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My Brief Life as a Woman

My Brief Life as a Woman

NYadgal Profile Photo
NYadgal
#1My Brief Life as a Woman
Posted: 6/3/09 at 6:36pm

As my wife and I sat on the couch one night this past winter, reading and half-watching the inevitable HGTV, I started sweating hard and my face got so fevered and flushed that I felt as if I were peering into an oven.

I turned to Deb and said, "Man, I'm having a wicked hot flash." And she said, "Me, too." Then we laughed. You laugh a lot - unless your hormones are making you cry - when you're having menopause with your wife.

I was in the middle of treatment for an aggressive case of prostate cancer last winter, and it included a six-month course of hormone therapy. My Lupron shots suppressed testosterone, which is the fuel for prostate cancer.

When your testosterone is being throttled, there are bound to be side effects. So, with the help of Lupron, I spent a few months aboard the Good Ship Menopause with all the physical baggage that entails. It's a trip that most men don't expect to take.

The side effect that surprised me most were the hot flashes - not that I got them, I was expecting that, but by how intense they were. They often woke me in the middle of the night and made me sweat so much that I drenched the sheets. In midwinter I'd walk our miniature poodle, Bijou, wearing shorts and a T-shirt. I sometimes felt as if Deb could fry eggs on my chest. (It's also a bit disconcerting when your hot flashes are fiercer than your wife's.)

When it comes to hot flashes, ladies, I salute you. After my brief dalliance with that hormonal phenomenon, it seems to me it's an under-reported condition. And it's certainly under-represented in the arts. Where are the great hot flash novels or movies? How come there's not a Web site or magazine called "Hot Flash Monthly?"

Hand in hand with the hot flashes came the food cravings. I lusted after Cheetos and Peanut Butter M&M's, maple-walnut milkshakes, and spaghetti and meatballs buried in a blizzard of Parmesan. Isn't it funny how cravings very rarely involve tofu, bean curd or omega-3 oils?

Then there was the weight issue. During the six months I was on Lupron I gained about 25 pounds. That was partly a byproduct of the cravings, but it also stemmed from the hormonal changes triggered in my body.

And I hated it, hated it, hated it. I had never had to worry about my weight, and I began to understand why media aimed at women and girls obsess over weight so much. It was strange and unsettling not to be able to tell my body, "No," when it wanted to wolf down a fistful of Doritos slathered with scallion cream cheese.

When I wasn't devouring a king-size Italian sub or smoldering from a hot flash, it seemed that I was crying. The tears would usually pour down when I got ambushed by some old tune: "Sweet Baby James" and "Fire and Rain" by James Taylor, "That's the Way I?ve Always Heard It Should Be" by Carly Simon and, yes, "It's My Party" by Lesley Gore. Not only was I temporarily menopausal, but it appeared that I was also turning into a teenage girl from the early 1970s.

There were other side effects, too, like headaches and fatigue. But when I started drinking Diet Coke for the first time in my life, my son Owen couldn't take it anymore. He said, "Dad, are you turning into a chick?"

So, what else did I learn during my six months of hormone therapy?

Even though I only got to spend a brief time on the outer precincts of menopause, it did confirm my lifelong sense that the world of women is hormonal and mysterious, and that we men don't have the semblance of a clue.

And, guys, when your significant female other bursts into tears at the drop of a dinner plate or turns on you like a rabid pit bull - whether she's pregnant, having her period or in the throes of menopause - believe her when she blames it on the hormones.

One more thing. I don't really know whether menopause likes company - you'd have to ask my wife that - but I do know that it really, really likes HGTV and Peanut Butter M&M's.



I would just like to say - I love this guy!
Great article.

Pass the M&M's!





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"Two drifters off to see the world. There's such a lot of world to see. . ."
Updated On: 6/3/09 at 06:36 PM

lusciouslace Profile Photo
lusciouslace
#2re: My Brief Life as a Woman
Posted: 6/4/09 at 2:05pm

I love this guy, too! I wish more people would understand this. I mean, yes, I'm only 27, but I have a tumor in my pituitary gland and because of all the hormones it was affecting, I was having these same symptoms and then some. It makes you feel absolutely freain' crazy. Now I know how much power hormones have over your body and your mind. They truly do affect behavior. Yay for someone (even a man) being able to articulate that so well!

Bluemoon
#2re: My Brief Life as a Woman
Posted: 6/4/09 at 2:10pm

For a minite there, Addy, I thought you had an announcement.

TheatreDiva90016 Profile Photo
TheatreDiva90016
#3re: My Brief Life as a Woman
Posted: 6/4/09 at 2:19pm

Yes, that first line threw me a bit...


"TheatreDiva90016 - another good reason to frequent these boards less."<<>> “I hesitate to give this line of discussion the validation it so desperately craves by perpetuating it, but the light from logic is getting further and further away with your every successive post.” <<>> -whatever2

PalJoey Profile Photo
PalJoey
#4re: My Brief Life as a Woman
Posted: 6/4/09 at 2:46pm

Sweet Baby James
Fire and Rain
That?s the Way I?ve Always Heard It Should Be

You mean there are people who DON'T cry when they hear those songs?



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