Parenting in Perimenopause: When Cougar Puberty Meets Puberty Puberty
- drtera

- Aug 18
- 3 min read
If you’re a Gen X or Millennial mom raising a teenager right now, I don’t have to tell you but puberty is loud. It’s eye-rolls, closed doors, mood swings, friend drama, and sudden bursts of “Why are you ruining my life?” shouted as the door slams.
Here’s the twist no one warned us about → while your teen’s hormones are ramping up, yours are starting their own rollercoaster. Welcome to the intersection of their puberty and your perimenopause. Or as I affectionately refer to when Cougar Puberty meets Puberty Puberty.

The Double Hormone Storm
Perimenopause can bring fluctuating estrogen and progesterone levels that make your moods unpredictable, your sleep patchy, and your patience… hmmm, let’s just say fragile. Add anxiety, irritability, low mood, menorage, and hot flashes, and suddenly the simplest request (“Mom, can you drive me to hang out with a friend?”) can feel like someone just asked you to summit Everest barefoot.
Meanwhile, your teen is in their own hormone-fueled chaos, slamming doors, staying up too late, questioning rules, and testing boundaries like it’s their job because that is what they are developmentally primed to do. Adolescence is a time of pushing away from family to start to learn to fly on their own. Yet, let’s face it, sometimes you can’t tell if you’re dealing with their emotional meltdown or your own.
Conscious and Mindful Parenting in the Chaos
You may already know about conscious or mindful parenting—responding instead of reacting, staying grounded even when emotions run high, and viewing conflicts as opportunities for connection rather than control. You may have read all of Becky Kennedy, Dan Seigel and Tina Payne Bryson’s books and felt like you were getting better at being really present with your kids. It sounds lovely. And it is. The parenting style that most closely aligns with this philosophy is authoritative parenting, where the parent both has high expectations and high support for their child. You truly just want to be a good, loving mom.
But in perimenopause? Mindful parenting can feel like running a marathon in flip-flops. You want to be calm, curious, and compassionate while you’re also sleep-deprived, overstimulated, stuffing protein in your face, walking in your weighted vest, and trying to remember if you took your supplements this morning.
The Cycle Breaker’s Dilemma
Many Gen X and Millennial moms are also cycle breakers who are super determined to raise their kids differently than they were raised. You might be committed to avoiding yelling, shame, or dismissiveness, even when it was the default in your own childhood.
Breaking cycles takes emotional bandwidth and the exhaustion of perimenopause often robs you of exactly that. The very moment you need your nervous system to be calm and resilient is the moment your hormones throw a wrench in the works.
Why You Don’t Have to Do It Alone
I’m a therapist, and I’m also right here in the trenches with you. I know the wild mix of exhaustion, guilt, and love that comes from raising teens while navigating your own shifting body and mind. Therapy isn’t about “fixing” you; it’s about creating space for you to feel supported, seen, and understood, so you can parent from a place of steadiness (or at least steadier than yesterday).
We can work on:
Managing anxiety, irritability, and low mood without losing your cool
Setting boundaries that work for both you and your teen
Reconnecting with yourself outside of motherhood
Honoring your own body’s needs during perimenopause
Developing strategies to deal with brain fog
Finding mindful parenting tools that actually fit real life
An Invitation
If you’ve been feeling like your patience is running on fumes, your emotions are on a hair-trigger, and your house is one slammed door away from implosion, you are not broken—you are human. And you deserve support. Moms are people too.
You don’t have to white-knuckle your way through this stage of life. If you’re ready to feel more grounded, compassionate (to yourself and your teen), and a little less like you’re losing your mind, I’d love to work with you in individual or group therapy.
📩 Reach out today and let’s talk about what it can look like to parent well—even when both you and your teen are riding the hormone rollercoaster.
Connect here to schedule a complementary discovery call for individual or group therapy. drtera@mindfulpathpsy.org or text/call (yes people still do that) 435-610-1015


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