Her Empty Nest Syndrome

Empty Nest Syndrome

Empty Nest Syndrome

Being a caregiver is a natural part of what many mothers do for a comprehensive period of their adult lives. So when it comes to an end, as when children grow up and leave an ‘empty nest’ at home, the transition can be painful and disorienting. Shone in a different light, this time in a woman’s life can be not so much an ending, but a shift in where we focus our energy.

The empty nest experience is akin to, and often coincides with, menopause which is another significant midlife change in and of itself. Often women don’t expect the emotional tsunamis that accompany the journey simply because they have never been there before. You don’t have a clue what it will feel like, and once you are in it, you can’t believe somebody didn’t warn you about the ride.

Women report that their emotions are often raw and overwhelming. So much of their identity has been wrapped up in giving to and doing for others. Doing – for their husbands, life partners, pets, parents and primarily their children. They cry easily and profusely and spend quite a bit of time wondering, now what? It marks a period of time when a woman enters into the ‘second half’ of her life.

Exactly! And face first into all of those unanswered questions that somehow are still waiting for her.

What do you do when there’s no longer someone that needs you to watch out after them, or is waiting for you to cook for them and get up in the middle of the night when they are sick, help with their homework or just do their laundry?

What do you want to do with the rest of your life? And the ever present question – Who am I?

Whether you were a stay-at-home mom, or a women also juggling a career alongside child-rearing, women wind up feeling like a huge part of their lives is over. It can be emotionally devastating and leave you feeling like you are at a significant crossroads in your own life. If only you had known what lay ahead, you might have planned differently. Or so you think.

A Midlife Crisis

There’s a reason this part of your life is referred to as a crisis. Crisis: a dramatic emotional or circumstantial upheaval in a person’s life. Midlife qualifies as a time when you desperately need a good support system including family and friends.

Often while women are dealing with children leaving the home, they are also dealing with concurrent issues such as:

·a career change

·starting a job for the first time

·divorce

·dealing with unacknowledged relationship flaws in their marriage

·health problems including raging hormones, and

·aging parents who require more time and attention

How to Start to Make Sense of it All

Plenty of parents who have gone through the empty nest caution, “Don’t worry, they’ll be back.” So calm yourself with the knowing that your children might have left home, but they will always be your children. Acknowledge and accept that you will be guided to your next purpose in life just as you have been guided through today.

Be strong in considering what’s best for your child’s welfare and don’t get caught up in feeling sorry for yourself. They need encouragement when they first venture away from home because they will probably be afraid to admit how nervous and sad they feel about this change in their lives. As much as part of you may want them to come home, remember back to your own transition and ask yourself, “What is best for this child?”

Stay in touch with your kids by phone and/or email. Arrange to spend time with them as a family. Visit them on the weekend or take them to lunch if you are close by and it is possible. When you are feeling weak, reach out to your support system first, and avoid the temptation to share your sadness with your child. The last thing you want them to feel is guilty for leaving home.

Self-Esteem and Defining Who I Am

The inevitable fact about the empty nest is that if you haven’t faced your own growth issues, you won’t be able to avoid them now. One of the main characteristics about this midlife transition is that it forces you to take a long, hard look at your life, backward and forward. Where have you been and how do you feel about your life so far? More urgently, just what comes next?

Plenty of women have discovered at this crucial time that they have self-esteem issues they can no longer avoid. Like those extra 30 lbs you’ve conveniently kept on for all these years because dealing with the kids was far more important. All of a sudden, YOU are your first priority. And it probably feels strange because now you are having thoughts about that class you always wanted to take to learn to write or sing. Your untapped desires start flooding to the surface and you need to sort through them.

Make this time of awakening a celebration. Now is the moment for you to fulfill some of your lifelong dreams.

As in any other stage or moment in life, the most important thing to remember is where you put your focus. Put your energy on feeling good and enjoying new things. Send love to yourself and your children every day. If you are showing signs of ongoing trouble such as depression that will not go away, reach out for help. There is help all around you.

Learn more about an Women Entrepreneurs Journey here

New Community for Women Empowers Lives

Community for Women

Community for Women

A new community for women is empowering lives across the globe and it’s called BraveHeart Women. Described as “social networking for women with a purpose,” this community is built from an inspiring vision of its founder Ellie Drake.

Based on the premise that women can transform the world when they find their own voice and power, Ellie Drake has developed strategies that empower women to become “inspiration in action.”

The BraveHeart community fosters personal growth and global change by first teaching women to raise their self-esteem, as well as grow on a personal and professional level. In addition, thousands of women members are actively creating alliances that help each other succeed.

If you are a woman who feels exhausted from swimming upstream in a man’s business world, BraveHeart Women offers a new paradigm of how women can collaborate to turn their dreams into reality.

At BraveHeart, women around the globe are learning how to follow their own hearts to inspire and be inspired as well as discovering how to work smarter. Part of that realization lies in rising above a world of conflict into one of collaboration. BraveHeart Women treat each other like sisters, and as such, join forces and use their individual skills and talents to create powerful results – such as: a more balanced life, happier families, very successful businesses and a more peaceful world for everyone.

In the BraveHeart community for women you will learn how to find your passion, become empowered in your life’s purpose, while building self-esteem for yourself and others. This unique community is a private online site where women can come to safely exchange ideas and passions without judgment.

In addition to exchanging ideas about things such as global issues, you can also learn how to build personal peace and prosperity for you and your family. You will be part of a global sisterhood of women who want the best for themselves as well as for you, and are spending the time and energy it takes to help each other reach their goals.

Being part of the BraveHeart community gives you access to groups of women around the globe through forums, communities, discussion boards, videos, as well as BraveHeart Women TV where you will find daily inspiration in ten minute videos.

Transformational leaders and celebrities have already recognized this powerful vision that is creating empowered women and have stepped up to endorse it including: Dr. Maya Angelou, Leeza Gibbons, Lisa Nichols of ‘The Secret,’ Mariel Hemingway, and Kathy Ireland.
After the BraveHeart annual meeting called RISE in October of 2010, Janet Smith Warfield from Venice, FL said, “I had tears streaming down my face throughout that face-to-face, heart-to-heart, soul-to-soul touching of Palestinian women with Israeli women, BraveHeart Women with BraveHeart Women. I was so proud of those tears. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could all just release our pain and love one another?”

Laura van den Berg, M.A. who attended from France had this to say, “What touched me the most was the sincerity of all these wonderful women all ready to meet each other with an open heart even if we were strangers. I heard so many inspiring stories and I felt so welcome!”

Many women reported being deeply touched by the experience of “sisterhood” at RISE. Lisa Collins from Aztec, NM sums it up beautifully, “What I really loved was that for a moment we were all ONE. It was like time stopped and there was peace in every country. We were all one color! We were all the same size! We were all in the moment together and open!”

These women are not alone. In 2006, BraveHeart began with 100 courageous women led by the founding inspiration herself, Ellie Drake. Today that community for women, numbers over 500,000.

Maybe this isn’t so much a community as it is a movement that has arrived just in time. Would you like to bring your light and join us?

You can Conquer Menopause Symptoms

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How to Conquer Menopause

How to Conquer Menopause

What if you could learn how to easily eliminate menopause symptoms through all 3 stages including peri-menopause, menopause and post-menopause and do it without taking traditional hormone replacement therapy (HRT)?

It’s not only possible, it’s not that difficult.  I can show you how to sail through mid-life without suffering and in addition, tell you everything you need to know about bioidentical hormones.

But first let me tell you a little bit about my story. I’m a 54-year-old woman very close to menopause (full cessation of my cycle), but I started experiencing some nasty symptoms related to peri-menopause at 46.

I was haunted by several symptoms:

-annoying mood swings including crying jags
-being prone to anger most of the time
-hot flashes during the day
-night sweats and wet sheets at night
-an inability to focus
-a significant loss of short-term memory
-uncomfortable gas and bloating, and
-abnormal weight gain – mostly in the middle

Belly fat is extremely annoying. What happened to being able to button your pants comfortably, or just sit down without feeling like there is a basketball in your stomach? Many people around me thought I was going nuts. Mostly because I often cried for no apparent reason at all.

My emotions appeared to be uncontrollable. I would literally be standing in the line at the grocery store and see a child walk by and break down into tears. For no reason! Or so I thought. I learned to wear my sunglasses pretty much everywhere I went.

Eventually, even I thought I was losing my mind! I turned 47 before I received my first helpful feedback and had one of those ‘aha’ moments during a conversation with my mother.

She said something to the effect that the last few times we had spoken, I sounded very “angry” and that it was very unlike me – and, the clincher – she recommended that I see a doctor. I hate doctors. So I got ticked off and didn’t do anything about it. LOL.

But time passed and my symptoms didn’t, and out of sheer desperation, I finally had to admit that she might be right … maybe something was in fact happening to me that I ought to be aware of. I began asking more questions …

Some to my peers, friends, co-workers, any other women I could find that was in the appropriate age range and would listen to me.

Questions like:

-What symptoms are you experiencing?
-How did you know when you entered peri-menopause?
-What can I do to prevent things like mood swings & hot flashes from happening to me?
-Does it ever all end?
-How can I get some immediate relief?
-What are these bio-identical hormones I keep hearing about in the news?
-Do you currently take traditional HRT and if so, how is that working for you?
-Do you know how to relieve water retention?
-What causes menopause dizziness?
-Does menopause come with joint pain?
-Can I expect more fatigue with menopause?
-Why have my anxiety levels increased since menopause?
-Will I ever get rid of the indigestion and bloating?

The predominant and reoccurring theme was that women trusted their doctors less especially if they had prescribed HRT for them, which most women have stopped taking.

Turns out lots of women were just like me … they did not have adequate answers for most of their questions and they were definitely looking for better, alternative solutions.

Most of women are going through menopause the same way I was … in a vacuum. Most of our mothers never talked to us about the mid-life transition because nobody ever talked to them about it either.

So I decided to break the cycle of ignorance and start talking about the subject to lots of women … and men, too! (We aren’t the only ones going through this cycle). And, I decided that the best way to reach these people quickly was by writing an eBook.

That’s when How to Conquer Menopause was born. Click here to find out all about this ebook.

Has anyone ever heard of menopause symptoms be really really bad?

Question by jas30705: Has anyone ever heard of menopause symptoms be really really bad?
I have just started menopause or at least the part with no more periods. And for the last 8 years I have had anxiety and panic attacks. Well now that my periods are gone (no periods in 4 months) I feel like I am going crazy. My anxiety is so bad I can’t stand myself. I forget everything and the hot flashes are 6 to 8 times and day. I tried perm-pro and the anxiety got even worse. Can anyone help. Anyone have any advice?

Best answer:

Publisher’s Note – Yes I have heard of symptoms being very bad – you are not alone! 4 months might not even be the end yet; typically menopause is considered to happen after 12 months of no periods. But here’s the most important thing – you have to take control of your hormones and with the severity you are experiencing, you should find a doctor in your area. Check out my website www.everythingmenopause.com to find a good doctor in your area. Consider regular and bio-identical hormones. Check your diet, and use this link to read a book that will help you through this. Good luck.

What do you think? Answer below!

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Q&A: menopause symptoms?

Question by Cissy B: menopause symptoms?
I have heard you can take black kolosh for menopauses hot flashes and night sweats, I have not been to a dr. but I have all the signs of menopause will it hurt to take black kolosh or do I need to go to the dr. first.
I have also put on weigh since I started having night sweats and hot flashes.

Best answer:

Answer by Violet Pearl
If you have a hormone imbalance, drinking tea may not do the trick.

http://messageboards.ivillage.com/iv-bhmenopause/?ctx=128

Add your own answer in the comments!

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Q&A: What is the best way I can ease menopause symptoms naturally?

Question by Only Mama Knows: What is the best way I can ease menopause symptoms naturally?
I was recently diagnosed has going through menopause. Some of my symptoms include feeling sweaty, being tired all the time, mood swings and just not being myself.

Best answer:

Answer by Anna H
take pamprin, it helps me!

Add your own answer in the comments!

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Menopause?

Question by OU812: Menopause?
Are all women ridiculous and unreasonable and hateful during menopause or does menopause just bring out the true personality?

Best answer:

Answer by sugerglaze28
it is men on pause time we cant help it.

Give your answer to this question below!

Menopause Symptoms?

Question by Lin J: Menopause Symptoms?
I believe I may be experiencing signs of menopause. For the last month I have been having my period every other week. I am having terrible lower back pain and not to bad of cramping. Are these some of the symptoms.

Best answer:

Check out all the known menopause symptoms – click here.

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Q&A: What are some alternative ways to treat menopause symptoms without using any hormone replacements?

Question by tennis: What are some alternative ways to treat menopause symptoms without using any hormone replacements?
I really do not want to use any HRT therapy, even bio-identicals. Can you recommend a type of Dr. to see that can treat menopause symptoms without a prescription of some type?

Best answer:

Answer by virtuous_gracious
Red Clover and black cohosh are both used to help with menopause. I personally see a ND who specializes in female hormone issues. Check on line, look for a local herbalist, ND, or holistic practitioner.

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