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This Is Why You Feel Anxious, Wired, or Can’t Sleep — Even When Everything Seems Fine

Your results suggest progesterone may be low — a common shift in perimenopause that can leave you feeling anxious, restless, and unable to fully relax… even when nothing in your life has changed.

What’s Likely Causing Your Symptoms

Low Progesterone

Your responses suggest that progesterone may be lower than optimal — a common shift in perimenopause that can affect how your body regulates stress, sleep, and overall calmness.

Progesterone isn’t just a reproductive hormone.

It plays a key role in:

  • calming the nervous system

  • supporting deep, restorative sleep

  • helping your body transition out of “fight or flight”

When progesterone drops, your body can stay in a more activated state — even when your life hasn’t changed.

This isn’t a mindset issue.
It’s a nervous system signaling issue.

What this often looks like

Many women with low progesterone experience patterns like:

  • Feeling anxious or on edge “for no reason”

  • Trouble falling asleep or staying asleep

  • Waking in the middle of the night with a racing mind

  • Feeling wired but exhausted

  • Increased sensitivity to stress

  • Feeling like you can’t fully relax

These symptoms often get treated individually — anxiety, sleep, stress — without recognizing the underlying pattern connecting them.

Why “calming down” doesn’t fix it

When progesterone is low, your body loses one of its primary calming signals.

That means:

  • your nervous system stays more activated

  • stress feels harder to regulate

  • sleep becomes more fragile

This is why:

  • meditation helps… but doesn’t fully fix it

  • better sleep habits help… but don’t restore sleep

  • cutting caffeine helps… but symptoms persist

Your body isn’t overreacting.
It’s missing a key signal.

What this result means

This pattern suggests that your symptoms may be less about external stress — and more about how your body is responding internally.

When progesterone is supported appropriately, many women notice:

  • improved ability to fall and stay asleep

  • reduced baseline anxiety

  • a greater sense of calm and stability

  • better resilience to everyday stress

This doesn’t mean progesterone is the only factor — but it may be the most influential place to start.

How this can affect weight and metabolism

While progesterone is best known for its calming and sleep-supporting effects, it also plays an indirect role in weight and metabolic function.

When progesterone is low, many women experience:

  • Poor sleep, which disrupts hunger hormones and increases cravings

  • Higher baseline stress, which can shift the body toward fat storage

  • Reduced recovery, making it harder to respond to nutrition and exercise

  • Increased cortisol patterns that work against weight loss efforts

This is why weight gain or stalled progress often shows up alongside symptoms like anxiety and sleep disruption.

It’s not just one issue.
It’s a connected pattern.

Important context

Many women are told:

“You just need to manage stress better”
or
“Try improving your sleep routine”

But low progesterone isn’t caused by a lack of discipline.

It’s part of a normal hormonal shift — especially in your late 30s and 40s — that can significantly impact how your body feels day-to-day.

This assessment doesn’t diagnose a condition.
It identifies a pattern that often gets overlooked — but can make a meaningful difference when addressed correctly.

What to do next

If this pattern sounds familiar, the next step is understanding what’s actually driving your symptoms — and what to address first.

If you’d like help implementing this plan in a way that’s tailored to your labs, symptoms, and goals, you can discuss your results with me HERE.