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Spiritual Aspects of Menopause
Angela Whitney RN, CS-FNP explores the
growth processes of the change of life.
The transition in a woman's life called
menopause is spiritual in its essence. We are bio-spiritual
beings with physical, emotional, mental, social and spiritual
experiences simultaneously interacting. That's a lot to think
about! Let's explore all this further.
What is menopause? Menopause is the time
in a woman's life when the flow of hormones that have supported
her body in menstruation and in the ability to conceive, deliver,
and suckle a child, cease, creating a new phase of life for
her. We are really talking about a longer time frame when
we think about the spiritual aspects of menopause. The decade
before actual menopause and the decade after it is when tremendous
changes occur-a time frequently called peri-menopause. After
that perhaps twenty-year time period, a woman emerges fully
into her new life of deeper uniqueness, generativity, nurturance,
and creativity. This is the spiritual fruit of an apparent
biologically-driven transition.
How do we understand what is going on
in menopause, or peri-menopause anyway? We know that the "times
they are a-changin'." Let's consider where we have been in
our understanding collectively. Culturally, perhaps we have
not had a clear understanding or appreciation of feminine
gifts, ways of being, and ways of knowing. Also, in the last
several decades, we have seen menopause treated as an illness,
an unpleasant event with unacceptable consequences, something
to be protected from. Through this cultural and medical perception,
a new way of understanding menopause is emerging-a new context
for menopause. This is not surprising and very exciting. This
new context of menopause is more whole, reflecting our heightening
awareness of ourselves as having physical, emotional, mental,
social, and spiritual experiences that are valuable to tend
to.
It is thought that the peaking neurotransmitter
levels at women's time of ovulation (FSH and LH) actually
become constantly high in the menopausal woman. That would
mean that the time of clarity of insight (though some would
describe it otherwise!) in the premenstrual woman may become
available to the menopausal woman during all of her monthly
days, instead of just a few. Our biology has consequences
for our spiritual selves. Our biology may actually be pushing
us to leave a major aspect of our femininity, and grooming
us to fully participate in the next. Some say (Northrup, Borysenko,
for instance) that menopause re-wires women for intuition.
This happens in different ways.
As our vision increases, so does the
demands on us. We are challenged. We see what we have not
seen, and feel what has been left unfelt. We must come to
terms with our new ways of seeing and experiencing our selves
and our world. We may be called to understand our feminine
roots more deeply; and we may become aware of how we are not
expressing our feminine gifts. A fire burns in us…clarifying,
purifying, and creating our new selves. We experience the
loss of our old bodies and selves, and we feel disoriented
as the new is just birthing and not fully developed. We find
ourselves working to make sense of the past, how we got here,
what we have been doing. In our menopause process, we may
remember our ideals, our spiritual passions, and re-orient
ourselves to nurturing them. Our faculties of intuition and
knowing are enhanced. We trust ourselves more deeply. We learn
how to nurture ourselves in this transitioning in a myriad
of ways.
We may become blocked in aspects of this
transition as it is not easy, and there has not been a lot
of support. This is understandable. Some get locked into unpleasant
physical symptoms, grief of things lost. Some are disoriented
in how to find new life, how to feel a sense of purpose or
worthiness. But even these blocks can be blessings. Ways are
found to move beyond these things. A voice is heard that comes
quietly from within, that strengthens as it is listened to.
These women relish their new sense of themselves and purpose.
They stand released from their procreative responsibilities
given by nature and cultural roles, free to birth and nurture
a new wave of life and creativity as it emerges uniquely-from
them.
How does a woman emerge in her new zest
and wholeness through this process? She finds spiritual food
for herself-this is different for each woman. She works with
her body, and her mind, and her spirit simultaneously-understanding
her spirit through her body and mind, and her mind through
her body and spirit. And what a menu of things there are to
consider!
Tending to our bodies, we rest, stretch,
relax, do yoga, and feed ourselves nurturing foods. We are
aware of our bodies and we communicate. In tending to our
mind, we reflect, take inventory, care for ourselves, educate
ourselves; we communicate and explore; we meditate, breathe,
become aware of our emotions, own them, and do yoga. In working
with our spiritual selves, we develop tolerance and trust
of ourselves and others. We develop community; we pray and
meditate, listen to inner guidance, do yoga, and trust the
process.
By tending to her inner and outer worlds
one step at a time, as she is led in this bio-spiritual transition,
she embraces Life anew. The world benefits as each woman finds
her new self and peace, and takes the fullness of her place
in creating our ever-emerging world.
Angela Whitney RN, FNP has guided
many women in their path to discovering even deeper meaning
in their perimenopausal and menopausal years, and offers clinical
consultation for women in mid-life transition at Mountain
Body-Mind Associates in downtown Asheville. She also leads
personal retreats at Light of the Mountains Retreat Center
in the mountains northwest of Asheville. You can reach her
at 828-232-1826.
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