
Hi. This is Mel. I am just an ordinary woman, mom, friend, colleague, and health and wellness professional, trying to help women navigate midlife, the menopause transition and all that entails. I am overwhelmed with the “state of the union” in this world overflowing with “hormone hacks,” detox teas, and supplement bundles promising to fix menopause overnight, so it’s understandable if YOU feel overwhelmed. Everyone seems to have “the answer” — the one magic pill, diet, or quick solution that claims to erase the discomfort of the menopausal transition. I must say, I often have imposter syndrome because I am not as technologically proficient or because I don’t have anything “for sale” that gives you the “instant results”, but here is what I do have to offer. I offer support, compassion and lived experience packaged with a deep understanding with decades of experience supporting people with behavior change.
Here’s the truth I’ve learned. There is no magic pill. There is only you. And that’s actually the good news. Unless you get to know yourself, have a relationship with yourself, and love yourself, there is nothing that will “fill the hole of not-enough”.
The most powerful tool you have during this transition isn’t found in a bottle or powder, it’s in your daily actions, your mindset, and your willingness to explore your relationship with yourself, your body, and your habits. True healing and adaptation come through the process of “behavior change”, not restriction, not perfection, but conscious awareness and choice.
Menopause Is Not a Problem to Fix, but a Transition to Embrace and Navigate
Menopause often arrives with a mix of relief and grief. The relief of no longer being tied to a monthly cycle, but also the physical and emotional shifts that come with hormonal change such as hot flashes, unexpected weight changes, disrupted sleep, shifting moods, changes in body composition, and energy dips.
Menopause isn’t a disease. It is not even a condition. The Menopause transition is a “biological milestone”. It’s a reflection of the body evolving, just like puberty or pregnancy. The difference is that we don’t often talk about the psychological and social aspects of menopause. Instead, women are left with a flood of contradictory advice: “Take these supplements”, “Cut out carbs”, “Do intermittent fasting”, or“Biohack your hormones.”
What most women really need during this time isn’t more confusion. It’s connection with themselves, with their values, and with trustworthy sources of support.
Behavior Change Is the Missing Link
When women come to me searching for answers, they often expect a detailed plan: what to eat, what supplements to take, what to avoid. And yes, “clinical nutrition science and physiology” matter. But if knowledge alone changed behavior, everyone would already be eating and living exactly as they “should.” (by the way, do not “should” on yourself)
Real, sustainable change happens when you understand “why” you make certain choices and how those choices align with your deeper values and needs.
Behavior change isn’t about willpower; it’s about awareness, experimentation, and compassion. It starts with small steps:
- Tuning in to hunger and fullness cues rather than external rules.
- Asking, “What do I need right now?” before reaching for food, caffeine, or distraction.
- Identifying automatic patterns, emotional eating, people-pleasing, overworking that once served a purpose, but now creates friction.
- Reconnecting with your body through curiosity rather than criticism.
The Behavior Change Process: Not Linear, but Transformational
Behavior change is rarely a straight line. Some days you’ll feel energized and consistent; other days, old patterns will resurface. That’s okay. This process isn’t about perfection. It’s about progress with self-awareness.
In my work, I often frame behavior change as a conversation between your logical mind and your emotional mind. One part knows what’s good for you…. balanced meals, adequate sleep, movement, boundaries. The other part seeks comfort, pleasure, or relief.
Changing behavior isn’t about silencing that emotional mind; it’s about learning to listen to it differently. When you understand the messages behind your urges, “I’m lonely”, “I’m overwhelmed", “I need rest”, you can respond with care instead of control. That’s when new, nourishing habits begin to stick.
The Real Work: Connecting the Dots
There’s a phrase I come back to often: “We don’t need more information; we need integration and inspiration.” You already have decades of life experience, intuition, and wisdom. Behavior change is simply the framework that helps you “connect the dots” between your biology, psychology, and environment.
When you align your nutrition with your lifestyle, your emotional patterns with your values, and your actions with your identity, menopause stops feeling like something happening “to” you and starts becoming something happening “for” you.
It’s an opportunity to step into the next chapter of your life “with clarity and calm”, not by erasing symptoms, but by understanding your body’s signals as valuable feedback, instead of trying to eliminate the process. Just because it does not feel good, does not mean it is bad. WHAT IF ALL THIS CRAZYNESS IS PREPARING YOU TO BECOME THE BEST VERSION OF YOURSELF? WHAT IF THIS IS YOUR TIME OF SELF DISCOVERY?
Make Space to Explore Who You Are Becoming
In my practice, I don’t just talk about macronutrients or hormone ratios. We talk about meaning…who you are, what matters most, and how to show up in this phase authentically.
Your relationship with food is also your relationship with life. What you choose to feed your body, your thoughts, your connections, shapes not only how you feel day-to-day, but how you move into the next stage of the woman you’re becoming.
Menopause is not the end of vitality, but the beginning of a new kind of wisdom…one lived with greater consciousness, agency, and self-respect.
The behavior change process gives you the map: learning, noticing, adjusting, reclaiming. Each small step brings you closer to a more integrated version of yourself, one who trusts her body, honors her needs, and knows that change is not something to fear, but something to support and guide you.
Final Thoughts
So yes, hormones matter. Nutrition matters. But “how you live” the microchoices, the mindset shifts, the self-compassion practiced in real time that’s what carries you through.
The solution isn’t outside of you; it’s within you. The behavior change process isn’t just about better habits, it’s about becoming who you truly are, even in the midst of change. If you would like to explore my process and the opportunity to work together, I am here for you. I am also available to support anyone who needs support with ANY Nutrition or lifestyle related need. Please click here for a complimentary Momentum Builder call and we can explore next steps.



