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My Menopause at 15

How does it feel to go through the menopause at 15? In the first of three stories of the menopause, journalist Annabelle Gauntlett describes her extraordinary experience.

For the next three weeks Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio Four presents fresh perspectives on the menopause. Ignored or downplayed for so long, the ceasing of menstruation now supports a growing industry of treatment and symptom relief, backed up by books and podcasts, but levels of knowledge and sensitivity in the medical profession vary wildly. This short series gathers together three journalists each with a unique story of the menopause. In the first episode Annabelle Gauntlett searches for medical insights into her extraordinary experience.

“At 13 I had horrific hot flushes that made me feel trapped in my burning skin. Worst of all, nobody could figure out what was wrong with me.â€
Two years later Annabelle Gauntlett was diagnosed with premature ovarian insufficiency. While her friends were navigating puberty, Annabelle was going through the menopause.

In the first of three documentaries on contemporary experiences of the menopause, Annabelle, who’s now 21, investigates the medical causes of extreme cases of early onset menopause, examines the response of the medical profession and considers her own future in which natural childbirth is an unlikely prospect.

1 in 100 women in the UK experience menopause before the age of 40, but for most the reasons are unclear. Most of those women experience premature menopause in their 30s- cases like Annabelle’s are rare but extremely upsetting.

Annabelle says, “Teenage menopause quickly became my life. The same track played on repeat in my head every night: ‘Why me?’ With no answers, no support and no future guidance, I became incredibly isolated from my peers who were navigating puberty while mine was ending.â€

“My infertility is something that evolves with me at every new stage of life. Recently I found myself smiling at a mother and baby playing peek-a-boo with a tear in my eye. I’m in awe of something I can’t ever have. Every relationship I enter, the first thing that springs to my mind is, ‘How and when will I tell him I can’t have children?’â€

Annabelle- now a print and video journalist with Highland News and Media in Inverness- uses her diaries and social media posts from her teenage years to tell her own story, discusses the impact with others in a similar situation and talks to experts in the field about diagnosis, treatment and research.

Producer: Alasdair Cross

Available now

28 minutes

On radio

Tomorrow 15:30

Broadcasts

  • Yesterday 11:00
  • Tomorrow 15:30