Daily Mail

How to stop your marriage ending in a meno divorce

After her confession­al in Saturday’s Mail, Ulrika Jonsson was inundated with stories of husbands who’d been hopeless during their wife’s menopause. Now, with help from a hormone expert, she reveals...

- by Ulrika Jonsson

LaST weekend I opened my heart to readers of this paper about the terrible impact the menopause has had on my physical and mental health, and how my husband — from whom I’m now separated — seemed unable to grasp what I was going through, adding to the pressures on our relationsh­ip.

I’ll admit I was nervous about that piece. I fully expected to be ridiculed for making such a fuss; that mistaking menopausal brain fog and forgetfuln­ess for early onset dementia would be dismissed as an exaggerati­on made for dramatic affect. and that my upset at feeling my husband didn’t care would be scorned as ‘woe is me!’ complainin­g.

I shouldn’t have worried. Five days on I’m still being inundated with messages from women telling me how they have suffered. Most humbling of all have been those from women who said the piece provided the impetus for them to sit down with their partner and tell him: ‘We have to talk about what the menopause is doing to me, and I need you to do more to help me through it.’

Many came from women who considered splitting from their partners because they felt so disconnect­ed from them.

‘He thought the menopause was only about hot flushes and moodiness,’ one told me.

She made him read my piece, in which I described the memory problems, anxiety, insomnia and crippling exhaustion that made life hellish.

‘afterwards, he admitted he had no idea the symptoms could be so terrifying and complicate­d,’ she said. ‘ He’s promised to change his attitude and be more supportive. I cried with relief when he said that.’

Unsurprisi­ngly, there were also women who said their relationsh­ips hadn’t survived this awful period. They spoke of their anger, and of feeling let down by the one person they felt should have been there for them.

I get that. It reminded me of how, when my husband suffered a health problem, I researched ways to help him feel better: what meals might improve his symptoms and how the illness might be making him feel.

I did that because I wanted to really know what he was going through. It seemed reasonable to expect similar efforts from him over the menopause.

But my concern wasn’t reciprocat­ed, which I found staggering and hurtful.

I must reiterate, that wasn’t what broke my marriage — but it certainly didn’t help.

But for some of the women I heard from, a similar lack of empathy had ended their relationsh­ip. ‘He’d just dismiss my anxiety and tears of despair as me being hormonal, a word he managed to turn into an insult instead of trying to understand that my hormones were making me feel absolutely awful,’ one lady confided.

In the end, she told him to go, and said that it was a relief when he did.

Reading her message made me so mad. We’re all hormonal — our endocrine system, where both sex’s hormones are produced, governs how well all our bodies and minds work. When things go berserk, as they do during the menopause, the impact can be devastatin­g.

To weaponise the word ‘hormonal’ is beyond wrong. No wonder she didn’t want that antiquated attitude dragging her down even more.

But men are not all beasts who just don’t care. The reality is they’re as flummoxed by the changes that affect us as we are — and that’s because nobody talks about it.

When I discovered that the symptoms that were making me exhausted, forgetful and at times depressed were due to the menopause, I felt angry I’d been so woefully unprepared for it. For me, HRT has worked a treat and I feel so much better. Other women prefer to go down the natural route, and if that works for them I’m glad. The point is, I could have got that help so much sooner if we talked openly about the menopause. It shouldn’t come as a shock.

That’s why I spoke out in the first place, and I’m happy I did — if only because of the innumerabl­e conversati­ons now taking place between couples across the country. These will help men understand what their partners are going through, and women finally feel that they aren’t going through the menopause alone.

Menopause made me fear I had dementia . . . but my husband didn’t seem to care UlUlrika’sik’ torment,tt from f Saturday’s Daily Mail

Yes, you can have a phenomenal menopause ... but other women had a positive ‘change’ — from yesterday’s paper

too. For example, we’d make plans to go somewhere, and when it was time to leave, she wouldn’t have a clue what we were doing.

‘I thought she’d lost interest in me; that she didn’t pay attention because she didn’t care any more. That would lead to arguments.’

Luckily, Ross was with Keeley when her doctor — a hormone expert who diagnosed early menopause — explained that brain fog and anxiety were as much symptoms of hormonal changes as hot flushes.

‘It opened my eyes,’ he says. ‘This wasn’t about our marriage being in trouble — it was about my wife facing something that was making her feel terrible.

‘We started talking honestly and openly after that, and I realised that I had an important role to play in getting her through it. Knowing I could hold her hand, and make her feel loved no matter how terrible she was feeling meant I no longer felt helpless.’ Ross says that now when friends tell him their wives are beginning to behave oddly, he finds himself giving advice.

‘I tell them to consider their partner might be menopausal, and that if she is, they’re going to have to step up and help her through it. I’m blunt and tell them that otherwise, they’re really letting her down.’

As a hormone expert, I don’t just speak to the women with health problems; I talk to many of their partners, too. One recently told me he was in deep despair. He said: ‘ My wife’s behaviour during her menopause has pushed our marriage to the brink.

‘I’ve spent over 20 years with the kindest, caring and most empathetic human being — now, in her early 50s — but it’s as if she has been possessed by an alien. Menopause has transforme­d her into a cold stranger.

‘We are in deep crisis. I just pray that one day, the woman I love deeply will return to me.’

Fortunatel­y, there’s always hope — and remember, menopause won’t last for ever.

Here are my top tips — a sort of hormonal first aid — to help get your relationsh­ip back on track:

Control your Cortisol: This stress hormone triggers hot flushes, while aggravatin­g brain fog and anxiety. It will also leave you feeling tired, while driving down your libido.

To get it under control, avoid quick fixes like red wine or sugary snacks. Find other ways to wind down, such as exercise to release endorphins. And when you feel stress levels rising, take ten slow, deep breaths, hold for three seconds each time then exhale.

Stick to naturally sweet snacks such as fruit, nuts and seeds. Swap caffeine — which will make you jittery and trigger hot flushes — for caffeine-free herbal teas. Try magnesium-rich foods, such as spinach, Brazil nuts and walnuts.

Herbal supplement­s with ashwagandh­a or rhodiola can also help.

lift your mood: Depression and anxiety can make you fly off the handle at the slightest thing. Exercise and meditation can help — plus a diet rich in phytoestro­gens to keep hormone levels on an even keel. Foods rich in soya and flaxseeds help. A supplement like Lambert’s Fema45+ can boost nutrient levels so brain fog lifts.

inCrease energy levels: Broken nights can be the norm during menopause, so identify what symptoms are interrupti­ng your sleep. If it’s night sweats, eat isoflavone-rich food like soya and flaxseeds to fool the brain into thinking you have normal, circulatin­g oestrogen. Try supplement­s to boost oestrogen.

If you’re feeling anxious and it’s keeping you up, keep alcohol to a minimum, and never skip a meal.

Or, if you’re woken up because hormonal changes mean you need the loo more often, simply keep liquid intake low before bedtime. For online classes with Maryon, open to both men and women, go to: maryonstew­art.com/virtualcla­ss

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