The Philippine Star

Chaka and ‘the change’

- By TWINK MACARAIG

Embrace the ‘change’ and you’ll take any suggestion­s about being pregnant as proof that you exude the aura of one young enough to be capable of child-bearing.

Iwas just about to board a Hong Kong Disneyland ride a couple of weeks ago, when I was accosted by an attendant in an officious- looking Ranger costume. The girl was telling me something in the accent peculiar to the former Crown Colony. After a fashion, I gathered that she was barring me from getting into the pop car. “So sorry but you cannot ride,” she was saying.

I couldn’t fathom why this would be so. Surely, she couldn’t be questionin­g my driving skills when kids, including my nine-year-old, were already buckled into the vehicle of their choice (and giving me nasty looks for holding up the trip). After determinin­g that the girl was indeed talking to me (and didn’t just have a lazy eye condition), I asked, “But why not?”

Looking genuinely concerned, she answered, “Eet’s not good for expectant mother.”

Girlfriend­s to whom I relate the tale are invariably outraged. They all conclude that this — shall we say — misconcept­ion must’ve arisen from my attire. “You were wearing some empire-cut outfit, ‘ no?”

Actually, no. I was in a stretch tank top and drawstring sweats, standard garb for traipsing around a theme park in 36 deg heat. And, I’ve since decided, the kind of thing — moreso than a flouncy top and leggings — that would lead someone to think of me as pregnant. It makes no attempt at cover-up the way a merely fat person would. It exposes limbs that look incongruou­sly spindly alongside the bulging belly. It’s exactly what a pregnant person would wear if she wanted to flaunt her pregnancy but not do a nude cover on Vanity Fair.

Except, I’m not pregnant. In a not entirely fallacious way, I’m the opposite: menopausal. But I thought that I’d dealt with the symptoms healthily enough that the “change of life” was barely life-changing. A daily routine of tweezing and teasing managed the hairs that have begun sprouting on my chin, and camouflage­d the bald spot developing on my head. The bouts of insomnia I treated as opportunit­ies to catch up on DVD shows my hubby doesn’t care for (“what do you see in that Tina Fey anyway?”). Night sweats were addressed by turning the a/c to Siberian. And the loss of sexual desire I accepted as directly proportion­al to the loss of my hubby’s sexual desirabili­ty (he’d taken to sleeping in thermal underwear and a wool cap).

What I wasn’t prepared for was the “middle-aged spread”, the thickening of the mid-section induced by the hormonal levels gone awry. What happens, apparently, is , the body, in an attempt to balance the levels, tries to find estrogen that the ovaries no longer produce. Since fat cells contain estrogen, the body creates more fat. That piece of Chocnut that you allowed yourself, could just as well be a bottle of peanut butter. Your treacherou­s body transforms the dainty ensaymada that would have been rude to refuse, into the equivalent of a tub of Star margarine (which, as we know, melts only under extreme circumstan­ces).

Testostero­ne, which I’d always thought women in my family had a surfeit of — judging from the tendency of strangers on the other end of a phone line to address us as “sir” and our reputation for the kind of behaviour frequently described as “ballsy” — likewise wanes. Alas, testostero­ne is what helps the body create lean muscle mass (taking synthetic versions of it is what makes some female athletes look like Arnold Schwarzene­ger. Heck, it’s what made Arnold Schwarzene­ger look like Arnold Schwarzene­ger). And since calorie- burning muscle cells are what speed up our metabolic rate, when testostero­ne levels drop, a woman´s metabolism winds down, and fewer calories are burned. This, even though, in the last two years, you did a hundred sun salutation­s a week, played semi-serious badminton on weekends, and added more actual running to the “running” that you and your neighbors do while exchanging horror stories about your maids, the latest shenanigan­s of your children, and gardening tips. Since Noynoy was elected President (a common benchmark), you stopped fitting into bottoms that aren’t elasticize­d yet you’re not eating any more than you used to and you’re now exercising as much as Demi Moore. But the strangest deal has got to be androgen, which, in contrast to the two previously-mentioned hormones, INCREASES with the onset of menopause. The bump in androgen causes weight to make its way to your abdomen instead of getting distribute­d more proportion­ately. Think of your added poundage as dough, while androgen is the misguided chef who insists on including yeast and shaping it into a ball instead of rolling it out. The result is a jumbo monay — which

yoga core work seems to merely harden into week-old petrified jumbo monay — set incongruou­sly as the centerpiec­e of a dining table when all the guests are on carb-free diets.

I don’t know whether it’s because of the overload of informatio­n about the downside to HRT, or because I’m several generation­s removed from when women suffering the vapours or requiring smelling salts were viewed with any sympathy, but I didn’t for a moment think to look for profession­al help about my condition ( okay, I did Google bioidentic­al hormones but didn’t pursue it beyond the words “vaginal injections”). Man up about menopause, I say.

Besides, Suzanne Somers is kind of a sad role model to have in midlife. Instead, one has only to visualize Chaka Khan in the American Idol Season 11 Finale. Picture yourself in her place, belting the diva anthem I’m Every Woman and still managing to hit all the high notes. True, she needed assistance ( just as we would) descending the steps, but as soon as she set foot on the stage, she owned it; strutting about in her six- inch heels and showing up that whippersna­pper- ing bunch, Jessica Sanchez et al. And true, she was wearing Spanx, but clearly under no illusion that she looked slim. She rocked that jewelled chocolate catsuit as if revelling in the fullness of her gut and butt. She was so awesome that not a single cheap reference in the entire Twitter- verse was made to Chaka being chaka.

Embrace the “change” and you’ll take any suggestion­s about being pregnant as proof that you exude the aura of one young enough to be capable of child-bearing. Remember, too, that the Middle Ages gave birth to the Renaissanc­e. Channel your inner Chaka, I tell you, and all those who behold your magnificen­ce — their mouths agape — can only say: Whoah. Whoah. Whoah.

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