The Shock of My First Missed Period

When I missed my first menopausal period at 48, my initial reaction was a mix of relief and quiet panic. For years I had helped midlife women lose weight through my CFP Weight Loss method, yet experiencing it myself brought the reality home. I knew this signaled shifting hormones—specifically declining estrogen and rising fluctuations in progesterone—that often trigger stubborn weight gain around the midsection. Like many in their 45-54 age range, I had already battled joint pain that made traditional exercise feel impossible and watched my blood pressure and blood sugar numbers creep up despite “eating clean.”

Understanding the Hormonal Shift

My training as a weight loss specialist quickly kicked in. I recognized this missed period as the start of perimenopause, where insulin resistance intensifies and makes fat storage easier, especially visceral fat. Research shows women can gain an average of 1.5 pounds per year during this transition, much of it linked to the body’s changing response to carbohydrates. Instead of panicking, I reviewed my own CFP method principles: focus on blood-sugar stabilizing meals, gentle movement that respects aching joints, and consistent sleep to balance cortisol. I immediately adjusted my plate to 40% non-starchy vegetables, 30% lean protein, 20% healthy fats, and 10% low-glycemic carbs—numbers I share in my book to help women avoid the overwhelm of conflicting nutrition advice.

Turning Fear into Actionable Strategy

Rather than another restrictive diet doomed to fail, I doubled down on anti-inflammatory foods like wild salmon, olive oil, and berries while cutting hidden sugars that spike insulin. For joint pain, I replaced high-impact workouts with 20-minute daily walks plus resistance-band sessions that protect knees and hips. Within six weeks my fasting blood sugar dropped 18 points and I lost 7 pounds without counting calories or spending hours at a gym. Insurance rarely covers these programs, so I designed the CFP approach to be affordable and time-efficient—perfect for busy middle-income women managing diabetes alongside weight concerns.

Embracing the Change with Confidence

That first missed period became a turning point. It taught me that menopausal weight loss isn’t about willpower; it’s about working with your changing biology. My book outlines the exact 4-week protocol I followed, including recipes that take under 15 minutes and movement routines gentle enough for beginners embarrassed by their current fitness level. If you’re facing the same hormonal changes, know that steady, evidence-based adjustments can restore energy, improve blood pressure, and shed pounds without extreme measures. Start by tracking your cycle—or lack of one—and notice how specific foods affect your energy and joint comfort. Small consistent changes compound faster than you expect.