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🌿 Hormones Through Every Stage of a Woman’s Life: Puberty to Menopause

By Michaeline Daboul | Thrive for Longevity Journal

After publishing Hormones 101, many women asked me for the next step to navigate hormone changes with confidence:

“Can you explain how hormones actually change throughout our lives? What’s normal, what isn’t, and why does everything feel different in our 40s and 50s?”

Most of us were never taught this. We enter puberty without guidance, move through our reproductive years guessing, and hit perimenopause with zero preparation. This article breaks down how estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone shift at each stage of a woman’s life — in clear, simple terms and supported by science, helping women navigate hormone changes with confidence.

I am not a doctor — this is an educational overview to help you understand your biology and have more informed conversations with your clinician. A link to certified menopause practitioners is at the end.


1️⃣ Puberty (Ages 8–15): The “On Switch”

Puberty begins when the brain (specifically the hypothalamus) signals the ovaries to start producing hormones.¹

What Happens in Puberty

  • Estrogen rises → breast development, hip changes, growth, emotional shifts
  • Progesterone begins cycling (often irregular at first)
  • Testosterone increases → muscle development, growth spurts, early libido development²

This stage sets the foundation for reproductive, metabolic, and mental health later in life.


2️⃣ Reproductive Years (20s–40s): Hormonal Rhythm & Stability

During these decades, hormones tend to operate in predictable monthly cycles.

Estrogen is at lifetime peak

It regulates:

  • fertility
  • menstrual regularity
  • cognitive sharpness
  • metabolic stability³
  • strong bones

Progesterone rises mid-cycle

It:

  • balances estrogen
  • calms the brain
  • supports sleep
  • regulates cycles

Testosterone supports

  • libido
  • confidence
  • muscle mass
  • bone health
  • healthy metabolism⁴

For many women, this is the most hormonally stable period of life — until perimenopause begins.


3️⃣ Perimenopause (Mid-30s to Mid-50s): The Roller Coaster

Perimenopause is the long transition before menopause and can last 4–12 years.⁵
It is not menopause — it is hormonal turbulence.

What Happens Biologically

  • Progesterone declines first, often in your mid- to late 30s
  • Estrogen becomes unpredictable, spiking high and dropping suddenly
  • Testosterone gradually decreases

Common Symptoms

  • anxiety or irritability
  • sleep disruption
  • heavier or irregular periods
  • brain fog
  • hot flashes
  • joint pain
  • decreased libido
  • new-onset weight changes
  • migraines
  • heart palpitations

Up to 80% of women experience significant symptoms, yet many are told “it’s normal” and left without support.


4️⃣ Menopause (12 Months Without a Period): The Estrogen Drop

Menopause is one moment in time — the 12-month mark after your final period.

What Happens

  • **Estrogen drops 80–90%**⁶
  • Progesterone is close to zero
  • Testosterone continues a slow decline

This sudden loss of estrogen affects the entire body — not just hot flashes. Women often experience:

  • sleep changes
  • cognitive shifts
  • vaginal dryness
  • sexual discomfort
  • joint stiffness
  • temperature instability
  • rapid bone loss

5️⃣ Postmenopause (Your 50s, 60s & Beyond): Long-Term Deficiency

After menopause, women spend one-third of life in a state of chronically low estrogen and progesterone.

Long-Term Effects Can Include

  • accelerated bone loss → increased fracture risk⁷
  • worsened insulin sensitivity
  • increased abdominal fat
  • changes in muscle mass
  • cognitive decline in some women
  • sexual health changes
  • cardiovascular risk increases

This is why many women consider whether Hormone Therapy (HRT) may fit into their health plan — which is the focus of Article 3. Check out Article 1 on Hormones here.


🔗 Next Step

Read the final article in this series:
👉 “Where HRT Fits In: What Every Woman Needs to Know About Hormone Therapy Today.”


📚 References

¹ Marshall WA & Tanner JM. Pubertal development. Arch Dis Child.
² Suter SE et al. Testosterone in female adolescence. Horm Behav. 2021.
³ Mauvais-Jarvis F. Estrogen and metabolism. Endocr Rev. 2018.
⁴ Davis SR. Androgen physiology in women. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2011.
⁵ Prior JC. Perimenopause: the overlooked stage. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2015.
⁶ Stuenkel CA et al. NAMS Menopause Statement. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2015.
⁷ Zhao N et al. MHT and bone health. Open Life Sci. 2023.


🩺 Thrive Disclaimer

This educational article is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified clinician to evaluate hormone-related symptoms or questions.


🌸 Find a Certified Menopause Practitioner

Use The Menopause Society’s directory to find experts trained in menopause care:
👉 Find a Menopause Practitioner