What often changes first
Cycle timing, bleeding pattern, sleep quality, heat symptoms, mood stability, and the sense that your body no longer behaves predictably.
InsideHer Learning · Course 04
A fuller patient course on changing cycles, sleep disruption, hot flushes, mood change, brain fog, sexual health, treatment review, prevention, and how to move through the perimenopause transition with clearer support.
Start Here
This course is designed to help you recognise the bigger picture when cycles become less predictable, sleep gets worse, mood feels less steady, and your body starts behaving in ways that no longer feel familiar.
What This Course Helps With
Module 1
The years where ovarian hormone patterns become less predictable and symptoms often change before periods stop completely.
Cycle timing, bleeding pattern, sleep quality, heat symptoms, mood stability, and the sense that your body no longer behaves predictably.
Symptoms can come and go. Some months feel manageable, others do not, which can make the pattern harder to trust or explain.
If symptoms affect sleep, confidence, work, sex, mood, or daily function, that is enough reason to review them properly.
Important
Many women first notice shorter cycles, sleep disruption, mood change, heavier periods, or feeling unlike themselves. The transition can still be hormonally meaningful even when classic flushes are not the loudest symptom yet.
Trust the pattern — not just the single bad week. Burden across cycle, sleep, and mood is the signal worth bringing into care.
Module 2
Cycle change is often one of the earliest signs that the transition is underway.
Helpful Framing
Bring the real pattern into care: unpredictability, heaviness, fatigue, cramps, disrupted sleep, and the effect on work or quality of life.
Track the pattern for two to three months before your appointment. Specifics — flow, days, gaps, knock-on effects — make care decisions cleaner.
Module 3
These symptoms often drive the feeling that daily life has become harder to hold together.
Broken sleep is the engine room of perimenopause for many women. Treating it well often improves mood, patience, weight stability, and the ability to tolerate every other symptom around it.
— InsideHer clinical advisory noteExplain whether the main issue is flush frequency, broken sleep, poor concentration, or how these symptoms are affecting work and resilience.
Protect sleep where possible, lower late-evening stimulation, and treat broken sleep as a symptom worth support rather than a personal failure.
Sleep disruption alone can worsen mood, patience, appetite, confidence, and the ability to tolerate other symptoms.
If you only address one symptom first, sleep is often the highest-leverage one. Stabilising nights tends to soften the daytime picture.
Module 4
Many women notice that the emotional load of daily life becomes harder to absorb during this stage.
When to ask sooner
Mood, anxiety, and a flat or fragile feeling are valid reasons to ask for support — you do not need to wait for things to get worse, and you do not need to attribute everything to hormones before raising it.
What Helps
When sleep, irritability, anxiety, and cycle change travel together, the care review becomes much clearer and more useful.
Mood change in midlife is not automatically depression and not only hormones. It deserves a full review, not a single label.
Module 5
Treatment decisions are easier when they are tied to specific symptoms and specific goals.
Treatment is not about chasing perfection. It is about reducing symptom burden, improving function, protecting sleep and mood, and making the transition more manageable overall.
Hormone options are often reviewed when flushes, sleep disruption, cycle change, or broader symptom burden are significant.
Some women focus on symptom-specific non-hormone options, especially if sleep, mood, or flush management is the main concern.
A good plan should be checked against function: sleep, patience, work capacity, and whether you feel more like yourself again.
Treatment is a conversation, not a verdict. Goals, time-to-benefit, and review windows are fair questions to expect answers to.
Module 6
These changes are common, important, and often under-discussed.
Sexual comfort, urinary symptoms, and body confidence are not optional extras. They are part of how this transition affects identity, intimacy, and quality of life.
Permission
Vaginal, urinary, and sexual symptoms have specific, well-evidenced treatments. Naming them clearly is the fastest route to relief.
If it affects intimacy, comfort, or confidence, it is part of your care — not a side note.
Module 7
Perimenopause is also a health-review moment, not only a symptom moment.
Strength work, adequate protein, mobility, and regular movement help support stability, function, and confidence during this stage.
Blood pressure, cholesterol, waist change, blood sugar patterns, and exercise tolerance are worth keeping visible too.
Sleep affects recovery, appetite, mood, and exercise consistency, which is why improving it often has benefits far beyond the night itself.
Treat this stage as your prevention checkpoint. Symptom relief and long-term health belong in the same plan.
Module 8
A calmer, more workable way to move forward from here.
Note cycle change, sleep disruption, flushes, mood shifts, sexual symptoms, and the effect on work and function.
Start with the symptom cluster causing the biggest strain rather than trying to solve the whole transition in one visit.
Use this stage to review both symptom relief and longer-term health support at the same time.
Your next step
The InsideHer app brings cycle, sleep, mood, and symptom patterns into one calm record — so the next conversation with your clinician already starts with what matters most.
References
Guidance synthesised from major women’s health societies. This course is patient education, not a diagnostic tool.
Last reviewed May 2026 · Next review November 2026 · Authored by the InsideHer clinical content team. Contact care@insideher.health with corrections or suggestions.