ELANE PROJECT 2

The Elane Case Study — Part 3

The Menopause
Rebuild Protocol

A practical day-in-the-life approach built around nourishment, movement, muscle protection, energy and long-term health.

Elane’s plan was never designed as another strict diet. It was a realistic lifestyle framework that could fit around work, family, changing energy levels and the physical demands of perimenopause.

Her Goal

Not Simply to Lose Weight

The bigger goal was to restore...
💪 Muscle
🔥 Metabolism
🌙 Sleep
Energy
🌱 Confidence
❤️ Long-Term Health
Understanding the Change

The Physiology

Menopause is not Elane’s body working against her. It is her body adapting to a different hormonal environment.

Based on feedback from her physician, her own research and my supporting input, Elane came to understand that this stage was not a personal failure.

It was a genuine physiological transition.

Less oestrogen can influence almost every tissue in the body.

Muscle becomes easier to lose.
Fat becomes easier to store.
Sleep can become lighter.
Recovery can slow.
Insulin resistance may increase.
Inflammatory load may rise.
Bone turnover accelerates.
Energy and appetite can become less predictable.
Elane’s Daily Framework

A Day in the Life

This is an overview of the approach Elane practised across the project. It was flexible, appetite-led and designed to be repeatable rather than perfect.

6:30am
Wake • Hydrate • Assess Hunger

Start Gently

  • Wake.
  • Approximately 500–700mL of water.
  • Warm water with a dash of fresh lemon.
  • Coffee.
  • If she isn’t hungry, she does not force breakfast.

Elane’s appetite often isn’t strong early in the morning, so skipping breakfast naturally extends her overnight fast.

Why?

Extending the overnight fasting period allows insulin levels to remain lower for a little longer, encouraging greater fat utilisation while giving the digestive system a rest. It also suits women who naturally experience reduced appetite first thing in the morning.

Morning
Walk • Light • Circulation

Morning Walk

  • 15–30 minutes.
  • Ideally outside.
  • A treadmill is the practical indoor option.
  • Easy, comfortable and repeatable intensity.
Why?

Morning movement gently raises metabolism, supports insulin sensitivity, promotes circulation and provides an important daylight signal to the brain. This helps regulate the body’s internal clock and may improve sleep later that night.

Only When Hungry

Her Two Breakfast Options

Breakfast volume was guided by hunger. For the most part, her meals were modest. On mornings when she wasn’t hungry, she simply had coffee and continued fasting.

Elane breakfast option one with Greek yoghurt, berries, nuts and seeds
Breakfast Option 1

Greek Yoghurt, Berries, Nuts & Seeds

A protein-rich, fibre-rich breakfast with healthy fats, colourful plant compounds and strong satiety.

Elane breakfast option two with eggs, vegetables, avocado and sourdough
Breakfast Option 2

Eggs, Vegetables, Avocado & Sourdough

A whole-food savoury option supplying protein, fibre, healthy fats and sustained energy.

Lunch

A big salad. Not a side salad. The meal.
Chicken
Salmon
Tuna
Lean beef
Mixed leaves
Tomato
Capsicum
Cucumber
Red onion
Beetroot
Carrot
Avocado
Olive oil
Pumpkin seeds
Feta
Why?

Colour diversity helps feed a diverse gut microbiome. Lean protein protects muscle, while olive oil, avocado and seeds provide healthy fats that assist satiety and cardiovascular health.

Afternoon

This is where many women struggle.

Energy falls.

Sugar cravings appear.

The coffee machine calls.

Instead, Elane went to protein first.

Boiled eggs
Greek yoghurt
Protein smoothie
Cottage cheese

Then...

  • A cup of tea.
  • A short walk outside.
  • A few trips up and down the office stairs.
  • Five minutes of movement.
The Strategy

Protein, hydration and a short movement break often helped settle the afternoon energy drop and reduced the urge to reach immediately for sugar or another coffee.

Evening Meal

Dinner

Protein first. Plenty of vegetables. Quality carbohydrate where activity and appetite supported it.

Her Approximate Protein Target 150–180g

Cooked lean protein as the central part of the meal.

1

Protein First

Salmon, chicken, lean lamb, lean beef or white fish.

2

Half the Plate Vegetables

Broccoli, beans, pumpkin, cauliflower, asparagus, Brussels sprouts and zucchini.

3

Quality Carbohydrate if Active

Sweet potato, brown rice or quinoa in a portion suited to activity, appetite and recovery needs.

Why?

Protein supports overnight muscle repair, while vegetables provide fibre, vitamins, minerals and valuable plant compounds. Including carbohydrate in appropriate portions can assist glycogen replenishment and may help some women sleep more comfortably by supporting satiety and serotonin pathways.

Greek yoghurt, blueberries and dark chocolate dessert
Only if She Felt It Was Necessary

Dessert

Dessert wasn’t automatic.

If Elane genuinely felt she needed something after dinner, she kept it simple and nourishing — such as Greek yoghurt, blueberries and two squares of dark chocolate.

Warm water with lemon and a tiny dash of bicarbonate soda
Her Hydration Approach

Hydration

Aim: approximately 1–1.5 litres each day

Elane found warm water with fresh lemon and a tiny dash of bicarbonate soda the easiest way to increase her fluid intake.

She also found larger fluid volumes difficult and sometimes disruptive, particularly because urinary urgency was already one of her symptoms.

The practical goal was therefore not hydration perfection. It was gradually increasing intake in a way she could comfortably maintain.

The Elane Case Study — Part 4

Supplement
Strategy

The extra bits that supported Elane’s food, activity, recovery and sleep strategies.

Supplements were never intended to become the foundation of the plan.

Food, movement, sleep and appropriate medical care remained the priorities. These additions were simply trialled as practical support.

Creatine, collagen peptides, psyllium husk and magnesium supplements
Now for the Extra Bits

Supplements Don’t Replace Food

They simply support it.

Trial • Observe • Review

Elane’s Trialled Stack

Each supplement was introduced for a clear reason, monitored for tolerance and only considered worthwhile if it produced a useful response.

💪
Muscle • Recovery • Brain

Creatine Monohydrate

5g per day
Why?

Creatine is probably one of the best-researched supplements available.

  • May help maintain lean muscle.
  • May support improved strength.
  • May enhance recovery.
  • May support brain function.
  • May improve training quality.

There is growing interest in creatine’s potential role for women during the menopausal transition, because both muscle and cognitive resilience become increasingly important.

Elane’s Response

Super easy to take, inexpensive, and I think it definitely helped my recovery from exercise.

“I will keep going.”
🦴
Connective Tissue • Skin • Joints

Collagen Peptides

10–15g per day with a vitamin C source
Why?

Collagen provides amino acids involved in supporting collagen production within tendons, ligaments, skin and connective tissues.

Collagen is not a complete muscle-building protein, but it can complement adequate dietary protein, particularly for women experiencing joint stiffness or wanting to support their skin and connective tissue health.

Elane’s Response

I found it made my gut unsettled, even when I reduced the volume. This one simply didn’t agree with me.

“However, I have friends who feel it helped — particularly with dry skin.”
🌾
Fibre • Gut • Fullness

Psyllium Husk

1–2 teaspoons per day
Why?

Simple.

  • More fibre.
  • A healthier gut.
  • Support for lower cholesterol.
  • Better blood glucose control.
  • Greater fullness and appetite control.

Many adults fall well short of recommended fibre intake, making psyllium a practical addition where extra fibre is genuinely needed.

Elane’s Response

Yep, easy to take and helped keep things regular.

🌙
Muscle Relaxation • Cramps • Sleep

Magnesium

Small evening dose, where appropriate
Why?

Some women find magnesium helpful for muscle relaxation or sleep quality, although responses vary and the evidence is mixed.

Magnesium is most useful where dietary intake is low or a deficiency is present. In Elane’s case, it was trialled specifically because she was experiencing repeated lower-leg cramps in bed.

Elane’s Response

I definitely found it eased my night cramps over the first two weeks, which helped me achieve more settled sleep.

The cramps slowly returned, and increasing the dose left me with a little looseness.

“A small dose appeared to be best.”
The Food Foundation

Foods She Includes Every Week

Default Foods
Foods Elane includes each week
Not Banned — Simply Limited

Foods She Reduces

12-Week Focus
Foods Elane reduced during the twelve-week case study

No food needs to be labelled “bad.” The goal is to make nourishing foods the default and discretionary foods the exception.

BP’s Philosophy

The Goal Was Never Simply to Make Elane Lighter

It was to make her stronger.

Stronger muscles.

Stronger bones.

Better sleep.

Better energy.

Better metabolism.

Better confidence.

Better health markers.

The weight loss became a by-product of rebuilding her physiology, not the primary objective.

Menopause is not about fighting your body. It is about learning what your body now needs to thrive in its next chapter.

The Elane Case Study — Part 5

The Movement
Reset

Moving through menopause with walking, simple strength work and an approach designed to be repeated.

One of the biggest myths surrounding menopause is that women simply need to exercise harder.

In reality, many women may benefit from doing the opposite: choosing a sensible amount of movement they can recover from, enjoy and consistently repeat.

The Messages We Wanted to Send

The Goal Wasn’t Exhaustion

“I still need muscle.”
“My heart still needs to be strong.”
“My bones still need loading.”
“My metabolism still needs protecting.”
“My brain still needs movement.”
Moving Through Menopause

Consistency Before Intensity

Rather than trying to “burn calories,” we wanted to build a healthier, stronger and more resilient body.

The goal was to send Elane’s body the right messages often enough for it to adapt — without making every session another source of stress.

We weren’t only preparing her body for the next 12 weeks. We were building something that could serve her for the next 30–40 years.

Simple by Design

Elane’s Weekly Plan

Nothing extreme. Nothing heroic. Just enough quality movement to create a meaningful physiological response.

🚶‍♀️ Frequency Walk most days
⏱️ Duration 30–45 minutes
❤️ Intensity Comfortable pace
🔁 The Standard Enjoyable and repeatable
Elane walking outdoors as part of her menopause movement plan
The Daily Foundation

Why Walking?

Walking may well be one of the most underrated forms of medicine available.

Regular walking can help:

  • Improve insulin sensitivity.
  • Improve blood glucose control.
  • Reduce visceral abdominal fat.
  • Improve mood.
  • Reduce anxiety.
  • Improve sleep quality.
  • Improve circulation.
  • Maintain aerobic fitness.
  • Reduce blood pressure.
  • Support heart health.
  • Support bone health.
  • Increase daily energy expenditure without excessive fatigue.
Most importantly... you can still do it tomorrow.
Strength Training

Your Metabolism Insurance Policy

If walking was Elane’s medicine, strength training became her insurance.

One of the significant physiological challenges during and after menopause is the gradual loss of muscle.

Muscle is not simply about looking toned.

Muscle is your:

Metabolic engine
Glucose reservoir
Posture protector
Joint protector
Balance system
Strength reserve
Independence in older age
Confidence builder

Protecting muscle becomes one of the smartest investments a woman can make.

Elane performing a dumbbell overhead press during a home workout
BP’s Philosophy
Forget spending 90 minutes in the gym.
Forget chasing personal bests.
Forget crawling out of the session.
Train three days each week.
15–20 minutes.
Finish feeling good — and wanting more.
Nothing Fancy

Elane’s Three Home Workouts

Just dumbbells, her own bodyweight and a short list of basic movements she could perform safely at home.

A

Workout A

  • Goblet squat
  • Standing row
  • Chest press
  • Shoulder press
  • Standing calf raise
B

Workout B

  • Sit-to-stand
  • Bent-over row
  • Wall push-up or bench push-up
  • Step-up
C

Workout C

  • Assisted split squat
  • Single-arm row
  • Glute bridge
  • Dumbbell curl
  • Overhead triceps extension
  • Side plank
Simple and Controlled

Elane’s Formula

4–7 exercises
2 sets
10–15 repetitions
Control each movement
Leave 2–3 good repetitions “in the tank”
No need to train to failure
Elane’s Response

From Soreness to a Game Changer

I was certainly a little sore the day after the first few sessions.

I kept the weights light when starting and built up nice and slowly.

Undoubtedly, I actually started to really enjoy my weights sessions — even more than the walking.

“Once I got into it, it really was a game changer.”

The Physiological Return

Why Resistance Training Matters During Menopause

Helps preserve lean muscle mass.
Improves strength.
Helps maintain bone mineral density.
Improves insulin sensitivity.
Can help reduce abdominal fat when combined with nutrition.
Improves posture.
Reduces falls risk.
Improves confidence.
Improves functional independence.
Supports healthy ageing.

Many women also report improved mood, a better body image and greater confidence as they become stronger and more capable.

Beyond the Case Study

Elane’s Long-Term Goal

This was never meant to finish after 12 weeks.

It wasn’t about fitting into a dress.
It wasn’t punishment for gaining weight.
It wasn’t another temporary exercise challenge.

It was about creating a body that could confidently carry Elane into her 60s, 70s and beyond.

Strong enough to lift grandchildren.
Fit enough to enjoy holidays.
Energetic enough to embrace life.
BP Philosophy

The Body Adapts to What It Experiences Most Often

It does not need punishment.

It needs regular, achievable signals.

A brisk walk most days, two or three short strength sessions each week, nourishing food and good sleep can create thousands of positive adaptations across a year.

They are not glamorous.

But they are powerful.

For many women navigating menopause, this kind of sustainable routine can be far more effective than short bursts of extreme motivation followed by soreness, fatigue and exhaustion.

That is exactly why Elane’s program was designed to be simple enough to repeat — because repeated healthy choices are what ultimately rebuild health.