Mammabrønsj - med Irene og Linnca

Overgangsalder - Fra klarsynt til hjernetåke

November 06, 2023 Barnehagenett Season 3 Episode 9
Overgangsalder - Fra klarsynt til hjernetåke
Mammabrønsj - med Irene og Linnca
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Mammabrønsj - med Irene og Linnca
Overgangsalder - Fra klarsynt til hjernetåke
Nov 06, 2023 Season 3 Episode 9
Barnehagenett

Konsentrasjonen blir borte, hukommelsen svikter og livsgnisten er ikke tilstedeværende! Dette kan være symptomer på mye, men har du tenkt på at det finnes noe som heter overgangsalder? I ukens episode har vi med oss Mariann Kruse Larsen som forteller om sin historie.  

Gjest: Mariann Larsen  Kruse 

Abonner på Mammabrønsj på Youtube eller der du hører på podcast.
Kom gjerne med innspill til hva du vil høre om. Du finner Barnehagenett på websiden barnehagenett.no og de fleste sosiale kanaler.
@barnehagenett - Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Youtube

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Konsentrasjonen blir borte, hukommelsen svikter og livsgnisten er ikke tilstedeværende! Dette kan være symptomer på mye, men har du tenkt på at det finnes noe som heter overgangsalder? I ukens episode har vi med oss Mariann Kruse Larsen som forteller om sin historie.  

Gjest: Mariann Larsen  Kruse 

Abonner på Mammabrønsj på Youtube eller der du hører på podcast.
Kom gjerne med innspill til hva du vil høre om. Du finner Barnehagenett på websiden barnehagenett.no og de fleste sosiale kanaler.
@barnehagenett - Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Youtube

Speaker 1:

You can't do anything so long in your head it doesn't work. For example, I took a wrong bus several times a week. I went on and so, especially when we were about to leave work, then I would write on something else and I was like I've been on the bus again and now we're going back to the tunnel again.

Speaker 3:

No, Welcome to this week's Mamma Brunch. Today we're going to talk about a topic that we're a little back to, the tabu-bulac and what we often talk about. Today, maria, we're lucky to have a guest who has been there again but who can share some experience with us. Can you introduce?

Speaker 1:

yourself. Yes, my name is Maria Kruse and I'm 49 years old.

Speaker 3:

Today we're going to talk about the organization Early organization, how it actually affects life. Maybe it affects the child's family. What's going on?

Speaker 1:

Can you tell us a little bit about the story? Yes, I can. When you say early, I'm not in the early age of the organization. It's completely normal. I was 48 when I started working in the market. Now I'm 49. One thing I know about the early age was the age of the organization and that you stopped being a fruit. We talked about these two things. You can talk about it in the next few months. You can see that. You can see my life as a woman who's just up in the wind.

Speaker 3:

Or in the wind. It's not that big of a deal. You just sit down and save yourself.

Speaker 1:

That's what I heard about. I didn't have a whole lot of it. I didn't have a whole lot of it, but I got everything else. And now I'm like one third of it gets a high level of symptoms, one third of it gets a good level of symptoms, but it's just a few days and then one third of it gets almost nothing. And I was one of the first category. I noticed that something happened. I started reading about the subject. I found a podcast about it. It's about the age of the organization. I started reading about it.

Speaker 2:

I noticed that something happened, but did you feel that it was a coincidence?

Speaker 1:

I don't know. Yes, okay, and that was because I had. I remember she is 12 years old or so and she had the same plan, especially the brain-challenged Brain-challenged yes. So what I mean is that when we come to the organ cell, the estrogen level goes drastically down and the estrogen has overall the body and it affects very much and this is not the case before, but it affects the results of the brain and the concentration level. Oh, so when the estrogen level goes down, it goes beyond your brain to concentrate and remember. So the guy. Then he goes to the store, buys egg, milk, bread, three things. You go to the store and you think what should I buy? What should I buy? You might remember egg, Nothing at all.

Speaker 2:

But you remember when you should remember. Yes, I remember when you should remember.

Speaker 1:

And all the symptoms that come there. It is completely different All the same early demands and when you are not ready for them, there are a lot of people who are very busy and then they go to the patient and then they say I have the symptoms, and the patient has the ability to go out of the patient's way and I think, okay, I have heard about those who have been sent to the brain scan and they are on excursion for several years. They have been sick and sick and no one has thought about which age you are in. No, and what you are saying is a real concern, I think, because we both in ordinary 課棧棧棧棧棧 also.

Speaker 1:

Trainee, do not come from the workplace here to talk.

Speaker 3:

No, it's. I think that if you have been able to get Alzheimer's, I would have been very worried.

Speaker 2:

I thought that I would have gotten that band and not the organization.

Speaker 1:

Yes, because most relatives have a best mother who got Alzheimer's, or they have a bad family. And then many people start to think. And the first thing I did was that I started with Alzheimer's. Bananas and carrots were great because of the symptoms of the disease, so I started with all natural things, but it didn't help.

Speaker 2:

What other symptoms did you have?

Speaker 1:

As I said, concentration Concentration means that you can't do anything for as long as your head doesn't work. For example, I got a wrong bus several times a week, and especially when we were about to leave work. I would tell someone else and I would say, no, I have gone on a wrong bus again. And now we are going back to the tunnel again. No, and then I called the morning center I have gone on a wrong bus today and I became completely quiet. Could you cut that now? No, I have done it. And then I just have to tell you about one episode. I train very much. I train four times a week On cycling training, very often four times a day. And I went on a wrong bus and you have your own laws. And then my friends went on cycling training, cycling for an hour, went up to the bathroom and then the door was open and then I just entered the room.

Speaker 2:

Someone has opened my closet and then I open the closet.

Speaker 1:

We see. No, there hang my loss. Also, I have lost no another of my creation With some other sign clerk, and that is so typical of Alzheimer's symptoms that you do such a thing or that you get out of the shop and put some other things in your house. That is so typical. And then I got so scared and stood there and thought help, and then I started to get around. What else am I giving? What kind of creation is?

Speaker 3:

lost.

Speaker 1:

But there was no one there. I lost my creation and I just stood there with a pair of shoes on, but I was so scared I took off my clothes and then I fell out. But that is such a typical symptom. Then on that, yes, not true. And then the other symptoms. That is, estrogen levels is also what makes us energy, so energy went down the whole thing. I was like I got back from work and then I just had to put myself on the couch. It was like you couldn't. Now I can feel it right before Christmas it's the darkest time. Then I can feel it, but then it was like it was just you are not used to it.

Speaker 3:

No, not used to it.

Speaker 1:

It was almost like oh no, I'm not training today. I just said just completely and just out of the way.

Speaker 2:

In a sense, it can be a symptom that you can do what you love to do.

Speaker 1:

And then the mood of course becomes unstable. You become a little nervous I'm at least getting that. Not everyone gets that. But the usual activities that you are happy with. It doesn't happen anymore. We would go to the dentist in winter and I thought I'm glad I didn't do that.

Speaker 2:

Did you notice that this happened to you in your life? Yes, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

I'm tired of it all day. I wonder how you know that you are you when you wake up in the morning. I was an angel person. I have been an angel person for 48 years and suddenly I don't know myself again. An angel symptom is what happens when the progessor is gone. The progessor makes us feel well and a little well-being, and when that happens, it gets a little. I go with an angel all the time. I'm not going to call it angel symptom because it didn't happen, but if you get a little angel symptom, marianne, it becomes like this. I'm going to call it angel symptom help. I've heard that women who suddenly don't want to go to the tunnel they go big around the world. Many things can happen.

Speaker 3:

I think that what you're telling here if you don't know what's going on with you and also when you know about it. I have a small child and we have children in different environments today, but you can't compare it to the amatocca where you go and you're completely or what you call the amatocca, but I think that's because you don't sleep.

Speaker 3:

It can be very important, but what this actually has to do with family life is to take care of the people around you, the man you call, the child, whether they're small or big, or to be quiet for others. If I had the experience to have what you describe, then should I be able to take care of my child?

Speaker 1:

Yes, that's a good question. You're in your own bubble and then home to us. We have one child who lives at home and he's in the middle of the party in the middle of the worst party, I should say. And then I said to him he's 14, he said you know what? Now we're on the same planet. Yes, we're on the same planet. My husband, he's in control of the most and we're not in the same planet. So it happens with the people, when you're not able to take care of them, you can't follow them, or what you do.

Speaker 3:

You mentioned that because I was a little bit used to it, because you have to get some help to take care of this. You can't go like that in the evening. Then you get crazy. You do that. You can't feel yourself, or you don't feel that you're struggling, or you just miss the list.

Speaker 2:

I'm not the only one with the sun-credits symptoms, maybe but you have to take care of it. Yes. When did you realize that you were planning to make some changes?

Speaker 1:

I think it was December to May in the year when things happened with myself and then I tried to regulate it with a cough and it didn't help. You tried to make some changes. Yes, and then I tried some natural products and I drank a little soy milk every day, because that's what estrogen should be.

Speaker 1:

I don't know, I'm not into estrogen, so I tried a lot and then it ended up being a little skeptical, starting with some medicine, hormone, estrogen and so on, and then I tried a lot, and then you finally realized, what it was. Yes, before I had done anything with you, I thought that this would be nice. But then in April I thought that this wouldn't work out. So then I ordered. I didn't go to the fasting camp, but I ordered a team because I knew that they were specialists in this so.

Speaker 1:

I was sure that it was and I jumped over the fasting camp and then I went there in May and then I came to the gym. So I sat down and she said first and ask what's that?

Speaker 3:

And then and then it's like something someone thinks and asks and often it's just a tour we were like.

Speaker 1:

And then I checked in all the boxes and I said concentration, I'm starting to get a tumor, that you're sleeping badly. It's also less than 8.9. Now there's a hormone. You get less than 8.9, you're sleeping badly, waking up at night and then you're in a coma and that again has an impact on everyone, for example, weight gain and skin health. There's so many consequences that you're not sleeping.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot of things here. It's a great reason to take care of it.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely, absolutely. Now, I've heard a lot about this, but in England it's one of ten women who can't work anymore. So it's a great reason to take care of it and it can be later that they don't understand that it was what they said. But they get sick and unwell, so they have taken care of it in England, so there is the most public clinic that can handle the illness. I don't think we have that in Norway, why not?

Speaker 2:

No, I don't think I can talk about it, so I can't talk about it. But did you get it concentrated on shopping?

Speaker 1:

Yes, I checked in the box and then I suggested that you have something that fits you, and the reason for the skepticism is that the study came out 20 years ago and that estrogen is strong in the future. The thing with the research was that it was given in a large dose and to women who were actually concerned about getting that type of estrogen Do you hear that there are many things that are of great importance to you.

Speaker 1:

Yes, there are many things for me, so I have seen so many of them. I have to try everything I have to try everything. It doesn't work anymore. I will get sick and unwell. So I got plastic and two different types, and there are not brown plastic that you put on your knees when you get sick. It's completely different, a little different. You put on two times a week and the other one was not about the lower belly.

Speaker 2:

So you don't really feel like you are getting it. No, I don't.

Speaker 1:

You know what? I just checked for? A miracle plastic, so nice. I took it on a Tuesday because you have to do it twice a week. It's easy to remember Tuesday and Sunday you change. I took it on a Tuesday because I was very excited about this and on Wednesday the next day I was in the hospital again. You can say that with the plastic effect, but it has been so cold.

Speaker 2:

And I was in the hospital again, did you think that something happened inside you?

Speaker 1:

Yes, I did. I noticed it so well, I was so happy. My humor, my habit, my head was just like that. I got to sleep again and out.

Speaker 2:

It's just a matter of being yourself.

Speaker 1:

I'm becoming myself again, because what happens is that you suddenly don't know yourself. This is not me what's happening. And then I become myself.

Speaker 3:

Again, I don't have the knowledge you have I've been at least once but we see the importance of taking this on everyone, because you are friends, and friends with someone who is also a little bit more specific, and everyone comes into this organization.

Speaker 2:

But we know that. We know that.

Speaker 3:

But what I also want to do is to take a little tour of this organization. I've been doing this with this organization for a long time you can actually get it pretty young and then, as I said, I've been at a course and I've read a little bit, but then it is it actually has to be treated, and then it is as you say. This is in relation to Skeptical neosis, in relation to medicines. I mean, I think you have to talk for a long time Because, as you call it for your miraculous place.

Speaker 1:

There are probably a lot of different things you should do and not do.

Speaker 3:

Or you can use it but it actually has to be done, or you have to talk high about it, Because I might be also a knock here that you don't sit here alone.

Speaker 1:

Yes, because it is a project and what you say in Tabu, I have both family and friends who are older and no one has said anything about it. So when I came into this period, I didn't want to talk to people about it, but everyone had to talk and then people talked yes, I had this and I have this and that, I've been to this and that, and you can't talk about it.

Speaker 3:

How can you?

Speaker 2:

talk about it. We haven't come to this yet, but one day we will, and I feel much more comfortable now to be able to take the symptoms on all of us. After hearing you talk, I think this is very relevant information and knowledge so that you can get the right treatment. I feel like I would also like to go to the family history and just be so sick about this and go right and be alive, so that, again, one thing is of skepticism towards medicine.

Speaker 2:

I might have also been afraid to go to the doctor to get it concentrated. Yes, and over there, it's totally natural, we all have to be sick.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it's not about being sick, even if your wife is lying on many of our sick homes.

Speaker 3:

Yes, and it's not. It's about taking care of your parents, as I said, in the family life. This has to be your mother. This has to know what to do and how to do it. I think it's important to have the quality of life that we are talking about.

Speaker 2:

You have to use the word the mother tongue. If you use the word mother tongue, you know that most of the time when you have a child, you get into that, you have to go through the mother tongue and now you want to get used to it. You mentioned that you have a child who is in the hospital. We know what happens in the hospital. There is also a little bit of such a thing. This sounds like something that is the same symptoms, but we don't know what it is. We are not able to know what is going to happen. Therefore, it is not important that we speak about it and that you are willing to say that this has been through.

Speaker 1:

Yes, the knowledge has to be out. It should have been. I have thought a lot about this, but it should have been like jump into your digiposs and the day you fill 40. You fill 40 years. This will happen in the next 10 years.

Speaker 2:

You are going to school.

Speaker 1:

You are going to school, so you are afraid of everyone else.

Speaker 2:

But it is not the case, it is what you think. And then suddenly we sit down and if we are in a meeting with early age groups, we are there, and we are there, and there are many who are in that category, and there are many in that category who also have children. And to know what is happening because, as you say, you miss the concentration, you can't follow yourself, you can't follow others, and to have small children in addition. I think it is important that we have knowledge of what it can be.

Speaker 1:

And then it is important, of course, to say that it is not everything that is about the youth, no. You have brain child, maybe you have a big child who is born exactly when you are. It can be many things that make you have a little headache, but it is often opposed to that. It is you believe. It is not to say that it is the practical transition.

Speaker 1:

And you think, it is a taboo because no one has the symptoms, especially sexy symptoms that you get. It is a taboo and no one wants to get old. In a way, it is to be older have no status in the western world. There can be many things that make it.

Speaker 2:

But is there one thing we know that we get a little older every day that goes. So it is very easy that it is taboo, Because this is something that is 100% true. Yes, that you get older every day that goes Half of the world's population should be through this If they live so long.

Speaker 1:

And then I have something that, if you start looking for transition, you will find yourself a picture of a lady who is 70 years old and has a gray hair, and you identify with them. It will be completely different, isn't it?

Speaker 3:

It is a good view. I think we just have to take that the transition is coming in all families in all forms of songs and performances, but as in the background, before we started playing. Today, we talked about a symptom that I, at least, wanted to know about.

Speaker 1:

When estrogen falls, it happens a lot, and it happens in a life without a life that you get dry and everything gets dry. You get dry in your hair, you get dry in your skin. So I also take a local estrogen pill. If not, it makes you feel bad. What about sex, for example?

Speaker 3:

That is also with the quality of life, I think, and the family, perhaps Absolutely Family, if you are not married and have sex, because if it is so you don't have it. It is fantastic that there is something that is possible.

Speaker 1:

That it can change. It becomes a bit like when you are about to be born.

Speaker 3:

It becomes a bit like that and then we can say thank you, maria, for sharing and keeping up with your story and all the knowledge you have to give us. Thank you very much. Thank you for the fun. Thank you for today. A little bit of love for podcasting on Spotify or YouTube.

Speaker 2:

Or there you hear podcast.

Effects of Early Menopause on Life
Recognizing the Importance of Hormonal Changes
Falling Estrogen and Quality of Life