Tag Archives: women’s health

Why You Keep Waking Up Between 1–3 AM

If you’re a woman in your late 30s, 40s, or early 50s and you’ve started waking up in the middle of the night — often somewhere between 1 and 3 AM — you’re not alone.

Many women tell me the same thing:

“I fall asleep fine… but then I wake up at 2 or 3 AM and my mind turns on.”

Sometimes you can fall back asleep.
Sometimes you can’t.

And over time it becomes exhausting.

Most women assume this is just insomnia or something they have to live with as they get older.

Many women search for answers to questions like “why do I wake up at 3 AM every night?”

But in many cases, your body is actually trying to communicate something important.


Your Body Isn’t Random — It’s Rhythmic

Your body runs on rhythms.

Hormones follow rhythms.
Digestion follows rhythms.
Your nervous system follows rhythms.

When these rhythms are supported, sleep tends to be deep and restorative.

But when they are disrupted — often from stress, overstimulation, irregular routines, or hormone shifts — the body begins sending signals.

Middle-of-the-night waking is one of the most common signals.


Many women begin waking between 1–4 AM during their late 30s and 40s, especially during periods of stress or hormonal transition.


The Nervous System Connection

One of the biggest reasons women begin waking between 1–4 AM is nervous system overload.

Many women today are living with a nervous system that has been running in low-grade fight-or-flight mode for years.

Work demands.
Parenting.
Emotional load.
Constant stimulation from phones and screens.
Years of pushing through exhaustion.

I recorded a short video explaining why this happens and what your body may be trying to tell you:

When the nervous system is constantly on alert, the body produces more stress hormones like cortisol.

Cortisol is meant to rise gradually in the morning to help you wake up.

But when the nervous system is dysregulated, that rhythm can flip.

Instead of rising in the morning, cortisol can spike during the night, waking you up between 1–4 AM.


Hormones Also Play a Role

For many women, this pattern becomes even more noticeable during perimenopause.

One reason is that progesterone naturally begins to decline during this stage of life.

Progesterone is often called a “calming hormone.”
It helps regulate the nervous system and supports deeper sleep.

When progesterone drops and the nervous system is already under stress, sleep disruptions often follow.

This is why many women in their 40s suddenly begin experiencing sleep patterns that never used to happen before.


From a Seasonal Perspective

There is also something important happening right now if you’re reading this in late winter or early spring.

In seasonal living traditions like Ayurveda, winter is naturally a slower, heavier time.

The body tends to store more energy, move less, and turn inward.

But as spring approaches, the body begins to shift toward mobilization and detoxification.

If the nervous system is already overloaded, this seasonal shift can amplify symptoms such as:

• waking during the night
• puffiness or inflammation
• irritability
• fatigue
• feeling “wired but tired”

Again, your body isn’t malfunctioning.

It’s adjusting.


A Few Simple Ways to Support Your Sleep

If you’re experiencing this pattern, small shifts can make a meaningful difference.

Here are a few gentle practices that help many women begin restoring their sleep rhythm:

Dim lights and reduce stimulation in the evening
Bright light and screens signal alertness to the brain.

Eat an earlier, lighter dinner
Heavy or late meals can disrupt nighttime hormone rhythms.

Avoid late-night snacking and sugar
Blood sugar swings can contribute to night waking.

Create a calming wind-down routine
Even simple rituals like herbal tea, stretching, or journaling can signal safety to the nervous system.

These changes may seem simple, but they significantly support the body’s natural rhythms and can have a dramatical effect on your ability to heal and recover over time.


The Bigger Picture

Sleep disturbances are rarely just about sleep.

They are often a reflection of the overall state of the nervous system and hormonal environment.

When women begin supporting these systems together — rather than chasing isolated symptoms — the body often responds surprisingly quickly.

Better sleep.
More stable energy.
Improved mood.
Less inflammation.

This is the deeper work of restoring rhythm.


If You Want Support Resetting Your System

Right now I’m opening a few private spots for

Spring Reset Sessions
Nervous System + Hormone Support for Women 35–55.

This is a 6–8 week private support container designed for women who are feeling:

• exhausted
• inflamed or puffy
• hormonally off
• stuck despite trying to do the “right things”

Inside the intensive we work on:

• nervous system regulation
• restoring healthy rhythms
• seasonal lifestyle adjustments
• gentle detox and hormone support

If you’d like to explore whether this work could support you, you can learn more or schedule a free 20–30 minute strategy call here:


Listening to Your Body’s Signals

If your body has been waking you up in the middle of the night, try not to see it as a failure or something broken.

Often it’s simply your body asking for a different kind of support.

And when you begin listening to those signals, powerful shifts can happen.

Why Perimenopause Is Not a Disease (and What It Really Means)

For too long, women have been told that perimenopause is a problem to be fixed, a disease to be treated, or something to simply “get through.” But what if this season of life is actually one of the most powerful transitions a woman can experience? In today’s podcast episode, I’m reframing midlife not as a medical condition, but as a sacred rite of passage—one that calls us deeper into wisdom, truth, and freedom in our own bodies.

If you’ve ever felt dismissed, pathologized, or overwhelmed by the changes of perimenopause, this conversation is for you.

Listen below and explore the show notes for key takeaways.

Episode 2 – Perimenopause Is Not a Disease: Reframing Midlife as a Sacred Rite of Passage

Published: August 19, 2025
Host: Jessica Robinson | Sacred Wisdom Wellness Podcast – Where Holistic Health, Spiritual Truth, and Real Freedom Meet


Episode Summary:

Perimenopause is not something to fear, medicate away, or hide. It’s not the end of your beauty or vitality — it’s a sacred initiation into deeper wisdom, sovereignty, and freedom.

In this episode, I invite you to see perimenopause in a whole new light. Through both cultural critique and Ayurvedic perspective, I share why resisting this transition often creates more suffering — and how embracing it can unlock intuition, clarity, and spiritual growth.

What We Explore:

  • Why perimenopause is more than just a hormonal shift
  • How cultural lies about aging keep women stuck in fear and resistance
  • Ayurveda’s perspective on the Vata season of life (and what your body needs now)
  • Why “anti-aging” is actually anti-woman
  • How midlife can become the beginning of sovereignty, not the end of vitality

🌿 Resources + Next Steps:
✨ Watch the free 5-Part Perimenopause Video Series — learn the stages of perimenopause and how to support yourself naturally:
👉https://sacredwisdomwellness.com/2025/08/14/your-ultimate-guide-to-perimenopause-series/ 

✨ Book a free 20-minute Clarity Call — let’s talk about your biggest health challenges and explore whether holistic Ayurvedic support is right for you:
👉 https://api.leadconnectorhq.com/widget/bookings/sww-clarity-call 

✨ Explore my favorite Ayurvedic products & herbs from Banyan Botanicals (affiliate link):
👉 https://glnk.io/kovw3/jessica6vz
Use discount code: SACREDWISDOM15

Let’s Stay Connected:
📸 Instagram: @sacred.wisdom.wellness
🌐 Website: SacredWisdomWellness.com
📬 Email: https://live.sacredwisdomwellness.com/email-list
🎧 Listen on Apple, Spotify & YouTube


Your midlife is not a decline.
It’s a divine invitation into sovereignty,
freedom, and deeper wisdom.


Your Ultimate Guide to Perimenopause Series

The midlife time in a woman’s life has always been shrouded in mystery. Some women never speak of it at all and suffer in silence, while others are constantly complaining about the infamous hot flashes, night sweats, and mood swings.

What’s been lacking for a long time is a comprehensive guide that educates women on the natural flow of this sacred transition and the type of care she needs.

This is why I created this 5-part video series on perimenopause that goes deeper.
I’ll walk you through what’s really happening during this transition, how to support yourself holistically, and why this time is sacred — not shameful.

* Captions are listed above each corresponding video in this series.


Your Ultimate Guide to Perimenopause (Part 1 of 5) – Reframing Perimenopause as a Sacred Transition

Most women are taught to fear this phase of life, but perimenopause isn’t the beginning of your breakdown — it’s the beginning of your becoming.


Your Ultimate Guide to Perimenopause (Part 2 of 5) – The Fire Builds

Early Perimenopause

  • Age Range: Late 30s to early 40s (sometimes earlier)
  • What’s Happening: Estrogen and progesterone start to fluctuate unpredictably. Ovulation may still occur, but less consistently.
  • Common Signs:
    • Shorter cycles or irregular periods
    • Increased PMS or mood swings
    • Fatigue or sleep disturbances
    • Anxiety, irritability, breast tenderness

Sacred Invitation:
👉 Begin listening to your body more deeply. Start releasing overcommitment and overgiving.


Your Ultimate Guide to Perimenopause (Part 3 of 5) – The Storm

Mid Perimenopause

  • Age Range: Typically 42–48 (varies)
  • What’s Happening: Hormones shift more dramatically. Progesterone drops, estrogen surges and dips erratically. Cycles may become very irregular or heavy.
  • Common Signs:
    • Night sweats, hot flashes
    • Worsening anxiety or depression
    • Heavy or skipped periods
    • Brain fog, rage, or intense emotions

Sacred Invitation:
👉 Shed what no longer serves. Set boundaries. Honor rest and retreat. This is a sacred purification — not a breakdown.


Your Ultimate Guide to Perimenopause (Part 4 of 5) – The Descent Before Rebirth

Late Perimenopause

  • Age Range: Late 40s to early 50s
  • What’s Happening: Ovaries slow down production of estrogen. You may go several months without a period. Once you’ve gone 12 months without one, menopause officially begins.
  • Common Signs:
    • Longer gaps between periods
    • Fewer emotional swings, but persistent fatigue or dryness
    • Sleep may still be affected
    • A new calm or clarity may begin to emerge

Sacred Invitation:
👉 Deepen into self-trust. Reorient to purpose. Prepare for the rebirth that comes with menopause.


Your Ultimate Guide to Perimenopause (Part 5 of 5) – Recap

 Perimenopause isn’t a diagnosis — it’s an awakening.

🔥 The fire builds.
🌪 The storm hits.
🌙 The descent begins.

Each stage asks something different of you — and when you listen, you move through this transition with more ease, clarity, and self-respect.

This isn’t about fixing what’s “wrong.”
It’s about returning to what’s true.

💜 If this series spoke to you, let’s talk! Use the button below the video 👇🏽 to book your complimentary 20-minute Clarity Call to see how an Ayurvedic approach can support you in this sacred season.


If You’re Ready to Step Into This Season with Grace…

If you’re ready to move through perimenopause with grace and vitality, let’s connect.
I offer a complimentary 20-minute Clarity Call where we’ll talk about your top health challenges and how an Ayurvedic approach can support you in this sacred season.
If we’re a good fit, I’ll share the ways we can work together for deeper support.