skipping breakfast worsens perimenopause symptoms

Skipping Breakfast

March 04, 20263 min read

If you wake up already tired…
If your brain feels slow, scattered, or fuzzy by 10am…
If you’ve ever stood in the kitchen and forgotten why you walked in there…

The frustration is real.

Brain fog is one of the most common (and most frustrating) symptoms of perimenopause. What you eat (or don’t eat) at breakfast plays a much bigger role than most women realise.

As a woman in your 40s or 50s, your hormones are shifting. That means your blood sugar, stress response, and energy regulation are shifting too. And breakfast becomes less optional… and more strategic.

Let’s talk about why.

What’s Actually Causing Brain Fog in Perimenopause?

During perimenopause, fluctuating oestrogen affects:

  • Glucose regulation

  • Insulin sensitivity

  • Cortisol levels

  • Neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine

Oestrogen isn’t just about reproduction, it also plays a role in how your brain uses fuel. When levels become erratic, your brain becomes more sensitive to blood sugar dips.

If you skip breakfast or grab something low in protein (like toast with butter or just coffee), you set up this pattern:

  1. Cortisol rises naturally in the morning

  2. You add caffeine (often on an empty stomach)

  3. Blood sugar spikes then drops

  4. Energy crashes

  5. Brain fog, irritability, and cravings follow

This isn’t a willpower issue.

It’s physiology.

Researchers like Dr. Stacey Sims have highlighted that midlife women are more stress-sensitive than men or younger women, particularly in the fasted state. What worked in your 30s (skipping breakfast, intermittent fasting, “just coffee”) can backfire in your 40s.

Your Brain Is an Energy-Hungry Organ

Your brain uses roughly 20% of your daily energy intake.

Overnight, you’ve fasted for 8–12 hours. Liver glycogen is partially depleted. Cortisol is rising to wake you up. If you don’t replenish fuel, especially protein and complex carbohydrates, your brain runs on stress hormones instead.

That “wired but tired” feeling?
That’s often cortisol doing the heavy lifting.

And cortisol-driven energy is not stable energy.

What a Brain-Supportive Breakfast Looks Like

A perimenopause-friendly breakfast should include:

25–35g of protein
Fibre-rich carbohydrates
Healthy fats
Minimal added sugar

Why?

Protein provides amino acids for neurotransmitters.
Fibre stabilises blood sugar and helps to keep you full.
Healthy fats support hormone production and brain cell membranes.

Some great examples of a hormone supportive breakfast in perimenopause are:

  • Greek yoghurt + chia seeds + berries + nuts

  • Eggs + avocado + sourdough + spinach

  • Protein smoothie with oats, flaxseed and frozen berries

This combination flattens the blood sugar rollercoaster and reduces the mid-morning crash that feeds brain fog.

“But I’m Not Hungry in the Morning…”

This is incredibly common in perimenopause.

Often it’s a sign of:

  • High evening cortisol

  • Poor sleep

  • Under-eating the day before

  • Chronic stress

Gently rebuilding your appetite with a balanced breakfast can actually improve hunger signalling over time.

Start small if needed — but start.

The Bigger Picture: Breakfast Is a Lever

Breakfast won’t fix everything overnight.

But it’s one of the simplest, most powerful levers you can pull.

When you stabilise blood sugar early in the day, you often notice:

  • Clearer thinking

  • Fewer 3pm crashes

  • Reduced sugar cravings

  • Better mood regulation

  • More consistent energy

And when your brain feels clearer, everything feels more manageable.

If You Want a Done-For-You Plan…

This is exactly why I created the Peri Brekkie Blueprint.

It’s designed specifically for women in perimenopause who want:

  • Simple, realistic breakfast formulas

  • Protein targets already calculated

  • Easy recipes (no weird ingredients)

  • Blood sugar-friendly combinations

  • Clarity on what actually works

No extremes.
No fasting rules.
No “just try harder” advice.

Just strategic, hormone-aware breakfasts that support your brain instead of fighting it.

You can download the Peri Brekkie Blueprint and start tomorrow morning with a clear plan.

Brain fog isn’t a personality flaw.

And it’s not something you just have to live with.

Sometimes… it starts with breakfast.

Louise is a nutritionist and lifestyle engineer - helping women create a life they love through nutrition and lifestyle wellness habits.

Louise Mathwin

Louise is a nutritionist and lifestyle engineer - helping women create a life they love through nutrition and lifestyle wellness habits.

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Want to stop the brain fog?

Breakfast is your most important meal during perimenopause.

A breakfast rich in protein and fibre lowers cortisol (our stress hormone) and helps to minimise brain fog, energy crashes and mood swings.

I never used to eat breakfast but this brekkie is now my favourite way to start the day and it can be yours too.