A Tuesday afternoon

Nothing is wrong.

The dishwasher needs emptying. Someone is texting you. There is a form somewhere that requires attention, and dinner needs a decision, and someone asked you something this morning that you still haven't answered.

None of it is urgent. None of it is hard in any objective sense. You have handled things much harder than this without thinking about it.

And yet right now, in this moment, you sit down and feel something close to: I cannot.

Recognition

You used to handle this. You know you did. The same emails, the same logistics, the same small daily decisions that make up an ordinary life — they used to flow through you without particular effort. There was friction, but it was the normal friction of being a person with responsibilities.

Now there is a gap. Between what the day requires and what you feel able to give it. And what makes this gap most difficult is that it is completely invisible. From the outside, your life looks exactly the same. Nobody can see what it takes to get from morning to evening. Nobody knows that the cost of an ordinary Tuesday has somehow doubled.

Nothing has changed. Yet everything costs more.

You are not becoming less capable. Something changed in how your system handles load.

what you are experiencing is not a personality shift. It is not a sign of depression, although it can feel indistinguishable from one. It is not weakness, and it is not something more positive thinking would fix.

Many women describe this period as the hardest of their adult lives — not because of any single event, but because of the accumulated weight of ordinary things that used to be weightless. That experience is real. Its cause is real. And it is shared by far more women than ever say so out loud, because it is very hard to explain why a Tuesday feels unsurvivable when nothing is actually wrong.

The strange part is that you can see, from the outside, that it shouldn't feel this way — which makes it feel worse.

You know that the form is not a big deal. You know that dinner is not a crisis. The knowledge that your reaction is disproportionate does not make the reaction smaller — it just adds a layer of confusion and self-judgment on top of it.

Most women in this situation try to fix it with attitude. More gratitude. More perspective. Reminders that other people have harder lives. This sometimes quiets the surface of things. It does not touch the underlying cost, because the underlying cost is not coming from thought. It is coming from somewhere else entirely.

What is actually happening
Part of what makes what you are experiencing so difficult to explain is that it is not emotional in the way people assume. It is not about your feelings about your life. It is about the capacity available to process your life — and that capacity is being affected by something physical.

Estrogen plays a role in how the brain handles multiple things at once — filtering noise, shifting between tasks, making decisions without each one costing something.

When estrogen fluctuates — as it does throughout perimenopause — these processes become less automatic. Things that once happened in the background now require deliberate effort. The brain works harder for the same output. The daily capacity runs out earlier.

This is why an ordinary Tuesday can feel unsurvivable when a genuinely difficult day months ago did not. The capacity shifted — not permanently, but enough to make the gap between who you were and what you can currently manage feel bewildering.

The cost is real. You are not inventing it. And understanding where it is coming from is the beginning of not spending energy blaming yourself for it.
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