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Menopause Matters magazine ISSUE 81 out now. (Autumn issue, September 2025)

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Author Topic: Evenings  (Read 4355 times)

dulciana

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Evenings
« on: January 17, 2017, 09:24:20 PM »

My anxiety levels have gone through the roof at the moment, but particularly in the evenings.  I can't watch TV beyond a certain point - I have to look away and just listen.  If the conversation starts getting intense (Hubby's rather good at doing this, after he's finished whatever), I have to put my fingers in my ears and pretend to be listening.  Really, I prefer silence, under these circumstances.  I have to choose the music I listen to in the evenings, very carefully, otherwise it'll be too much for me, as it registers on my "Richter scale" much more at this time of day.   I prefer total stillness and just quietly reading a book, as long as the book is calming.   And I've started to dread evening social events.  Well, I can't sit with my head resting on my hand and my eyes shut, then, can I?   I have a headache at the moment, due to having watched TV and then listened to Hubby talking despondently about the political situation.   I'm wondering if anyone else experiences this sort of thing in the evenings?   :-\  (The anxiety stuff, not their hubby talking politics!)
« Last Edit: January 17, 2017, 09:26:21 PM by dulciana »
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Cazikins

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #1 on: January 17, 2017, 09:30:33 PM »

Hi dulciana, sorry you are feeling like this.
Do you have problems getting to sleep at night, or getting a good nights sleep?
If so then it could be that you are subconsciously fearing the time you go to bed because you know you will have problems etc - just a thought as I have had it.
Cazi x
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dulciana

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #2 on: January 17, 2017, 10:15:05 PM »

Hi dulciana, sorry you are feeling like this.
Do you have problems getting to sleep at night, or getting a good nights sleep?
If so then it could be that you are subconsciously fearing the time you go to bed because you know you will have problems etc - just a thought as I have had it.
Cazi x

Thanks Cazikins.  Not really - thanks to the bottle of magnesium spray I keep by my bedside.  I don't fear going to bed, particularly.  It's just the way I feel in the mid-evenings, these days.  If I can keep calm, I'm okay at bedtime and through the night. 
« Last Edit: January 17, 2017, 10:23:14 PM by dulciana »
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dulciana

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #3 on: January 17, 2017, 10:18:22 PM »

Dulciana, I have times when I can't cope with people, noise, conversations - its all just so overwhelming.  Hubby puts the TV on then starts a conversation about something unrelated or starts discussing an item on the news before it's finished so I don't hear what's being said so I'm none the wiser!  No wonder my concentration is so bad, plus he talks very loudly which drives me nuts, I have to tell him not to shout! 

I actually find the evenings my least stressful time of day, my anxiety levels are at their highest from the early hours until lunchtime usually.

Is this something new for you?

S x

Hi Sparkle - it is, yes, ever since my Hubby retired in November.  Not sure why that should affect things, but it has done.   Mornings are pretty well okay, once I've had my early-morning cuppa and my breakfast.  But evenings are me at my most meno-ish, these days.
« Last Edit: January 17, 2017, 10:22:19 PM by dulciana »
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dulciana

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #4 on: January 17, 2017, 10:20:03 PM »

Ah - Not totally confined to evenings but when OH (aka husband) starts talking politics serenity and calm fly out of the window. I find it best not to comment as it often results it argument it I don't my agree with whatever the thought of the minute is.

I think we're singing from the same hymn sheet, Hasty!  ::)
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cubagirl

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #5 on: January 17, 2017, 10:30:00 PM »

Been there, on occasion. Sometimes need some quiet time or else I think I'll explode. Usually because hubby is watching something which doesn't interest me. Most times I'll just go onto my laptop & engross myself in something, but there are times when I just can't be in the same room. Not his fault.
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Lizab

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #6 on: January 18, 2017, 03:57:39 AM »

I don't have a particular time of day for this to happen, but I am having trouble with noise at times. In particular, noisy restaurants. I find myself getting distracted by all the voices around me and have trouble focusing on the conversation at my table. It's like instead of being background murmur my brain is trying to actually hear all the people around as if they're talking to me.  That kills me. I just want to go hide in a quiet corner. Also when there is more than one conversation going on at home at the dinner table, say if my husband and one of the kids are talking while I'm talking to another kid. The other conversation going on makes it very hard for me.  We've always been a loud and social family so this a new thing for me, feeling the need to retreat from the noise.
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Elizabethrose

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #7 on: January 18, 2017, 08:30:31 AM »

I'm sorry, you're struggling dulciana: I really do think it can be tricky adjusting to a partner's sudden retirement, many people experience this.  It takes time to adjust to the changes and new patterns of living.

I don't get the anxiety but I do experience the noise overload. Like Lizab's, we are a noisy, highly sociable family and I grew up in a large, loud, extremely sociable household so it's not that I don't have a lifetimes experience of it. However, after the kids left home things did become much quieter and I think you get used to it. When they are back, whilst delightful, I can find the noise exhausting. Their friends have always gravitated here: there is music in every room, loud animated conversations (to a non English speaker they'd sound like arguments), we're all confident and assertive so debates can rage long and hard! Brexit was a nightmare here as was the Trump horror story.

Like Sparkle's husband, I'm afraid I'm the one who doesn't come up for air, I talk... a lot! So it's not that I'm a quiet person but I find that if there are too many noise sources, i.e. Radio 4 in the background, music being played, political debates, youtube bursts of noise, very loud television noise, I feel a noise overload, like a brain overload, it's coming from too many directions to cope with.

If you are seeing each other more during the days could you disappear into a good book in a quiet space in the evenings? Give yourself some peace and quiet and 'you' time. Explain to hubby that you'll sit in another room as you find the tv or music distracting whilst reading? It might alleviate the wretched anxiety if you can escape and control how you spend your evenings and at what volume!! x

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babyjane

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #8 on: January 18, 2017, 09:48:02 AM »

I was only saying this to my husband this morning before he went off out for the day to visit a relative.

When he is not around I revert to autopilot and don't have to concentrate too much on what I do, but when he is in the house with me I find myself referring to him and being aware of his movements and conversation which requires autopilot to switch off and that is more difficult.

Having them around most of the time does change the dynamics of the day but it can also be a blessing once you get your new routines settled.  It has been 3 years for us now and it is easier, I really look forward to him coming home whether he has been out to the gym, shopping or away to visit family or friends  :)
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elsie001

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #9 on: January 18, 2017, 09:58:32 AM »

Dulciana, I'm very similar to you with my anxiety probably at it's worst in the evenings.  I used to love watching thrillers on telly but I even have to censor what I watch in case it sets off my adrenaline & stops me sleeping.  My Happy Valley dvd has been sitting gathering dust for over a year now since episode 2 got me too jittery to carry on with it!

Can't remember the last time a deep conversation with OH got me anxious in the evening, mainly because we tend to sit in different rooms - me watching telly, him watching clips on Youtube, but disagreements with headstrong 16-yr old YD happen way more often than I would like.  If they happen at bedtime I can forget sleep!

Wish I had a solution.
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CLKD

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #10 on: January 18, 2017, 01:08:38 PM »

Himself often interrupts what I'm watching  ::) with something completely un-related  :(.  I try not to sigh as he should be more important .... however!

I tend to nag the TV  :-X
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Elizabethrose

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #11 on: January 18, 2017, 03:55:03 PM »

I think your husband is a missing brother of mine!  ;)
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Kathleen

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #12 on: January 18, 2017, 04:21:49 PM »

Hello dulciana.

Another anxiety sufferer here. Oddly, late in the evening is the best time for me,  I don't feel great but definitely better, my anxiety seems to ebb and flow throughout the day. I have actually sat with my fingers in my ears in company and I've used earplugs at the cinema on two occasions. I think the menopause presents us with a unique mix of hyper vigilance and intolerance. Oh the joys etc, etc.etc. lol.

Wishing you well inspite of it all.

K.

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CLKD

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Re: Evenings
« Reply #13 on: January 18, 2017, 05:30:17 PM »

I improve during the day as my committments disappear - I have learned not to say 'yes' to anyone after 4.30 p.m. because by 4.30 a.m. I will be full of anxiety  :-\.  Years ago I would be worried in the evenings, knowing what I had to face the next day  :sigh:
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