Hagitude: Reimagining the Second Half of Life
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About this ebook
Sharon Blackie
DR. SHARON BLACKIE is an award-winning writer and internationally recognized teacher whose work sits at the interface of psychology, mythology, and ecology. Her highly acclaimed books, courses, lectures, and workshops are focused on the development of the mythic imagination, and on the relevance of our native myths, fairy tales, and folk traditions to the personal, social, and environmental problems we face today. As well as writing four books of fiction and nonfiction, including the bestselling If Women Rose Rooted, her writing has appeared in the Guardian, the Irish Times, the Scotsman, and more, and she has been interviewed by the BBC and other major broadcasters on her areas of expertise. Sharon lives on a smallholding in the mountains of Wales.
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Hagitude - Sharon Blackie
STANDING ON THE THRESHOLD
1
THE ALCHEMY OF MENOPAUSE
The Fire and the Furies
When I look back to the early years of my menopause, what I remember most is a quality of experience that resembled British journalist Suzanne Moore’s description of her own: I don’t really have the mood swings that some talk about. I have just the one mood. Rage.
⁴ And that fast-flowing, turbulent river of rage seething under the surface of my calm and sorted everyday persona — rage which sometimes I just couldn’t find a way to contain — was more petrifying than empowering, for someone who had never been allowed to express it as a child. Whenever anything remotely resembling anger had threatened to emerge, and especially during my teenage years, my mother would clench her jaw, look me hard in the eyes, and tell me that I was just like my father.
That would be the man who had beaten her regularly throughout their (blessedly short-lived) marriage. As you can imagine, that did the job. I looked like my father; it was easy enough to believe I might unknowingly harbor some of his worse personality characteristics too.
Well, that’s menopause for you: whatever else it does, it torches taboos. My inner anger-control mechanism had operated infallibly throughout my adult life, but at the age of fifty, rage seemed to have taken up residence at the back of my throat, hovering on the threshold of speech, always ready to make a break for it. It didn’t take much to trigger. Once upon a time, in what now seems like another life, I hiked up to the edge of the Masaya volcano in Nicaragua. I stood there for ages, looking down into the sulfurous, smoking hole, overawed by the melted, contorted rock of the earth all around me. That night, I had a dream of a woman walking out of that volcano, and everywhere her feet touched down she set the earth alight. I felt like that woman. I’d been storing up rage like ancient magma, and I was all set to erupt.
Even now, from time to time, the old familial conditioning kicks in and I look back in horror, wondering how many situations I might have overreacted to — but I know, really, that most of the rage I was feeling then wasn’t an overreaction at all. I was simply reacting honestly, for once in my life, to ideas and situations that shouldn’t ever have been tolerable in the first place. Because the rage I experienced was rarely petty; it was well within the boundaries of what I think of now as righteous wrath.
There are times in our lives when it’s necessary to release anger. There are times when it’s entirely appropriate for the honest, healthy animal in us to bite. I reserved my finest vintage of fury for the usually younger (and, frankly, almost always less qualified or experienced) men of my acquaintance who either patronized me, ignored my voice completely, or kindly explained to me that I’d obviously completely misunderstood this or that subject throughout my many decades of relevant scholarship, training, and experience, when they’d been so clearly capable of understanding everything after simply reading a book or two — heavens, some of them were clever enough to understand the entire field of psychology and neuroscience just after skimming a couple of nicely laid-out websites! What a pity it was that I insisted on actual study, qualifications, insight, experience, before expressing an opinion on complicated subjects, or setting oneself up as an expert in them. What a pity it was that I insisted that I knew things, and maybe even knew more about some things than they did.
As you can see, sometimes the anger persists, even today … but all through my academic and corporate years, I’d been sidelined by men who weren’t entirely sure that women should be allowed in the workplace, except of course as secretaries, tea ladies (yes, we still had them in those days, carts and all), and cleaners. I was so very tired of the patriarchy by the time menopause happened along, and a good few of the men I was responding to had made anger a feature of their public persona, a selling point. The angry young man
archetype still has a certain romance about it, in some circles. It was okay for them to express public fury, lash out at or troll people on Twitter, but if a woman had the audacity to express a little irritation or indignation every now and again, we were hysterical harridans, or worse.
It hasn’t always been so. In Classical mythology, righteous wrath was the province of old women. Three very specific old women, in fact: the Furies (or the Erinyes, in Greek). Fragments of myth featuring the Furies are found in the earliest records of ancient Greek culture. These sisters were much more ancient than any of the Olympian deities, indicating the persistence of an older, female-dominated tradition which endured here and there even when later, more patriarchal, mythologies set in. The role of the Furies was to preside over complaints brought to them by humans about behavior that was thought to be intolerable: from lesser misdemeanors such as the insolence of the young to the aged, of children to parents, of hosts to guests — to crimes that were very much worse. It was their role to punish such crimes by relentlessly hounding their perpetrators.
The Greek poet Hesiod names the three sisters as Alecto — unceasing in anger,
the punisher of moral crimes; Megaera — jealous one,
the punisher of infidelity, oath-breaking, and theft; and Tisiphone — avenger of murder.
They were, he said, the daughters of Gaea (the goddess who personified the Earth), who conceived them from the blood of her spouse, Uranus, after he had been castrated by his son, Cronos. They lived in the Underworld, and like other chthonic deities, like seeds that lie buried beneath the Earth, they were also identified with its fertility. The wrath of the Furies manifested itself in a number of ways: a tormenting madness would be inflicted on the perpetrator of a patricide or matricide; murderers usually suffered a dire disease, and nations which harbored such criminals could be stricken with famine and plague. The Furies could only be placated with ritual purification, and the completion of a task specifically assigned by them for atonement. It’s important to understand that although the Furies were feared, they were also respected and perceived to be necessary: they represented justice, and were seen to be defenders of moral and legal order.
The Furies were portrayed as the foul-smelling, decidedly haggish possessors of bat-like wings, with black snakes adorning their hair, arms, and waists, and blood dripping from their eyes. And they carried brass-studded scourges in their hands. In my menopausal years, I certainly had days when I could have gone with that look.
I’m happy to admit that the existence of seriously not-to-be-messed-with elder women like the Furies in our oldest European mythology gives me great pleasure. And it’s difficult not to see them as the perfect menopausal role models, because sudden upwellings of (mostly righteous) anger are a feature of many women’s experience of menopause. In her passionate and meticulously argued book The Change, Australian feminist writer Germaine Greer suggests that society’s aversion to menopausal women is, more than anything, the result of our intolerance for the expression of female anger.
⁵
But why do we find women’s rage so unacceptable, so threatening? It is for sure an attitude which is deeply embedded in the culture. Several studies conducted over the past few decades have reported that men who express anger are perceived to be strong, decisive, and powerful, while women who express the same emotion are perceived to be difficult, overemotional, irrational, shrill, and unfeminine. Anger, it seems, doesn’t fit at all with our cultural image of femininity, and so must be thoroughly suppressed whenever it is presumptuous enough to surface. One of the saddest findings of these studies is that this narrative is so deeply ingrained that it even exists among women — and we internalize it from an early age. Soraya Chemaly, American author of Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Women’s Anger, writes:
Studies show that by the time most children are toddlers they already associate angry expressions with male faces … Girls and women, on the other hand, are subtly encouraged to put anger and other negative
emotions aside, as unfeminine. Studies show that girls are frequently discouraged from even recognising their own anger, from talking about negative feelings, or being demanding in ways that focus on their own needs.
Girls are encouraged to smile more, use their nice
voices and sublimate how they themselves may feel in deference to the comfort of others. Suppressed, repressed, diverted and ignored anger is now understood as a factor in many women’s illnesses,
including various forms of disordered eating, autoimmune diseases, chronic fatigue and pain.⁶
We hide our anger by refusing even to use the word — instead of saying we’re utterly furious, we talk about being annoyed,
upset,
or irritated.
We take refuge in sarcasm, we nurse grudges, or we simply withdraw. And as a consequence of these actions and attitudes, anger is an emotion that, more often than not, makes women feel powerless — not just because we’ve been made to feel as if we’re not allowed to express it, but, accordingly, because we’ve never learned healthy ways to express it.
In the hot-flashed fury of my own menopause I gazed, awestruck, at a neighbor who blithely reported that she’d hurled a frying pan across the kitchen at her husband in the heat of hers. It’s not that I imagined this would ever be a good thing to do — I spent the first three years of my life with a father for whom flinging fists around the room was the preferred strategy for coping with the perceived vicissitudes of his life, and it wasn’t fun — but I was profoundly envious of the unstated but clearly implicit assumption that expressing anger was her right. I longed for the ability to somehow let go of my anger in simple physical expression — ideally without running the risk of injuring someone else! — because studies also show that we women often hold anger in our bodies. Unacknowledged or actively repressed, anger takes its toll on us. Numerous psychological studies have unequivocally shown that women who mask, externalize, or project their anger are at greater risk for anxiety, nervousness, tension, panic attacks, and depression. A growing number of clinical studies have linked suppressed anger to serious medical conditions such as high blood pressure, heart disease, gastrointestinal disorders, and the development of certain cancers.
There are, of course, fundamental differences between anger and aggression; the one doesn’t lead inexorably to the other. Rage, properly explored, can be a great teacher. Properly expressed, it can be a great healer — because all rage hides a wound; all rage emerges from pain. My own menopausal rage, I believe, derived from the pain of being excluded, from not being allowed to have a voice, from a strong sense of exile and unbelonging which had been with me ever since I was a child. Anger, then, once examined, contains the potential for profound discovery, for a deepened knowledge of the self; working with it and through it can provide the inspiration for change. Recognized, it can be transformed, and once it’s been transformed, it can be harnessed. It’s a creative force. It shows us that we’re still alive, still breathing, still caring, still invested in the world. Rebecca Traister, author of Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women’s Anger, writes: In the fury of women comes the power to change the world,
and in her book she tracks the history of female anger as political fuel — from suffragettes marching on the White House, to office workers vacating their buildings in protest after Clarence Thomas was confirmed to the Supreme Court.⁷ More recently, we’ve seen the same hunger for social transformation fueled by women’s rage and given healthy expression in the #metoo movement, and three women who were furious at the violence inflicted on Black American communities by the police and others, originated the movement that is now Black Lives Matter. At its best, anger is a perfectly rational as well as an emotional response to threat, violation, and immorality of all kinds. It helps us to bridge the gap between the dreary unendurable which seems to exist now, and a more beautiful world of vivid possibility which stretches ahead of us into the future.
Men’s attitudes to menopausal women have been a particular source of ire for many of us, and it’s hard to countenance some of the perspectives which have been expressed over the past century or so. It is a well-known fact, and one that has given much ground for complaint, that after women have lost their genital function their character often undergoes a peculiar alteration, they become quarrelsome, vexatious and overbearing, petty and stingy, that is to say that they exhibit typically sadistic and anal-erotic traits which they did not possess earlier during their period of womanliness,
Sigmund Freud declared in 1913.⁸ Well, you can argue that he was a man of his time; the first couple of decades of the twentieth century weren’t exactly known for their respect for women’s finer qualities. But unfortunately, the nonsense didn’t stop there. The unpalatable truth must be faced that all postmenopausal women are castrates,
pronounced American gynecologist Robert Wilson in a 1963 essay;⁹ he then elaborated fulsomely on this theme in his 1966 bestseller Feminine Forever.¹⁰ This frighteningly influential book, it later emerged, was backed by a pharmaceutical company eager to market hormone replacement therapy. Once the ovaries stop, the very essence of being a woman stops,
psychiatrist David Reuben wrote in 1969 in another bestseller, Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex but Were Afraid to Ask.¹¹ The postmenopausal woman, he added, comes as close as she can to being a man.
Or rather, not really a man but no longer a functional woman.
Half a century on, has anything really changed? Sadly, I don’t think so. It might not be acceptable in most circles to write that kind of thing anymore, but menopausal women are too often the butt of men’s jokes for me really to believe that the attitudes themselves have shifted. They’ve just gone a little more underground.
So if these are the stories men are telling about us, where are the stories we’re telling about ourselves? Unfortunately, they’re not always very much more helpful. A surprising number of self-help or quasi-medical books by female authors toe the male line, enjoining women to try to stay young and beautiful at all costs, and head off to their doctor to get hormone replacement therapy to hold off the symptoms
of the dreaded aging disease
for as long as possible. Their aim, it seems, is above all a suspension of the aging process, an exhortation to live in a state of suspended animation. And although more women are beginning to write about menopause as a natural and profoundly transformational life-passage, in the culture at large it is still primarily viewed as something to be managed, held off, even fought. Well, you can either see menopause as a possible ending or you can see it as a possible beginning. Arguably, it should be a bit of both. The ending of one phase of life, but also the beginning of a whole new journey — a challenging but ultimately fertile journey across the threshold of elderhood.
From the outside, looking at a woman objectively, there’s no obvious single transition point which marks the beginning of this odyssey. Menarche, the first occurrence of menstruation and a gateway to adulthood, is easily identifiable; pregnancy, a gateway to motherhood, is even more visible. But the features of menopause — that final, great biological upheaval in a woman’s life — aren’t nearly so obvious from the outside and are often deliberately concealed.
To add to the complexity, the passage lasts for a much longer period of time. Usually, it starts during our midlife
years. Perimenopause, sometimes called menopause transition,
kicks off several years before menopause itself, and is defined as the time during which our ovaries gradually begin to make less estrogen. This usually happens in our forties, but in some instances it can begin in our thirties or, in rare cases, even earlier. During perimenopause, the ovaries are effectively winding down, and irregularities are common. Some months women continue to ovulate — sometimes even twice in the same cycle — while in other months no egg is released. Though four to six years is the average span, perimenopause can last for as little as a year or it can go on for more than ten. Menopause is usually declared after twelve months have passed without a period. In the US, the average age at which menopause is recorded is fifty-one years, though around one in a hundred women reach this point before the age of forty. Four years is the typical duration of menopause, but around one in ten women experiences physical and psychological challenges that last for up to twelve years — challenges which include depression, anxiety, insomnia, hot flashes, night sweats, and reduced libido.
Sometimes, these challenges are significant; at their most severe they can present as risks to physical or mental health, and women need help to manage them. But one of the main reasons why women fail to see menopause as part of a natural — and even desirable — life transition is that, in Western culture, it has been thoroughly and effectively medicalized. It’s presented as a disability, a dysfunction in need of medication, a set of symptoms
— rather than being imagined as a natural and necessary entry point into the next stage of life, as it once was in traditional societies, and as it still is in many indigenous cultures today.
Interestingly, menopause didn’t become a matter of medical concern until the eighteenth century, when it was often referred to as the climacteric
— a word derived from medieval theories that divided life into periods of seven to nine years that were punctuated by crises. During this period, male physicians throughout Europe began to write learned theses about the end of menstruation, suggesting that it initiated an assortment of physical and psychological diseases in women. In the early twentieth century, with the discovery of hormones and the development of the new field of endocrinology, menopause began to be viewed primarily as a deficiency of estrogen — a hormone which consequently became heavily identified with femininity. This perspective led to the development of hormone replacement therapy, and throughout the twentieth century menopause continued to be presented, in the world’s leading medical journals and books, as a disease to be cured
with medication — one which, to add insult to injury, was capable of triggering the onset of other diseases.
Everyone in Western cultures reading this book, then, young or old, will have been born into a culture which teaches us that menopause is a disease, a failure, a dysfunction. Menopause is presented to us as a lack — specifically, a lack of estrogen, the femininity and fertility
hormone. And, consequently, modern conceptions of menopause encourage images of midlife women as weak, and as subject to drastic mood swings, forgetfulness, and laughable hot flashes. We ourselves tend to focus on what we’ve lost — dewy, unlined skin, hair color, firm muscles, the ability to give birth — and the only things we imagine we’ve gained in return are wrinkles, sagging backsides, painfully dry vaginas, sweat-ridden bedsheets, and osteoporosis. We’re told that we should still, above all things, disguise ourselves as young women in order to be sexually attractive to prospective or existing partners at sixty. We’re told that a reduction in libido at this stage in our lives is abnormal: something to panic about, to fix — again, to medicate ourselves out of, when many women are actually quite content to slip naturally into a phase of life which is much less focused on their sexuality. We think of aging as a failure, something to be fought against — rather than as a natural part of life which, like all of life, we must find a way to adapt to, and to welcome, not merely to endure.
These attitudes aside, the problems that many women face in adjusting to menopause are simply down to the fact of living in a culture that doesn’t allow us to build time into our lives for key transitions. We’re not permitted to take time out, so many of us try to carry on exactly as we were before. Being everything to everybody. Holding down the job, still looking after the kids, the cats, the partner. Piling on the need to care for older and ailing relatives to the backbreaking stack of existing responsibilities. Running from work to the gym to the supermarket then home to cook dinner, trying to soldier on as if nothing were happening, and medicating ourselves to cover the inevitable cracks. And then we wonder why we break. Because what we should be doing during menopause is gently and consciously letting go of one period of our lives, and slowly and mindfully easing the progression into another.
That letting go is hard — of course it is. It needs time; it needs tenderness. It can be hard to relinquish our identification with society’s view of youth as the owner of beauty, hard to turn our backs on its cult of sexuality. But we must. No matter how long we try to postpone the inevitable, our body’s ultimate trajectory leaves us no choice. Often, that necessary surrender to the inevitable gives rise to a time of deep grieving — and it should. Because menopause is an ending of sorts, and it is natural to mourn an ending — but it is also a new beginning. It is above all a transformation. The late author Ursula K. Le Guin expresses this idea beautifully: The woman who is willing to make that change must become pregnant with herself, at last. She must bear herself, her third self, her old age.
¹² I love this idea, because to me transformation is everything: it’s the purpose of life. We women do it all the time, and often in the most cataclysmic of ways. From puberty to pregnancy … and then, just when we think it’s all over, along comes menopause, to shake us to the core again. We’re never done with our transformations; they just keep on coming round. We shapeshift all the way up to the end, casting off certainties like a selkie casts off her sealskin.
One aspect of menopause that is particularly difficult for many women is the need to let go of our tendency to define ourselves by our potential to birth new life — whether we have actually chosen to do so or not. Women are still, in many societies around the world, valued predominantly for their childbearing abilities. Once all that’s over, so are we. We become irrelevant, inconsequential. And of course, throughout history, that was women’s primary function. Until very recently, few women made it past childbearing age; most women never reached menopause at all, and hardly any passed through it into elderhood. But now that we are living longer, it’s important to remember that fertility isn’t actually the norm in the context of an entire lifespan. We’re fertile (more or less) from approximately fifteen years old to around forty: twenty-five years out of an average, in Western countries today, of eighty.
Regardless of that, society doesn’t make letting go of fertility easy for us. In 2019, a medical procedure that aims to delay menopause in women for up to twenty years was launched by ProFam — a company of IVF specialists in Britain (headed, inevitably, by a primarily male team). The procedure involves surgical removal of a fraction of ovarian tissue by laparoscopy. The tissue is sliced, then frozen at very low temperatures so the tissue and eggs can be preserved. The idea is that, if you want to become pregnant or to delay menopause at some stage in the future, the tissue will be thawed and transferred (grafted) back into your body. After that’s been done, the company claims, most women gain full hormone production within four to six months. The justification for this procedure, according to the company’s website, is that:
Young women today are destined to live in the menopausal stage for 30–40 years (or more), but throughout history most women did not live much beyond their fertile period. Although modern lifestyle and medicine are ensuring we live much longer, the intrinsic nature of the ovaries has not changed, and unless we use modern technology to preserve them, the ovaries will cease to function at around 45–50 years of age, leaving a woman with 4 or 5 decades of menopausal issues. Delaying menopause with ovarian tissue cryopreservation and transplantation later in life can extend the period a woman lives in pre-menopausal stage. Years of meticulous research has now allowed women to delay their biological clock.¹³
Four or five decades of menopausal issues
? Even though some effects of estrogen depletion, such as osteoporosis, do persist for the rest of one’s life, frankly that’s nonsense. As I indicated earlier, the challenges associated with menopause have almost always passed within a maximum of twelve years. What the company actually appears to be suggesting here is that fertility is normal, and infertility is not. That there is something aberrant in the idea of women living for decades in which they’re free from the burden of menstruation and potential pregnancy. That there is something transgressive in the idea that we might have a useful and meaningful life which isn’t dependent upon, and which outlasts, our fertility. This kind of attitude perpetuates the (surely, by now, outdated) idea that women are valuable, and can have self-worth, only in the context of that fertility. It’s enough to make you want to call in the Furies, for sure.
My own entry into menopause was hardly typical; it all happened quite suddenly. It was less of a nice slow transition, and rather more of a car crash. I had suffered from severe endometriosis for all of my adult life, and the only effective way I’d ever found to manage the monthly agony and excessive bleeding was to take the contraceptive pill to normalize
my cycles. But I had always planned to stop taking the pill once I reached the age of fifty, because the medical evidence clearly suggested that it was unlikely to be safe after that. I imagined I’d just have to deal with the ongoing pain, and hope that it would all miraculously vanish when menopause finally happened and I could kiss goodbye to menstruation forever. So, my fiftieth birthday arrived, I stopped taking the pill shortly afterward — and never had another period. Not so much as an ache or a twinge; not even the slightest spotting of blood. Menopause, it seemed, had been happening quietly in the background while I wasn’t paying attention; it had been masked by the effects of the contraceptive pill.
At first, it seemed to me that all this was a very fine thing; not only had I been liberated from a lifetime of heavy and painful periods, but I hadn’t even had to endure any of the menstrual irregularities most women face in the run-up to menopause. I hadn’t had a perimenopause at all. But of course, there were still changes to go through — and now, they all descended on me at once. That sudden volcanic eruption of rage I’ve described defined my psychological experience; fire defined my physical experience too. I was burning woman; I was a walking hellfire. Some great conflagration was occurring, and I felt as if I were being consumed from the inside out.
My friend Fern, an artist, facilitator, and wilderness guide here in Wales, had the same experience. She remembers regularly going to bed wrapped in a king-size bath towel to absorb the buckets of sweat which would otherwise soak the sheets. The sweats also happened during the day. I’d often have to do an Olympic sprint to remove at least two layers of clothing in less than three seconds flat,
she laughs. This was rather less easy if I was in company. Thirty seconds later, I’d feel chilled and have to pile it all back on again. I became magnetized by watching my body ‘fire up,’
she tells me. "There was a sound I inwardly made — the mimicking of a small explosion or nuclear-fueled rocket powering itself