In this candid and deeply informative episode, Kristin Hocker and Meghan Caponiti sit down with Dr. Shieva Ghofrany, a practicing OB-GYN, ovarian cancer survivor, and outspoken advocate for women’s midlife health. Together, they unpack the realities women face across every life stage—from menstruation and sexuality to perimenopause, menopause, and beyond—and why mindset and education are just as critical as medical care. Dr. Ghofrany explains why menopause shouldn’t be treated as a fleeting “moment,” but as an ongoing, essential health conversation, especially given decades of misinformation around hormone therapy. She addresses the persistent gaps in medical training, the fear-based narratives that still keep women suffering unnecessarily, and the importance of informed choice when it comes to hormone replacement. The conversation also dives into sexual health, libido, and the often-misunderstood concept of “use it or lose it,” reframing it in an empowering, non-patriarchal way. Dr. Ghofrany shares insights on responsive desire, why so many women feel “broken” when they’re actually normal, and how long-term intimacy evolves over time. Menopause is not a “moment.”Dr. Ghofrany explains that menopause has always existed, but decades of misinformation and lack of research caused it to disappear from mainstream medical conversation—leaving generations of women undereducated and underserved. Hormone therapy was misunderstood for years.Fear stemming from early 2000s studies dramatically reduced hormone use, even though current data shows hormone therapy is safe and beneficial for many women when prescribed thoughtfully and individually. Women deserve information, not fear-based care.Only a small percentage of women use hormone replacement today—not because they don’t need it, but because they haven’t been given accurate, balanced information to make informed choices. Sexual desire changes—and that’s normal.Many women experience a shift from spontaneous desire to responsive desire over time. This is not dysfunction or aging—it’s normal neurochemistry that’s rarely discussed openly. “Use it or lose it” needs reframing. Vaginal and sexual health benefit from regular blood flow and use, but this includes self-pleasure and agency—not obligation or patriarchal expectations. Openness builds confidence and connection.Dr. Ghofrany shares that being honest about bodies, health struggles, sexuality, and aging helps dismantle shame, reduce isolation, and empower women to advocate for themselves medically and emotionally. Beyond medicine, the episode explores authenticity, social media pressure, and Dr. Ghofrany’s personal journey through cancer, hair loss, and self-expression. Her core message is clear: openness breeds confidence, and honest conversations—especially the uncomfortable ones—are what help women feel less alone, more informed, and better equipped to advocate for their health.
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