Unlike a lot of women I know, I remember looking forward to menopause. I imagined it as a time of freedom and an unshackling from the many inconveniences of periods. That was before I knew about perimenopause…
There is a narrative that portrays this stage of life as a deficit position (lack of fertility) and as a nuisance (it can be) but I’m hoping we can change the general attitude in time for our daughters and granddaughters.
Menopause
At last, she arrives
And I embrace her β
A long-awaited accomplice.
βSuch a lovely change to be
Welcomed warmlyβ, she winks.
Sheβs not what I expected.
No mumsy twinset and pearls
Or purple leopard-print activewear.
She is elegance and confidence,
Her dress a kaleidoscope
Glittering with her eyes.
We relax into armchairs,
Sipping tea,
At ease with each other.
βMy favourites,β she says
Reaching for the biscuits
And building a lopsided pile
On the arm rest.
Iβve learnt so much, I tell her.
My worth isnβt measured by
The length of menβs stares,
Or numbers on a scale.
Iβm more than a reproductive system,
No longer bound by a cycle
Of inconvenience and mood swings.
She stops mid-sip,
A sideways glance.
βAbout those mood swingsβ¦β
I tell her more about my change β
The sloughing of crippling expectations
And the moulting of attitudes β
Happy to be moving on
From the burden of blood.
She devours another biscuit
And nods.
βNew you. Make your own rules.β
I will, I say,
Reaching for the usually
Forbidden second biscuit.
And third.
(Nadia Mead, 2021)