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Personal Health · Menopause

I Gained 18 Pounds in Menopause Doing Everything Right.
Then I Found Out Why.

What six months of research — and one overlooked hormone — finally changed for me.

JC

Jennifer Crane

Contributing Writer · March 2026 · 8 min read

3.1K shares

I want to start by saying something that took me a long time to accept: I was doing everything right. I really was.

I was eating the way I always had — actually better, because I'd cut back on sugar and started cooking more at home. I was walking four mornings a week. I had cut out alcohol almost entirely after I read that it worsened hot flashes. And for about eighteen months, the weight kept arriving anyway. Slowly, persistently, specifically in my midsection, as if my body had decided to store everything in the one place I least wanted it.

 

My doctor, who I like and trust, told me that this was normal. Metabolism slows in menopause. Estrogen declines. Bodies change. She wasn't wrong. But she also didn't explain why the changes felt disproportionate to what I was actually eating — or why my waist was expanding while my arms and face stayed relatively the same.

The pattern was consistent: eating well, exercising regularly — and still gaining weight, specifically around the middle.

The Question I Kept Coming Back To

Why the belly? If it were purely about metabolism or calories, wouldn't the weight distribute more evenly? Why did it accumulate in exactly that one place, in that specific way — what my husband (unhelpfully) called my "muffin top," which is not a phrase I've forgiven him for?

 

I started researching. Not the usual advice — I'd already read those articles about protein intake and cortisol-friendly yoga. I went deeper, into actual published research. And about three months in, I found something that nobody had ever mentioned to me: the connection between declining estrogen and a hormone called cortisol.

Estrogen, it turns out, acts as a natural buffer against cortisol. When estrogen drops in menopause, that buffer weakens — and the body's cortisol response becomes significantly more reactive.

Cortisol is usually described as the "stress hormone," which makes it sound like it's only a problem if you're anxious or overwhelmed. But that's not quite accurate. Cortisol governs a huge range of biological processes — including, critically, how and where your body deposits fat. And cortisol deposits fat preferentially in the visceral compartment: the deep abdominal fat that wraps around the organs, rather than the fat that sits just under the skin.

Visceral fat (shown in yellow) accumulates deep inside the abdominal cavity, surrounding vital organs. Unlike surface fat, it's metabolically active — releasing inflammatory compounds and directly interfering with insulin and cortisol signalling.

The Piece Nobody Was Talking About

When I understood this, the pattern finally made sense. The weight wasn't evenly distributed because it wasn't being driven purely by calorie balance. It was being driven by a cortisol system that was functioning differently than it had for the first four decades of my life — because the estrogen that used to regulate it was no longer there in the same quantity.

The Mechanism — What the Research Shows

When estrogen declines in perimenopause and menopause, it weakens the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis — the system that governs cortisol production. The result: the same stressor that previously produced a moderate cortisol response now produces a significantly larger one.

 

Cortisol, when chronically elevated, triggers a process called glucocorticoid-stimulated lipogenesis — essentially, it signals visceral fat cells to store more fat and release less. This explains why abdominal fat in menopause is structurally different from the fat gained in younger years and responds poorly to standard dietary restriction.

28%

Average rise in cortisol observed in women entering menopause

3x

More visceral fat in post-menopausal vs. pre-menopausal women of similar overall weight

Sources: Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism; Menopause, The Journal of the Menopause Society

There's also a painful irony here. Caloric restriction — the default prescription for weight gain — is itself a biological stressor. It raises cortisol. For a menopausal woman with an already-sensitised cortisol system, dieting harder can literally make the underlying problem worse. I had been unknowingly fighting fire with gasoline.

So What Actually Works?

Once I understood the mechanism, the question became obvious: is there anything that meaningfully regulates cortisol in a menopausal woman without involving synthetic hormones or pharmaceutical intervention?

 

This is where I landed on Ayurvedic medicine — not because I'm a believer in everything alternative, but because the research trail led me there. Specifically, to a category of plants called adaptogens, which have been used in Indian and Chinese traditional medicine for thousands of years to help the body respond more moderately to biological stress. And within that category, to a compound called KSM-66® Ashwagandha.

Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera) — the most clinically studied adaptogen for cortisol regulation.

KSM-66 is a standardised, full-spectrum extract of ashwagandha root that has been through multiple randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials. The results are specific enough to be useful.

What the Clinical Evidence on KSM-66 Actually Shows

Cortisol reduction: In a double-blind, placebo-controlled study, participants taking 600mg KSM-66 daily showed a 27.9% reduction in serum cortisol after 60 days — compared to 7.9% in the placebo group. The difference was statistically significant.

 

Menopausal symptoms: A separate trial in menopausal women found KSM-66 significantly reduced menopausal symptom scores on validated scales. Notably, the treatment group also showed a statistically significant increase in estradiol levels compared to placebo — making this one of the only non-hormonal interventions with evidence of influencing estrogen levels directly.

 

Safety: A 12-month observational study found no adverse effects on hepatic, renal, or thyroid function at clinical doses.

27.9%

Cortisol reduction in KSM-66 group vs 7.9% placebo — after 60 days

60 days

Time to peak measurable effect in clinical trials

Chandrasekhar et al., Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine, 2012; Dongre et al., BioMed Research International, 2015

The formula I found that uses clinical-dose KSM-66® alongside traditional Ayurvedic herbs specifically for menopause is Osh Menopause Support — developed by expert practitioners at Osh Wellness.

Learn More →

What I Actually Tried

I'll be honest about my expectations when I started Osh Menopause Support: they were low. I'd tried ashwagandha before in a supermarket-bought form, and noticed nothing. I later learned that standardisation of the active compounds matters enormously — generic ashwagandha products often don't use the same concentrated extract that appears in the clinical research.

 

I committed to three months. The first two weeks were genuinely uneventful. Week three, I started sleeping through more nights without waking. By week five, a colleague asked me if I'd done something different because I seemed "lighter" — her word, not mine, and she meant it in temperament, not weight. The belly didn't change quickly. But by month two, I noticed my waistband fitting differently. Not dramatically. But measurably.

I'm not going to tell you it was miraculous. But it was real. And for the first time in eighteen months, the changes I was seeing actually made physiological sense to me.

The Product Itself

Osh Ayurvedic Menopause Support

KSM-66® Ashwagandha — clinical-grade cortisol regulation*

Shatavari — support for vaginal moisture and hormones*

Gotu Kola — cognitive clarity, anxiety modulation*

Guduchi — metabolic and immune support

No synthetic hormones · No stimulants · No fillers

60-day money-back guarantee. Free shipping. The 3-jar bundle is what the brand recommends for full results — and covers the entire timeline the clinical research is based on.

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What Other Women Have Said

One Thing Worth Knowing Before You Try It

The timeline matters. Cortisol recalibration is not a quick process — the clinical research that showed the 27.9% reduction measured participants at the 60-day mark, not the 14-day mark. The women I've spoken with who were most satisfied all said the same thing: they gave it a genuine 90 days. The women who were disappointed had mostly stopped after three or four weeks, just before the changes tend to become apparent.

 

Osh offers a 60-day money-back guarantee for exactly this reason. It covers the minimum meaningful trial period. But if you're going to do it, I'd buy the three-jar bundle. Not because of the savings, though they're there — but because knowing you have the supply removes the temptation to stop at week three, which is when most people quit and which, based on everything I've read, is also when the process is just getting started.

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Address the Root Cause.
Not Just the Symptoms.

Clinically studied KSM-66® Ashwagandha + 6 Ayurvedic botanicals.

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Title

Advertorial Disclosure: This is sponsored content produced by Osh Wellness. The personal account above narrative of experiences shared by customers; individual results vary. All scientific claims reference published peer-reviewed research cited in the text. This content is for informational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Osh Menopause Support is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Scientific references: Chandrasekhar K, et al. (2012). Indian J Psychol Med. | Dongre S, et al. (2015). Biomed Res Int. | Joffe H, et al. Estrogen-cortisol interactions in menopausal transition. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. | Pratte MA, et al. (2014). J Altern Complement Med.

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