Menopause Resource Center
~
Menopause Metamorphosis ~
by Susun S. Weed
"Menopause
is a metamorphosis, like a caterpillar becoming a
butterfly.
The caterpillar
needs a cocoon, and so do you. One of the most important
things you can do during menopause is to take time
for you. Go into your cave, go into your cocoon, go
into your room and shut the door."
These
are words I have said, and sung, over and over. Words
whose truth
rings in the hearts
of so many women who hear me speak. Words that prompted
one (famous) female MD to throw her arms around me
and exclaim "I thought I hated my patients. Now
I know I just need a year off!" But words whose
full meaning took some time to get through to me.
The
idea of taking time off during menopause is an extension
of a moontime
mystery teaching: A woman
benefits herself and her community if she takes a day
off during her menstrual flow, to go within and tend
to herself. By taking care of herself, a woman has
more to give to others. But even more importantly,
when she gives herself this time, she may sense the
presence of her "spirit band" (angels) --
those who are too faint to be noticed when one is focused
on the hubbub of everyday life.
During
menstruation, and during the menopausal years, say
my Native teachers,
the "veil between
the worlds" is thin and easily parted. Our abilities
and senses are heightened and we are open to guidance,
inspiration, illumination -- but only if we give ourselves
quiet time alone, free of responsibilities.
I believe in this idea so strongly that
I actually pay my apprentices to take one day off during
their monthly flow. But it was exceptionally difficult
for me to give myself the same time off. After all,
I had to keep appointments that had been made months
in advance and involved dozens to hundreds of people.
I can't agree to be the keynote presenter at the National
Institutes of Health conference on Women and Botanical
Medicine and then tell them after I get there that
I have to have the day off because I'm bleeding, can
I?
So,
even though I knew that my menopause would be more
severe if I remained
in the public eye,
I again found myself unable to say "No." And
for once I was sorry to be right.
The first summer of my menopause was
exceptionally hot, and it seemed to trigger hot flash
after hot flash. At one big conference, I was so hot
they finally put me to bed on a cot in the climate-controlled
(air-conditioned!) herb storage building while everyone
else braved it in tents. I awoke not totally refreshed
(I woke those days four and five times a night), but
not melted either, and smelling decidedly fragrant.
And then there was the class that walked
off and left me. It was another hot summer day. My
memory of most of those insufferably hot menopausal
summer days is mercifully blank -- or, perhaps more
to the point, welded into a recollection of one ongoing
unrestrained surge of molten energy blanketing me from
belly to crown. But this particular day is vivid in
my mind's eye.
It was a staggeringly hot day. It was
so hot that I decided after lunch to take my class
of about twenty women to the river which runs through
the back of my land. First, everyone had time for a
little break to tend to necessities; then we were to
meet at a certain place at a certain time to stroll
to the river and look at plants along the way.
At
the appointed hour, I showed up at the appointed
place. By ones and twos,
the students
gathered. One asked me if I had a remedy for her headache.
I asked her to get a glass of water and went into the
house to get the herb she needed: skullcap. (How aptly
named it is!) When I returned, in moments it seemed,
no one was there except for the woman with the headache.
I put ten drops of skullcap tincture in her glass of
water, and asked where everyone was. "On their
way to the river," she replied, much to my surprise,
chagrin, and dismay. They had walked off and left me
with no students to teach.
It took me some minutes to work through
my feelings of abandonment, and more still to work
through my sense of loss. But when I did, I could see
that my students had given me the gift of the afternoon
off. They somehow understood -- I finally understood
-- that I needed time alone, time away from responsibility
and leadership. And if I didn't have the sense to go
into my cocoon, the Universe was willing to see to
it that I was placed there by circumstance.
Ten years later, I look back and smile:
remembering those sultry menopausal nights and steamy
hot flash days. If I had it to do over again, I would
squash my qualms about global warming and buy an air-conditioner
as soon as those first strong hot flashes hit. And
I would pull every string I could so that I could take
as much time as possible off during my menopause metamorphosis.
Green Blessings,
Susun Weed
copyright © Susun
Weed