You've probably heard the warnings. For decades, they were impossible to miss.
Don't take hormones. They cause cancer. They're dangerous. Just tough it out.
Maybe your mother said it. Maybe your doctor did. And so, like millions of women, you white-knuckled your way through the hot flashes, the sleepless nights, the brain fog, the mood swings, the weight gain, and the quiet, creeping sense that the woman you used to be was slipping away - telling yourself this was simply the price of getting older.
But what if everything you were told was wrong?
A Seismic Shift Nobody Prepared Us For
On November 10, 2025, the FDA removed the long-standing boxed warning from Menopause Hormone Therapy (MHT) products - the same stark warning that had, for more than two decades, told women and their doctors that hormone therapy was dangerous. Life-threatening, even.
For author and attorney Jayne Wesler, that announcement landed like a thunderclap. She had internalized those warnings and built her healthcare decisions around them, quietly suffering through her symptoms, convinced she was doing the responsible thing.
And now, almost overnight, that consensus had flipped. Life-threatening had become lifesaving. Jayne's first reaction wasn't relief. It was whiplash.
She Did What Lawyers Do: She Looked at the Evidence
Jayne Wesler has spent her career evaluating evidence. She knows the truth is rarely found in a single study or headline. So when the FDA's announcement forced her to confront everything she thought she knew about MHT, she approached it methodically, rigorously, and with a willingness to be surprised.
What she found astonished her.
Research now suggests that for many women - particularly those who begin therapy early - MHT may do far more than relieve symptoms. It may protect the heart, support bone density, and help preserve cognitive function. The blanket condemnation that shaped a generation of women's healthcare decisions? The evidence suggests it was never fully warranted.
Jayne also looked inward - examining her own fears and biases honestly. She wrote this book for every woman carrying those same fears.
What This Book Is - and What It Isn't
This is not a book telling you to take hormones. That decision belongs to you, made with your healthcare provider, based on your own health history, symptoms, and priorities.
What this book is, is an invitation - to look at the evidence with fresh eyes, set aside the fear and conflicting headlines, and ask yourself: What do I actually know about MHT? And how do I know it?
Jayne walks you through the history, explains in plain language how MHT works, what the current research says about risks and benefits, and what questions you should be asking your doctor. She honors the emotional weight of this decision - because for many women, reconsidering MHT isn't just a medical question. It's a deeply personal one.
You Deserve to Make an Informed Choice
If you are in perimenopause, navigating menopause, or living postmenopausally - if symptoms are affecting your quality of life, your relationships, your work, your sense of self - you deserve accurate, up-to-date information, not decades-old fears rooted in a study that has since been substantially reexamined.
This book won't make the decision for you. But it will make sure you have what you need to decide wisely, confidently, and on your own terms.
Because this is your health. Your body. Your life. And you deserve nothing less than the full truth.