Published on March 25, 2026 at 06:00 AM
Every spring, women over 40 break out of their winter training routine, clip their race bibs onto their shirts, and use their first event as a speed check against others to gauge physical fitness. From the tough spring gravel grinder to the line at some familiar friends’ early-season 70.3, the goal is always the same: figure out where our baseline fitness stands at the start of the season.
But then the math stops adding up.
Your heart rate rises, but your wattage or pace fails to support the effort. for you Heart rate variability (HRV) Readings become irregular. Your sleep is interrupted, recovery takes an excruciatingly long time, and you simply want to feel like you’re performing at the same level you were last season.
It’s tempting to panic and fear that your fitness has melted away. But most of the time, your high-intensity exercise is a hormonal shift. Your body doesn’t let you down; She is doing exactly what her hard wiring dictates she would do in the context of perimenopause and a changing internal landscape.
When big workouts collide with hormonal changes
Perimenopause and the transition to menopause are not failures, but rather phases in a constant state of flux.
As Celine Yeager, performance coach, says, Podcast hostand co-author of The Next Level: Your guide to kicking ass, feeling great, and crushing goals during menopause and beyond He points out that the relationship between changing hormones and the stress of high-intensity training (HIT) is a weighty one:
“Hormonal changes can cause physiological stress manifested by sleep disturbance, vasomotor symptoms such as hot flashes and night sweats, and musculoskeletal symptoms such as aches and pains,” says Yeager. “Disruptive symptoms can complicate HIT training. This is the most obvious interaction.”
The other reason is that estrogen is a big driver of how you respond to and recover from exercise. As Yeager says:Estrogen plays an important role In how the body responds to and recovers from exercise by influencing inflammation, muscle repair, and stress hormone signaling. When estrogen levels are low or fluctuating, some women experience a longer post-exercise stress response, which can contribute to a slower or less predictable recovery.
In these situations, recovery often requires more time and careful attention to how the body responds, which makes managing individual loads especially important, she adds.
This instability is also what makes similar training sessions seem largely productive on one occasion and extremely draining on another, depending on what’s going on under the hood. As Yeager points out, this kind of uncertainty is common among middle-aged athletes because there is no version of yourself that will emerge during exercise.
Why heart rate variability suddenly seems useless in perimenopause
“Human HRV can become noisy in the perimenopausal period, because it can be sensitive to hormonal fluctuations, sleep disturbance, and vasomotor symptoms,” Yeager says.
When your autonomic balance is thrown off track by changing estrogen, or you wake up at 2 a.m. with a hot flash, your wearable device can’t tell you why your HRV is suddenly in the tank; It’s just telling you that you’re “nervous.”
For this reason, Yeager says an athlete should never be stuck on a heart rate monitor for a single day. instead of, Look for larger patterns. When you look at it long term, you can determine how physical symptoms relate to your data.
Thermoregulation and estradiol “spring surprise”
Estradiol too Regulates the body’s ability to regulate heat And blood volume. When this system is out of balance, dealing with heat becomes more difficult. Your heart rate rises before you notice it, and faster.
This is why an early season race that is supposed to be manageable suddenly looks like a brawl. Heart rate rises at usual power output. Your race pace seems exhausting. You may feel as if your engine is not working properly, but your fitness is not gone; Your body is temporarily out of touch with what’s going on hormonally.
The inflammatory conversation that middle-aged athletes continue to avoid
Middle-aged athletes We hear about protein All the time, whether they want it or not. But this abundance of advice is appropriate because anabolic resistance increases as we age. Yeager recommends that middle-aged women in triathlon maintain a standard intake of 1.4-2.0 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight (about 40% more than the average person), depending on their training load.
It’s easy enough on paper, but here many athletes go wrong: In the obsession with protein, many middle-aged athletes learn to fear Carbohydrates.
As body composition can change and insulin resistance becomes more prevalent, talking about metabolism can be scary. But if you’re performing well, you can’t eliminate carbs. I still need them. Yeager sums it up in one sentence for performance-minded athletes: “Redirect more of the carbohydrates in your day to where it matters — before, during, and after training.” Combine that with a daily goal of about 30 grams of fiber, and you’ve got it Approach fueling well.
Why weightlifting is the missing link
While we’re talking about muscle damage and recovery, the main topic of discussion is strength training. When estrogen levels decrease, the spark that was used to maintain our muscle mass also decreases.
Endurance athletes tend to avoid lifting heavy objects, fearing that it will lead to leg heaviness when cycling or running.
But in the pre- and post-menopausal period, Heavy lifting (Fewer reps, more weight) is non-negotiable. It provides the central nervous system with the necessary stimulus to maintain strength and speed, and works to combat injury caused by the loss of fast-twitch muscle fibres. If you’re feeling that slowdown in your spring race pace, replacing just one “junk mile” endurance session with a quality, heavy strength session can be the exact recalibration needed for your body to discover missing gears.
Practical changes, not panic

If you experience a spring surprise, know that it may not be a decline in fitness. In fact, this is very likely an opportunity for a reset. Learning to interpret a whole new set of signals from your body, rather than anticipating the familiar, can help you maintain and even build your fitness. Here are some concrete ways to help you ease into this new position.
Track context, not just technology
Start tracking your symptoms instead of worrying about your daily “fluctuating” heart rate results. Document what you actually feel. If you keep a diary, don’t just write down data; Write down what was happening too. Was it a late night session followed by a bad night’s sleep? Are hot flashes associated with weeks when stress is greatest? Connecting these dots gives you so much more power than staring at a red shade on an app.
Find management experts
Do not use the white knuckle method. Find a doctor who knows about menopause and wants to get you the care you need.
Includes programming flexibility
If your recovery metrics are lower than usual and you feel flat, change your goal from a strict power/speed number to a noticeable effort number.
Feed when necessary
Eat carbohydrates immediately before, during, and after strenuous efforts.
Prioritize stress management
You should look positively at your recovery methods and treat sleep with the same respect that you give to your training sessions. Your body doesn’t differentiate between a big day of training and a big day of life stress, it’s all processed by the same group. When your life bucket overflows, which it will sometimes to varying degrees, your training should make up for that as well.
The bottom line on spring racing during menopause
The first race after a long winter may seem harder as you get older, but you don’t have to give up on your dreams. Fitness can still be built, and you’re definitely still in the game for high performance. All you have to do is train for the body you have now, not the body you had last season.



