr Stacy Sims PhD describes it in her book Next Level, reverse puberty — a single calendar date that marks the end of one hormonal chapter and the beginning of another. Before it lies perimenopause: the long, unpredictable transition where oestrogen and progesterone begin their erratic descent. After it lies postmenopause: the rest of your life, lived in a body that no longer has the hormonal buffer it once relied on.

The problem is not menopause itself. The problem is that we have been trying to navigate it with advice written for twenty-five-year-old men.

What is actually happening in your body

Oestrogen is not merely a reproductive hormone. It is a master regulator — of bone turnover, muscle protein synthesis, insulin sensitivity, vascular health, and neuroplasticity. When it falls, the body does not gently coast into decline. It enters a state of adaptation to absence.

Your brain, dense with oestrogen receptors, keeps searching for a signal that is no longer arriving. Hot flushes, night sweats, mood volatility, brain fog — these are not character flaws or weakness. They are neurochemical and thermoregulatory symptoms of a brain rewiring itself in real time. The body is not broken. It is reorganising.

What changes most profoundly is how your body responds to the things you used to do. Fasted cardio, calorie restriction, long slow distance running, and the eat-less-move-more prescription that worked in your thirties now produce a different result: muscle loss, bone thinning, cortisol accumulation, and a metabolism that becomes increasingly reluctant to cooperate.

The old rules — and why they stop working

For decades, fitness culture has sold women a single script: burn more, eat less, leaner is better. That script was never designed for a body in hormonal transition. Without adequate oestrogen, the protective effects of that advice simply vanish.

Fasted training, for example, was once a minor inconvenience your body tolerated. In midlife, without oestrogen to blunt the cortisol spike and support muscle protein synthesis, fasted high-intensity work actively degrades lean tissue. Calorie restriction that once produced a gentle recomposition now strips the very muscle you are trying to preserve. Chronic cardio that once felt restorative now accumulates stress without the hormonal capacity to recover from it.

The research is unambiguous: women are not small men. Their physiology is not a scaled-down version of male biology. It is different in its hormonal architecture, its response to load, its recovery demands, and its nutritional requirements. Treating it as anything else is not just inefficient. It is harmful.

The new prescription: train for the body you have now

Dr Sims's research, distilled in Next Level, points to a clear, evidence-based recalibration. The goal is no longer aesthetics or arbitrary performance. The goal is preserving the four pillars of healthy ageing: muscle mass, bone density, metabolic health, and cognitive resilience.

  • Heavy resistance training, 2–3× a week — compound lifts with progressive loading. Mechanical tension is the strongest signal for bone preservation and muscle maintenance. Light weights and high reps do not produce the same stimulus. Go heavy, go safe, and progress incrementally.
  • Sprint interval work instead of chronic cardio — short, sharp efforts that spike growth hormone and improve insulin sensitivity without the cortisol load of long-duration steady-state training. Think hill sprints, not marathon sessions.
  • Protein earlier, and more of it — the dose-response curve shifts upward in midlife. Aim for 1.6–2.0g per kilogram of bodyweight daily, distributed across meals. Breakfast protein is especially important; the anabolic response to protein is blunted later in the day without oestrogen's support.
  • No fasted high-intensity training — eat before you train hard. Even 20g of protein beforehand changes the metabolic outcome entirely.
  • Sleep as a non-negotiable training variable — 7–9 hours, protected. Poor sleep amplifies every negative symptom of menopause: hot flushes, mood disruption, insulin resistance, and cognitive fog.

The small levers that compound

Beyond the big structural shifts, a handful of smaller interventions produce outsized returns. Cooling the core — a cool bedroom, a chilled pillow, or simply sleeping with fewer layers — reduces the severity and frequency of night sweats. Limiting alcohol, which disrupts sleep architecture and thermoregulation, often produces more benefit than any supplement.

L-theanine, magnesium glycinate, and creatine monohydrate (3–5g daily) have solid evidence for sleep, mood, and muscle support in women at this life stage. They are not magic. They are scaffolding.

What this means for the next forty years

The deepest insight from the research is not about menopause at all. It is about the body that remains. Women in postmenopause are not inhabiting a diminished version of their former selves. They are inhabiting a body with different rules, different sensitivities, and different capacities — and those capacities are still trainable.

Bone density responds to load. Muscle responds to protein and tension. The brain responds to movement, sleep, and social connection. The cardiovascular system responds to sprint work and daily walking. None of this stops at fifty, or sixty, or seventy.

Menopause is not an ending. It is a recalibration. The fire is not going out. It is asking to be tended differently — with heavier weights, more protein, better sleep, and the quiet discipline of listening to the body you have now rather than mourning the one you had then.

The science says it plainly: the next forty years can be built on more strength, not less. More clarity, not more fog. More autonomy, not more limitation. The training just has to match the biology.

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May 2026

7 min read

Longevity for women in midlife: the levers that actually move the needle.

Forget the biohacking noise. After 40, a handful of unglamorous habits do almost all the work of adding healthy years to your life.

Longevity has become a noisy word. Cold plunges, peptides, red light, fasting windows, twelve supplements before breakfast. It's easy to feel that unless you're optimising every hour, you're falling behind.

The truth, for women in their second spring, is quieter and far more reassuring. The interventions with the strongest evidence for extending healthspan — the years you live well, not just the years you live — are almost all free, deeply unsexy, and entirely within reach.

Healthspan, not lifespan

The goal is not to die later. The goal is to stay strong, mobile, sharp, and independent for as long as possible — and then to compress the decline at the end into as short a window as we can. The science calls this healthspan, and it's the only longevity metric worth optimising for.

Almost everything that matters for healthspan in midlife women comes down to protecting four things: muscle, bone, brain, and metabolic health. Get those right and the rest tends to follow.

The five levers that actually matter

If you do nothing else, do these five. They are the foundation; everything else is decoration.

  • Strength training, 2–3× a week — the single best defence against frailty, falls, and the loss of independence that drives most late-life decline.
  • VO2 max work, once a week — short, hard cardio sessions. VO2 max is the strongest predictor of all-cause mortality we have, and it is trainable at any age.
  • Protein, 1.6–2.0g per kg of bodyweight daily — the raw material for muscle, bone, immune function, and stable mood.
  • Sleep, 7–9 hours, protected like a meeting — the master regulator for hormones, cognition, insulin sensitivity, and recovery.
  • Connection — strong relationships are as predictive of longevity as not smoking. Loneliness in midlife is a clinical risk factor.

Why midlife is the leverage point

Between 40 and 60, the body recomposes more than at any time since adolescence. Oestrogen falls. Bone density drops. Muscle quietly slips away. Visceral fat creeps in. Sleep architecture changes. None of this is failure — it's biology renegotiating its terms.

The decisions you make in this window compound. A woman who maintains her muscle mass through her fifties walks into her seventies with an entirely different body — and an entirely different range of life — than one who doesn't. The midlife decade is where most of the long-term variance is decided.

What we'd quietly skip

Most of the longevity industry is selling answers to problems you don't have. Be sceptical of anything that's expensive, branded, or asks you to take its word for it. Cold plunges are pleasant; they are not a cardiovascular intervention. Continuous glucose monitors are interesting; for most healthy midlife women, the readings will tell you to eat more protein and walk after meals — which you already knew.

Supplements are a small lever. Vitamin D3 in winter, creatine (3–5g daily) for muscle and brain, magnesium glycinate for sleep if you need it, and a B12 check if you eat little meat. That's most of it. The rest is marketing.

What to do this month

Pick one lever and build the habit before adding another. If you're not lifting, start there — two sessions a week is enough to change a decade. If you are lifting, audit your protein for a week and notice where you fall short. If both are handled, protect your sleep with the same seriousness you'd protect a doctor's appointment.

Longevity is not a product. It's the unglamorous accumulation of ordinary days done well. The body you want at 75 is being built, quietly, by the choices you make this week.

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May 2026

5 min read

Morning and evening sun, no sunglasses: the simplest hormone hack we know.

Two short doses of low-angle sunlight a day will do more for your sleep, mood and hormones than almost any supplement. Here's how — and where vitamin D actually fits in.

If we could prescribe one free, daily intervention for every woman in her second spring, it would not be a supplement or a workout. It would be this: step outside within an hour of waking, and again as the sun is setting, and look toward the sky without sunglasses for a few minutes. That's it.

It sounds almost too small to matter. The research says otherwise.

What low-angle sunlight actually does

When low, warm-spectrum sunlight hits the specialised melanopsin cells in your retina, it sends a direct signal to the suprachiasmatic nucleus — the master clock in your brain. That signal sets the timing of cortisol (your wake-up hormone), melatonin (your sleep hormone), and the cascade of downstream hormones that govern hunger, mood, body temperature and recovery.

In perimenopause, when oestrogen and progesterone are already fluctuating, an anchored circadian rhythm is one of the few stabilising forces you still control. Women who view morning light consistently report deeper sleep, steadier moods, fewer night sweats, and easier mornings — not because the light is magic, but because a well-set clock is.

Why no sunglasses (for these few minutes)

The melanopsin cells need light to actually reach the eye. Sunglasses block the very wavelengths that carry the timing signal. Prescription glasses and contact lenses are fine — they don't filter the relevant spectrum meaningfully. Sunglasses, by design, do.

You are not staring at the sun. You're facing the general direction of the sky for two to ten minutes, eyes open, blinking normally. Never look directly at a bright sun — especially once it's higher in the sky.

And the vitamin D question

Here is where we have to be honest: morning and evening sun are not your vitamin D source. Vitamin D synthesis requires UVB radiation, which only reaches the skin in meaningful amounts when the sun is high — roughly between 10am and 3pm in summer, and very little at all in northern winters.

So the protocol is really two separate things, often confused:

  • Morning and evening light, no sunglasses — for circadian rhythm, sleep, and hormone timing.
  • Midday sun on bare skin (arms, legs, face), 10–20 minutes a few times a week in summer — for vitamin D.
  • Most women in the UK and northern climates need a vitamin D3 supplement (1000–2000 IU daily) from October through April regardless.

Why this matters more after 40

Circadian disruption hits midlife women hard. Sleep fragments. Cortisol rises at the wrong times. Insulin sensitivity drops. The same protocol that does almost nothing noticeable for a 25-year-old can transform energy, sleep, and mood for a 48-year-old whose hormonal buffer is thinner.

Vitamin D, separately, matters for bone density (already under pressure from falling oestrogen), immune function, and mood. Getting both right — light for the clock, vitamin D for the bones — is a quietly powerful midlife foundation.

What to do this week

Tomorrow morning, before you check your phone, put on whatever clothes you can and go outside for two minutes. Face east. No sunglasses. Just look toward the sky and breathe. Do the same as the sun sets. Test it for seven days and notice what shifts — usually it's sleep first, then mood, then everything else.

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May 2026

7 min read

Strength training for women over 40: where to start.

If you've never picked up a barbell — or you've stopped since your thirties — here's the honest, hormone-aware way back in.

Somewhere around 40, the body starts quietly renegotiating its contract with you. Oestrogen begins to fluctuate, then decline. Bone density edges down. Lean muscle — the tissue that keeps you metabolically alive — starts to slip by roughly 3–8% per decade if you don't train it. None of this is catastrophe. All of it is reversible.

The single most powerful intervention we have is strength training. Not pink dumbbells, not endless reps — real, progressive resistance with weights that genuinely challenge you. Here's how to begin.

Why strength matters more after 40

Three things change in midlife that strength training directly addresses: bone loss accelerates as oestrogen drops, muscle protein synthesis becomes less efficient (a phenomenon called anabolic resistance), and joint integrity depends increasingly on the muscles surrounding them.

Cardio is wonderful for your heart. But cardio alone cannot maintain bone, cannot rebuild lost muscle, and cannot protect you from the loss of independence that drives most quality-of-life decline after 60. Strength is the keystone.

Where to actually begin

Start with the six movement patterns that cover almost everything a human body needs to do: squat, hinge, push, pull, carry, and rotate. Two sessions per week is enough to start. Three is better. Four is plenty for a lifetime.

  • Squat — goblet squat, then back squat
  • Hinge — Romanian deadlift, then conventional deadlift
  • Push — incline dumbbell press, then overhead press
  • Pull — single-arm row, then chin-up progressions
  • Carry — farmer's walks with heavy dumbbells
  • Rotate — Pallof press, cable chops

How heavy is heavy enough?

Heavy enough that the last two reps of a set feel genuinely hard. If you can chat through it, the weight is too light to drive adaptation. A good rule: work in the 5–8 rep range for compound lifts, leaving one or two reps in reserve.

This sounds counterintuitive at midlife, but it's the science. Mechanical tension is the signal that tells your body to keep its bones dense and its muscle fibres recruited.

Recovery is not optional

In your thirties you could train hard and sleep four hours and feel mostly fine. In your forties and fifties, that arithmetic stops working. Sleep, protein (aim for 1.6–2.0g per kg of bodyweight per day), and a true rest day between heavy sessions are the difference between progress and burnout.

If your cycle is still arriving, expect the week before your period to feel heavier. That's not weakness — that's physiology. Plan the deload, don't fight it.

What to do this week

Pick two days. Pick three of the six patterns. Do three sets of five to eight reps. Add a little weight next session. Repeat for ten years. That is, essentially, the whole secret.

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April 2026

6 min read

Why cardio alone isn't enough after 40 — and what to do instead.

Running, cycling, spin class — all wonderful. None of them, on their own, will protect the body you want at 60.

A pattern we see constantly: a woman in her late 40s, fit and disciplined, running four or five times a week, eating reasonably well — and watching the scale creep up, the energy dip down, and the recovery from a long run take three days instead of one.

She has done nothing wrong. She has simply hit the limits of what cardio alone can do for a midlife body.

What cardio is brilliant at

Aerobic exercise is unmatched for cardiovascular health, mood regulation, insulin sensitivity, and stress decompression. Walking is one of the most underrated longevity interventions in existence. Zone 2 cardio — the conversational pace, two to three sessions a week — should be a permanent fixture in your week.

What cardio cannot do

Cardio does not meaningfully build or maintain muscle. It does not load bones in the way required to maintain density. And in excess — particularly when paired with low energy availability — chronic cardio can actually accelerate the loss of both.

If you're running an hour a day and not lifting, you are likely getting steadily smaller, weaker, and more fragile. Not because running is bad. Because running is incomplete.

The balanced midlife week

We program our members around a simple template that covers all the bases without overwhelming the week:

  • 2× strength sessions (45–60 minutes, full body)
  • 2–3× zone 2 cardio (30–45 minutes, conversational pace)
  • 1× short, hard session — sprints, hill repeats, or a spin class (15–20 minutes of work)
  • 1× mobility, pelvic floor, or yoga
  • Daily walking — aim for 7,000–10,000 steps

Why this works

Strength preserves the tissue that defines how you age. Zone 2 keeps your mitochondria — your cellular engines — running clean. Short hard sessions maintain VO2 max, the single best predictor of longevity we have. Mobility keeps you free in your body. Walking does the quiet, unsexy work of metabolic health.

Together they are far greater than the sum of their parts. Each one alone is, after 40, not quite enough.

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March 2026

5 min read

Eating for energy: protein targets for women over 40.

If you eat the way you did at 30 in a body that's now 45, expect the body to disagree. Here's the nutrition shift that actually works.

The single most-impactful nutrition change a woman can make in her forties is also the simplest: eat more protein, more consistently, across the day.

This is not a fad. It's a response to a real, measurable shift called anabolic resistance — the reduced efficiency with which an ageing body turns dietary protein into muscle. The fix is straightforward: give the body more raw material, and give it earlier in the day.

What the research suggests

Older nutrition guidelines (0.8g per kg of bodyweight) were derived from young, sedentary men and are almost certainly too low for active women in midlife. Current research on muscle protein synthesis in women over 40 points to a target closer to 1.6–2.0g per kg of bodyweight per day.

For a 65kg woman, that's roughly 105–130g of protein daily. Most women we meet are eating 50–70g.

What 120g a day looks like

Aim for 30–40g of protein at each main meal, and a 20g snack or post-workout option. A practical day:

  • Breakfast — Greek yoghurt with berries and a scoop of whey (35g)
  • Lunch — Chicken or tofu salad with quinoa, plus olive oil (40g)
  • Snack — A handful of edamame or a protein shake (20g)
  • Dinner — Salmon or lentil dahl with roasted veg (35g)

Why this matters beyond muscle

Higher protein intake in your 40s and beyond is correlated with better sleep, stabler blood sugar, fewer cravings, and protection against the dreaded "meno-belly" — which is not a moral failing but a predictable response to insulin resistance, cortisol shifts, and muscle loss.

Protein is also remarkably satiating. Women who hit their protein target tend to eat less of everything else without having to think about it.

One thing to try this week

For the next seven days, front-load protein at breakfast. Aim for 30g before 10am. Notice the energy stability, the reduced mid-morning hunger, and the quiet steadiness it brings. Then build from there.

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June 2026

8 min read

Why menopause causes bloating — and the levers that actually flatten it.

It's not weight gain and it's not in your head. The hormonal shift of menopause rewires digestion, fluid balance, and how sensitive your gut is to normal gas. Here's the science, and what genuinely helps.

If your abdomen feels like a balloon by 4pm and your jeans fit differently from morning to evening, you are not alone — and you are not imagining it. Bloating is one of the most common and most dismissed symptoms of perimenopause and menopause, and it has almost nothing to do with willpower or portion control.

The gut is an oestrogen-responsive organ. It is lined with oestrogen and progesterone receptors, and when those hormones decline, the digestive system reorganises in ways that are entirely predictable — and entirely reversible with the right interventions.

What is actually happening in your gut

Three hormonal changes drive the bloating most women notice in their forties and fifties. First, progesterone falls. Progesterone acts as a smooth-muscle relaxant; it keeps the digestive tract moving at a steady, unhurried pace. When it drops, gut motility slows. Food sits longer in the stomach and small intestine. Fermentation increases. Gas builds. And because transit time is slower, constipation becomes more frequent — which traps even more gas and fluid above the blockage.

Second, oestrogen loss increases visceral hypersensitivity. This means the nerves in your gut wall fire more readily in response to the same amount of normal distension. The gas volume inside you may be unchanged from five years ago, but your brain now registers it as pain, pressure, and bloating. It is not that you are producing more gas. It is that you feel it more.

Third, cortisol often rises during perimenopause as the HPA axis loses oestrogen's calming regulation. Elevated cortisol slows gastric emptying, reduces digestive enzyme output, and preferentially stores fat around the midsection — the so-called 'meno-belly' that is partly visceral fat and partly chronic digestive distension.

Fluid retention is part of the picture too

Progesterone is a natural diuretic. It promotes sodium and water excretion through the kidneys. When progesterone drops, the body holds onto salt and water more readily. Many women notice puffy fingers, ankles, and a swollen abdomen that fluctuates dramatically across the day. This is not fat. This is osmotic fluid shift, and it responds quickly to the right inputs.

The microbiome shifts as well. Oestrogen helps maintain a diverse gut ecosystem, and its absence is associated with reduced microbial diversity and increased intestinal permeability. The result can be more fermentation, more inflammation, and more of the gas that your now-hypersensitive gut wall reports as bloating.

The evidence-based interventions that work

This is not a case for restriction, detoxes, or cutting out entire food groups. The research points to a handful of targeted, sustainable levers.

  • Fibre, but introduced gradually — aim for 25–30g daily from vegetables, legumes, oats, and ground flaxseed. Jumping straight to high fibre with a slow gut will worsen bloating before it improves. Add 5g per week and drink water with it.
  • Hydration, early and consistently — 2–2.5 litres of water daily, with the first 500ml within an hour of waking. Mild dehydration is one of the fastest ways to constipate a slowing gut.
  • A ten-minute walk after meals — gentle movement stimulates the gastrocolic reflex and mechanically pushes gas through the system. It is more effective than any supplement for post-meal distension.
  • Magnesium, especially glycinate or citrate — 200–400mg in the evening supports both motility and sleep. Citrate has a mild osmotic effect that softens stool without dependency. Glycinate is gentler and calms the nervous system.
  • A quality probiotic with Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains — the evidence for general bloating relief is modest but real, especially after antibiotics or during gut dysbiosis. Give it four to six weeks.
  • Smaller, slower meals — a stressed, slow gut handles a 400-calorie meal far better than an 800-calorie one. Chew thoroughly. Put your fork down between bites. The stomach has no teeth.
  • Avoid drinking large volumes with meals — a small sip is fine, but diluting stomach acid with 500ml of water during a protein-rich lunch impairs the first digestive step. Drink between meals instead.

The FODMAP question

Fermentable carbohydrates — onions, garlic, beans, certain fruits, and wheat — can produce large volumes of gas when transit time is slow. A short, structured low-FODMAP trial (two to four weeks, followed by systematic reintroduction) can identify specific triggers without sentencing you to permanent restriction. Most women find they tolerate many FODMAPs again once motility and microbiome diversity improve.

If bloating is persistent, severe, or accompanied by weight loss or change in bowel habits, see your GP. SIBO — small intestinal bacterial overgrowth — becomes more common in midlife due to slower gut motility, and it is treatable.

What to do this week

Start with three things: a 500ml glass of water on waking, a ten-minute walk after lunch and dinner, and 200mg of magnesium glycinate before bed. Notice what shifts by day five. Then layer in fibre, probiotics, and meal-size adjustments one at a time.

Bloating in menopause is not a character flaw. It is a message from a gut that has lost its hormonal scaffolding and is asking for support. The body is not broken. It simply needs different inputs now — more movement, more water, more patience, and less volume per sitting. Listen to it, feed it differently, and the distension will ease.

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