The Oscar-winning actress is reframing what it means to age — and her message is resonating
Halle Berry has never been one to quietly accept a narrative handed to her. So when menopause arrived, she did what she’s always done: she studied it, challenged it, and ultimately rewrote it — on her own terms.
In a newly published keynote address from the Eudemonia wellness conference, Berry, 59, offered a candid and disarmingly hopeful look at how she navigated one of the most misunderstood transitions in a woman’s life. Her takeaway, delivered with characteristic conviction, was a direct challenge to the way women are taught to think about aging: menopause isn’t a descent. It’s a climb.
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Hormones Were Only Half the Story
Berry revealed that she has been on hormonal therapy for nearly four years. While the treatment offered meaningful relief — better sleep, steadier moods, sharper recall — she was clear-eyed about its limits. The medication carried her a significant portion of the way toward feeling like herself again, but it was never the complete answer. The rest required something more deliberate: a fundamental rethinking of how she was living day to day.
That kind of nuanced honesty is what made her address stand out. Hormonal therapy, she noted, was only as effective as the overall health of the body receiving it — a point that reframes the treatment not as a fix, but as a foundation.
Rethinking the Plate
For years, Berry had followed a ketogenic diet — the high-protein, low-carbohydrate approach she adopted after being diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes. The Cleveland Clinic and other medical institutions have long noted the diet’s effectiveness in managing blood sugar. But when menopause entered the picture, her body stopped responding the same way.
She found herself needing carbohydrates, more fiber and a higher protein intake. What had once served her well was no longer working, and rather than push through, she listened. The adjustment wasn’t just physical — it was philosophical. Menopause, she came to understand, was not asking her to maintain what she had built. It was asking her to build something entirely new.
The Halle Berry Case for Lifting Heavy
Perhaps the most striking shift Berry described was in her fitness routine. As the founder of Respin Health, a women’s wellness company, she had long been committed to staying active. But menopause demanded a different kind of effort. Cardio, once the centerpiece of her regimen, gave way to something she had never prioritized before: heavy weight training.
The science supports her pivot. Research has consistently shown that resistance training helps increase bone density and reduces the risk of conditions like osteoporosis, which disproportionately affects post-menopausal women. For Berry, the weights were not just a workout — they were a form of long-term protection.
A Blueprint for the Next Chapter
What Berry offered at Eudemonia was not a wellness tutorial. It was a reframe. Menopause, she argued, is not a malfunction, not a signal of decline, and certainly not something to be endured in silence. It is a natural life transition that simply requires the right support — evidence-based therapies, reliable information and a willingness to stop treating change as a crisis.
Her words land at a moment when public conversation around menopause is finally gaining serious traction, with more women demanding the same candor from medicine, media and culture that Berry modeled from that stage. The woman who emerges on the other side of this transition, she suggested, is not a diminished version of who came before. She may, in fact, be the most formidable one yet.
Source: People

