
7 ways to ease 'morning dread' during perimenopause
Revisado por Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGPAutoria de Victoria RawPublicado originalmente 13 Jun 2026
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If you’re going through perimenopause, you may recognise the sudden wave of dread or anxiety that can feel most intense first thing in the morning.
These feelings can be especially overwhelming when they persist over time, affecting both your emotional wellbeing and daily life. The good news is that there are ways to support your body and mind through this natural - though often challenging - transition.
Why does perimenopause cause morning dread?
Perimenopause usually begins in your late thirties or forties, as your hormone levels gradually start to decline. It signals the transition towards menopause - the end of your reproductive years - and can bring a wide range of physical and emotional symptoms. Although perimenopause affects everyone differently, many people experience a lingering sense of dread or anxiety that can feel especially difficult to manage when they wake up in the morning.
While lifestyle factors, stress, and underlying health conditions can all exacerbate morning dread, there are also several biological reasons why it can occur. For women, one of the main contributors is hormonal fluctuation - particularly changes in cortisol, your body’s primary stress hormone - which can become harder to regulate during perimenopause.
This can feel especially pronounced in the morning, when cortisol levels naturally peak as part of your body’s wake-up response, while blood sugar levels tend to be lower after an overnight fast. Together, these shifts can contribute to feelings of anxiety, unease, or emotional overwhelm early in the day.
Dr Jody-Ann McLean explains that it is always important to rule out any underlying health conditions that can present with similar symptoms - such as thyroid disorders or blood sugar regulation issues.
However, if your doctor determines that your anxiety symptoms are hormonal in nature, she emphasises that this does not make them any less real or important.
“Waking up with a feeling of panic can be really overwhelming,” she says. “But if you know that your morning anxiety might be related to hormone fluctuation, it might make it a little easier to deal with, because you have an idea of what’s causing it.”

Simple ways to feel calmer when you wake up
It’s always best to speak to your doctor first about treatment options for perimenopause - including hormone replacement therapy (HRT) - so you understand what support is available. However, there are also lifestyle changes that can help manage symptoms, either on their own or alongside medical treatment.
Depending on your doctor’s diagnosis, certain lifestyle changes can help support your overall wellbeing. These may give your body the best chance of coping with perimenopausal symptoms - including morning dread.
McLean shares some practical, mindful habits that can work alongside medical treatment to help you navigate these feelings as part of a wider wellbeing plan.
1. Start your day with water
Although it may seem like a basic piece of advice, staying hydrated is one of the most important things you can do to keep your body functioning properly.
Before reaching for your morning coffee, McLean suggests drinking a glass of water. She says this simple habit can help blunt your body's natural stress response on waking.
“We tend to lose fluids overnight through our breathing and sweating, which can contribute to dehydration if you aren’t drinking enough water,” she says. “During menopause, your temperature regulation can be a bit off, and you might be having night sweats - which can cause even more fluid loss.
“Being dehydrated can activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis - your body’s stress response system. This could contribute to higher levels of cortisol and other stress hormones to help your body maintain a normal fluid balance.”
2. Get morning sunlight
If possible, spending time outdoors can do wonders for both your physical and mental health, helping to lower your blood pressure and heart rate while boosting your mood.
McLean recommends getting some exposure to natural daylight within an hour of waking up, even if it's only for a few minutes.
“Morning sunlight can help regulate your circadian rhythm, which you can think of as your 24-hour internal clock,” she says. “Our circadian rhythm tells us when we’re sleepy or when we’re alert and have energy. Your stress hormones, cortisol and melatonin, are both involved in this process.
“When your brain and eyes get morning light signals, it can help to keep your normal cortisol and melatonin rhythms in sync. A healthy cortisol curve usually means a clear peak in the morning to help you wake up, and then a general drop throughout the day, with variations according to stressors and activities.”
Without morning light exposure, McLean says your cortisol levels can remain elevated at inappropriate times, potentially disrupting your sleep later that evening. Morning sunlight also helps suppress melatonin, the hormone that promotes sleep, reducing lingering grogginess after waking.
“In menopause, this matters more because sleep is already often disrupted by hormonal changes,” she notes. “A poorly timed cortisol rhythm makes this worse.”
3. Prioritise quality sleep
Sleep is one of the building blocks of good health - right alongside a balanced diet and regular exercise. Getting enough quality rest can improve your memory, support a healthy metabolism, boost energy levels, help clear toxins from your brain and give your body the chance to recharge.
McLean explains that sleep and cortisol are closely linked, with each influencing the other. Poor sleep can cause cortisol levels to rise, while elevated cortisol can make it harder to fall asleep and stay asleep, creating a cycle that can be difficult to break.
“It’s a hard circle to get yourself out of,” she says. “The night sweats and hormonal fluctuations some have during menopause already threaten sleep quality, so protecting it becomes even more important. Poor sleep can also make you less resilient to stress.”
4. Fuel your body early
Protein is an essential nutrient that keeps your body functioning at its best. It plays a vital role in everything from building and repairing tissues to supporting a healthy immune system. It also helps regulate hormones, stabilise blood sugar levels, and maintain steady energy throughout the day.
McLean advises that you aim for a balanced breakfast within a couple of hours of waking up - ideally with protein, healthy fats, and fibre.
“Think eggs and avocado, or overnight chai pudding with Greek yoghurt, nut butter, and berries,” she says. “These types of food can help stabilise blood sugars, and eating early can give your cortisol rhythm the chance to follow its normal pattern.”
McLean explains that your blood sugar naturally dips overnight, so your body needs fuel in the morning to get back on track. Cortisol is also naturally higher when you wake up, helping to keep blood sugar stable. But if you skip breakfast, blood sugar can stay low for longer, which may prompt an additional cortisol release to compensate. Over time, this can lead to a more pronounced cortisol spike in the morning.
She warns: “In menopause, where blood sugar regulation is often already more unstable due to declining oestrogen's effects on insulin sensitivity, skipping breakfast can make blood sugar instability and the cortisol spike worse."
5. Rethink your morning coffee
A cup of coffee to kick-start your day isn’t the worst habit to have. If you already enjoy one and it helps make your mornings a little more bearable, there’s no reason you can’t keep that small comfort as part of your routine.
However, McLean does suggest waiting around an hour after waking before having your coffee, and ideally pairing it with a protein-rich breakfast rather than drinking it on an empty stomach.
“Caffeine can help you feel more alert and can contribute to the release of cortisol and adrenaline,” she explains. “When you drink it first thing in the morning, it might stack on top of your natural morning cortisol peak.
“Caffeine crosses the blood-brain barrier and blocks receptors for adenosine - a chemical that makes you feel sleepy, and naturally builds up during the day. When those receptors are blocked, the HPA axis can become indirectly activated, signalling your adrenal glands to release adrenaline and cortisol.”
McLean adds that caffeine also stimulates the sympathetic nervous system, which can trigger your body's stress response and lead to a temporary rise in cortisol. During menopause, when the HPA axis may already be more sensitive, this effect can be more noticeable. For some people, it may contribute to feelings of jitteriness, anxiety, or an energy slump later in the day.
6. Give yourself a screen-free start
It's a familiar story in the digital age. While smartphones may still feel like relatively new technology, they've been part of our daily lives for long enough that we now have a clear understanding of the impact constant screen time can have on our health and wellbeing.
If checking your phone is one of the first things you do when you wake up, McLean suggests swapping scrolling for lower-stimulation content, such as music or a podcast.
“Better yet, give yourself even 15 to 20 minutes of phone-free time in the morning,” she says. “Reaching for your phone might be the first thing you do when you wake up. But if you’re immediately scrolling through emotionally charged or fast-paced content such as news, mídias sociais, or emails, it can activate your sympathetic nervous system - your body’s fight-or-flight response.”
McLean adds that this can prompt the HPA axis to release additional cortisol on top of your body's natural morning surge. During menopause, when mood and stress regulation can already be more unpredictable, this may contribute to the “wired but tired” feeling that many women experience.
7. Use breathing to calm your stress response
When you're feeling anxious or overwhelmed, simply telling yourself to calm down is often easier said than done. However, learning how to interrupt your body's stress response can be a valuable skill, helping to reduce its impact on your mood and stop feelings of panic from escalating.
“If you want to try slow, mindful breathing, it can help engage your parasympathetic nervous system - often referred to as your body's ‘rest and digest’ mode - while dialling down the fight, flight, or freeze response,” says McLean. “A simple technique is to breathe in through your nose for four seconds, then out through your mouth for six seconds, repeating for a couple of minutes.”
McLean explains that stress-inducing habits can have a cumulative effect. On their own, each one may seem insignificant. But when several are stacked together in the first few hours of the day, they can place additional strain on an already sensitive HPA axis.
“If you're combining things such as poor sleep, skipping breakfast, checking emails the moment you wake up, and relying on caffeine first thing, those small stressors can add up,” she says. “Over time, that may contribute to feelings of anxiety, overstimulation and depletion in the morning.”
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Sobre o autorVer biografia completa

Victoria Raw
Redatora de Reportagens
BA (Hons), Literatura Inglesa
Victoria é uma redatora de conteúdo na Patient, cujos interesses especiais se concentram no bem-estar mental, nas tendências sociais e no impacto da tecnologia em nossa saúde.
Victoria colaborou com várias instituições de caridade ao longo de sua carreira, incluindo Ovarian Cancer Action, Scleroderma and Raynaud's UK, St John Ambulance, Andy's Man Club, a RSPCA e Barnardo's. Ela também trabalhou com grandes marcas de varejo como Marks and Spencer, Tesco e Morrisons, assim como gigantes do entretenimento como Disney e Warner Bros.
Sobre o revisorVer biografia completa

Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP
Médico Generalista, Autor Médico
MBBS, MRCGP, MRCP (Paediatrics), DCH
Dr Colin Tidy é um médico do NHS, baseado em Oxfordshire.
Histórico do artigo
As informações nesta página são revisadas por pares por clínicos qualificados.
Artigo também disponível em Inglês, Alemão, Espanhol, Francês, Italiano, Português, Hindi, Hebraico, Árabe, e Sueco.
Next review due: 13 Jun 2029
13 Jun 2026 | Publicado originalmente
Escrito por:
Victoria RawRevisado por
Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP

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