Hormonal Havoc: The Silent Erasure of Women’s Pain

Hormonal Havoc: The Silent Erasure of Women’s Pain

When the baseline of medicine is built on absence, suffering becomes a symptom of character, not biology.

The G-string on my harp is slightly flat, a dull, metallic thrum that vibrates against my palm and echoes the low-grade throb behind my left eye. It is 4:46 PM. I started a strict, no-sugar, no-joy diet at exactly 4:06 PM today, and I am already reconsidering every moral conviction I have ever held in favor of a chocolate bar. This is the reality of the luteal phase-a time when my body feels like a foreign country undergoing a violent coup, and yet, I am sitting here in a hospice ward, trying to provide a ‘peaceful transition’ for a man who hasn’t spoken in 26 days. My head is screaming, my joints feel like they’ve been filled with 106 tiny shards of glass, and my mood is oscillating between profound grief and the urge to throw my instrument out a window.

The Atmospheric Condition

When I mentioned this to my primary care physician last month, she didn’t even look up from her clipboard for 6 seconds. She told me it was ‘very common for women your age’-I am 46-and offered me a low-dose birth control pill or perhaps a mild antidepressant. The message was clear, vibrating in the sterile air of the exam room: your suffering is a biological tax you must pay for the crime of having ovaries. It isn’t a medical problem; it’s an atmospheric condition. You don’t fix the rain; you just buy an umbrella and stop complaining about getting wet. This is the fundamental lie we have been sold for 1976 years of modern medical history.

The Baseline of Absence

I’ve spent 16 years as a hospice musician, watching people leave this world, and if there is one thing I have learned, it’s that the body never lies, but the systems we build to manage it certainly do. We have created a healthcare architecture that treats the male body as the baseline-a steady, 24-hour hormonal cycle that is easy to map, easy to predict, and easy to medicate. Meanwhile, the 28-day (or 26, or 36, depending on the month’s whims) cycle of the female body is treated as a ‘complication.’

Exclusion Justification: ‘Noisy’ Data (1976+)

Clinical Trials

95% Excluded

Hormonal Data

100% Dismissed

In 1976, and for decades before and after, women were systematically excluded from clinical trials because our hormones were considered too ‘noisy’ for clean data. The irony is staggering. The very thing that makes our health complex was used as the justification for ignoring it entirely.

I had spent 56 years of my life feeling like I was ‘losing my mind’ every three weeks. She had been institutionalized briefly in the 1960s for what we would now clearly identify as PMDD. She wasn’t broken; she was just fluctuating in a world that demands stasis.

– Hospice Patient, Elena (Testimonial)

Chemical Withdrawal vs. Real Bleeding

We see this same dismissal today in the way we treat PCOS. We tell women to ‘just lose weight’-as if the insulin resistance isn’t a 116-pound weight sitting on their metabolic chest-and we give them a pill to force a bleed, calling it a period. It isn’t a period. It’s a chemical withdrawal. We are masking symptoms while the underlying fire of inflammation rages on, ignored.

[Your pain is not a character flaw; it is a data point the system has chosen to ignore.]

– Realization at 4:52 PM

I’m currently staring at a bowl of plastic fruit in the hospice lounge, and because of this diet I started 46 minutes ago, it actually looks appetizing. My irritability is peaking. Is it the hunger? Is it the estrogen drop? Is it the fact that the medical industrial complex still operates on 1986 standards of care? It’s probably all of it. We are taught to apologize for our hormones. We say, ‘Sorry, I’m just hormonal today,’ as if we are apologizing for having a functioning endocrine system. You would never hear a man say, ‘Sorry, I’m just testosterone-y today,’ even though his hormonal spikes drive half the aggression in the world. We have internalized the idea that our biology is a liability.

106 Symptoms vs. 6 Labels

💓

Palpitations

(Neuro-Estrogen Effect)

👅

Burning Tongue

(Rare Symptom)

😥

Labeled Anxious

(The Default Diagnosis)

In my work with Casey N.S., I’ve seen how music can bypass the cognitive filters of the brain, reaching the nervous system directly. The body knows how to heal when the noise stops. But in the world of women’s health, the noise is deafening. There are 106 different symptoms associated with perimenopause, ranging from heart palpitations to ‘burning tongue’ syndrome, yet most doctors can only name 6. When a woman shows up with 16 disparate symptoms, she is often labeled as ‘anxious’ or ‘somatizing.’ She isn’t anxious; she’s losing her neuro-protective estrogen, and her brain is trying to recalibrate in real-time.

The Gap: 6 Minutes vs. Ecosystem View

Standard Care

6 Min

Time Allotment

Functional Focus

Ecosystem

Holistic Testing

The tragedy is that we have the tools to treat this. We have functional testing that looks at the metabolites of hormones, not just a single snapshot in time. We have nutritional interventions that can stabilize insulin and support the liver in processing excess estrogen. But these things take time. They take more than the 6 minutes allotted for a standard insurance-based consultation. They require a practitioner to look at the woman as a whole ecosystem, not just a collection of parts that need to be suppressed or removed. If you are tired of being told your symptoms are ‘normal,’ finding a partner like Functional Medicine Boca Raton can be the difference between surviving your cycle and actually living through it. They understand that ‘common’ does not mean ‘normal.’ It is common to have a headache in a room full of carbon monoxide, but that doesn’t mean you don’t need oxygen.

The Cultural Failure: Valued for Fertility, Dismissed After

I think about the 146 times I’ve been told to ‘just relax’ when my cortisol was clearly through the roof. I think about the 56-year-old women I play for who are finally hitting their stride, only to be sidelined by night sweats that leave them exhausted and unable to function at work. We are losing the wisdom of our elders because we refuse to support their transition into the next phase of life. It’s a cultural failure. We value women for their fertility, and once that begins to wane, we treat their health as a declining asset.

The Realization of Gaslighting

There is a specific kind of anger that comes with realizing you’ve been gaslit by an entire profession. I felt it when I was 26 and told my heavy bleeding was ‘just something some girls deal with.’ I felt it again at 36 when the brain fog started, and I feel it now, at 4:56 PM, as I wait for my next patient. We have to stop accepting the crumbs of medical research. We have to demand that our hormones be seen as the complex, beautiful, and vital signaling systems they are.

The Symphony of Biology

My diet-the one I started at 4:06 PM-might fail by 6:06 PM. I am human, and I am hungry, and I am hormonal. But my failure to stick to a restrictive eating plan is not the problem. The problem is a world that expects me to be a machine when I am, in fact, a symphony.

A symphony has movements. It has dissonant chords. It has moments of frantic energy and moments of deep, somber silence. You wouldn’t tell a violinist to stop playing the minor keys because they’re too ’emotional.’ You wouldn’t tell the percussionist to be quieter because the rhythm is too ‘noisy.’ Yet, that is exactly what we do to women.

We tell them to mute their symptoms, to dampen their cycles, and to ignore the very signals that are telling them something is wrong.

The Weight of Ignored Signals

106

Symptoms Noticed

1976

Outdated Bias

1206

Generations Waiting

I’ve watched 106 people take their final breath, and not one of them said, ‘I wish I had ignored my body more.’ They all wished they had listened sooner. They wished they had fought harder for their own well-being. The mystery of women’s health isn’t that the science is impossible to grasp; it’s that the will to fund it hasn’t existed. We are still living with the ghost of 1976, holding onto outdated biases that treat half the population as an outlier.

Necessary Tension

As I pack up my harp, the G-string still slightly out of tune, I realize that the tension is necessary. Without tension, there is no music. But there is a difference between the tension of a string and the tension of a body under siege. We deserve to know the difference. We deserve a medicine that looks at the 66 different ways stress affects our progesterone. We deserve a society that doesn’t make us feel ashamed for the 16 days a month we might need a little extra grace.

It is now 5:06 PM. I have survived one hour of my diet. I feel a slight clarity emerging through the headache, a realization that my frustration isn’t just about hormones or hunger. It’s about the 406 ways we’ve been told to stay small and stay quiet about our pain. I’m done being quiet.

The Dignity of Living

I’m going to go play for a woman in room 206 who hasn’t had a visitor in 6 days. I’m going to play something loud, something vibrant, something that acknowledges that being a woman-with all its hormonal havoc-is not a mystery to be solved, but a life to be lived with dignity and support. Why are we still waiting for the medical world to catch up to what our bodies have been telling us for 1206 generations? The music is playing, whether they choose to listen or not.

Final Reflection: The body is a symphony of complex, beautiful signaling systems, not a machine requiring suppression.