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00:03From the most trusted journalists at Comedy Central,
00:07it's America's only source for news.
00:10This is The Daily Show with your host, Desi Leiden.
00:27Welcome to The Daily Show. I'm Desi Leiden.
00:30We've got so much to talk about tonight.
00:32The White House ballroom gets cock-blocked.
00:35Louis Black tells us the stupidest way to lose money.
00:37And you won't believe this,
00:39but Donald Trump attended a court case where he's not on trial.
00:43Let's get into the headlines.
00:50Let's begin with the Supreme Court.
00:52The people have ruined more women's lives than eyebrow-plucking.
00:56Today, they took on a historic case to decide
00:58whether every child born in the United States
01:01is automatically an American citizen,
01:03even kids with annoying names like Grayson or Portabella.
01:06And it's a very tricky question
01:09because, on the one hand, it's been enshrined
01:12in the Constitution for 125 years.
01:14But on the other hand, Donald Trump doesn't like it.
01:18So, scales of justice.
01:21And Trump is taking this case very personally.
01:24I'm outside of the Supreme Court in Washington,
01:26where President Trump has become the first sitting president
01:29to attend oral arguments at the Supreme Court.
01:33Well, that makes sense.
01:34Trump heard they'd be doing oral and was like,
01:36I'm in.
01:44Or maybe he was just hoping to influence the justices.
01:48He's doing this thing with John Roberts,
01:50or this thing to Clarence Thomas.
01:54Unfortunately for Trump, he's not a great legal scholar,
01:57so he probably thought a Supreme Court argument was going to be like this.
02:00I want the truth!
02:02You can't handle the truth!
02:04When actually it was more like this.
02:07Is the application of that general rule
02:10limited only to the situations that they had in mind
02:15when they adopted the general rule,
02:17or do we say they adopted a general rule
02:22they meant for that to apply
02:24to later applications that might come up?
02:29Okay.
02:30There is no way Donald Trump was still awake at that point.
02:35Isn't this the...
02:37No way.
02:40I mean, isn't this the guy who fell asleep at his own criminal trial?
02:45Now, if you're wondering why birthright citizenship
02:47is such a big problem for Trump,
02:49yesterday he explained that it's all about
02:51devious people exploiting it as a loophole.
02:53Chinese billionaires who are billionaires from other countries
02:57who all of a sudden have 75 children,
02:59or 59 children in one case,
03:01or 10 children,
03:03becoming American citizens.
03:06Okay, big difference between 75 and 10.
03:1010 is Mormon, 75 is a spider.
03:14Also, counterpoint, have you seen America's test scores?
03:18We need as many Chinese kids as we can get.
03:21Please.
03:23Bring them on.
03:26Gotta cheat off someone.
03:28But that's actually a fair point, okay?
03:30Foreign billionaires shouldn't be able
03:32to just buy their way into citizenship.
03:33Finally, we agree on something.
03:35For $5 million, this could be yours.
03:38A gold card.
03:39For $5 million, you buy a path to citizenship in this country.
03:46See...
03:47That's weird.
03:48So Trump says he opposes birthright citizenship
03:51because he doesn't want rich people to buy their way into America,
03:54but at the same time, he wants rich people to buy their way into America.
03:59It's almost as if he's bringing up billionaires for a completely disingenuous reason,
04:03and there's some other group of people that he wants to stop from becoming citizens.
04:08Gosh, what group am I thinking of?
04:20Sorry, that was just my reminder to turn my ringer off.
04:24Anyway, I guess we'll never know.
04:26But let's move on from birthright citizenship
04:28because the president has another court case to worry about.
04:31Tonight, a federal judge putting the brakes on construction
04:34of President Trump's $400 million ballroom,
04:37declaring the president of the United States
04:39is the steward of the White House for future generations of first families.
04:43He is not, however, the owner.
04:45It was a 35-page ruling, and it was quite extraordinary in its writing.
04:50It had 19 exclamation points.
04:5519 exclamation points?
04:57Who was the judge?
04:58Me writing a work email?
05:01The court demands an immediate halt in construction,
05:04but no worries if not exclamation point,
05:06sideways smiley face.
05:08I'm sorry, Donald Trump.
05:10It looks like your precious ballroom is over.
05:12There is no way around this.
05:14No loopholes here.
05:16The judge does allow that they can finish up projects
05:18so that they don't leave the site unsafe.
05:22Oh.
05:23Well, sure.
05:24Yeah, of course you have to patch up the site to make it safe.
05:27I mean, what if Kristi Noem's husband tripped and fell
05:29and popped his enormous titties?
05:34It was very dangerous.
05:39But aside from that tiny safety loophole, the judge was clear.
05:42You are not allowed to build the ballroom.
05:45It's over.
05:46Even you can't talk your way into saying that this is somehow a positive for you.
05:50This is positive for us.
05:52I'm allowed, meaning we are allowed to continue building as necessary to, let's see, what is that?
06:05To cover the safety and security of the White House and its grounds.
06:11So, it says here very carefully the safety and security have to be protected of the White House grounds.
06:17Well, that's what we're doing because everything's bulletproof, glass, et cetera, et cetera.
06:21Including the ballroom.
06:27Son of a bitch.
06:28The judge said no ballroom and President Amelia Bedelia took that to mean the judge is begging us to build
06:34that ballroom.
06:36By the way, bulletproof, et cetera, et cetera.
06:39What was the et cetera?
06:40It's bulletproof and it's ballistic proof.
06:44The roof is drone proof.
06:46We have secure air handling systems.
06:48We have a hospital and very major medical facilities.
06:54We have bio defense.
06:57We have bomb shelters.
07:00Hey, this is intense for a ballroom.
07:04Might I suggest if the ballroom starts experiencing ballistic assault,
07:09maybe we just cancel the ball?
07:11No worries if not!
07:13Exclamation point.
07:14Hug emoji.
07:22The worst part of all this is that this ballroom isn't even his only DIY project.
07:28He's also starting a new one in Florida.
07:30We're getting our first look at what President Trump's presidential library could look like.
07:34The president posted the video on social media showing renderings of a skyscraper in Miami.
07:39With, no surprise, Trump's name on it.
07:42Huh.
07:45Interesting library.
07:47Has Donald Trump ever seen a library before?
07:50Because this just looks like one of his hotels.
07:52But it's his library, right?
07:54Not a hotel.
07:55It's going to be most likely a hotel.
07:57It could be office, but it's most likely going to be a hotel.
08:01What a fitting monument to President Trump.
08:03A hotel parading as a presidential library where you can honor his legacy by cheating on your wife in the
08:09Ashley Madison suite.
08:11Guess what?
08:12What?
08:13All the suites are Ashley Madison.
08:22I know, I know Trump doesn't do anything in the traditional way, whether it's governing or standing, but...
08:31Trump...
08:33Don't you want that classic presidential library or museum?
08:38I don't believe in building libraries or museums.
08:43Reminder, this is him announcing that he is building a library and museum.
08:47And he's like, I don't trust museums.
08:50All the little guys come to life at night and make you learn history.
08:58Honestly, honestly, this sounds like one of the worst ideas Trump has ever had, which is not very easy.
09:04I mean, I can't think of a single good thing about this building.
09:07I wouldn't start until I'm out of office.
09:13Wait, you wouldn't start until you're out of office?
09:23Mr. President, we need this library that is mostly a hotel as soon as possible.
09:34You should leave office and start building it right now.
09:37We can't wait a second longer.
09:40In fact, you might...
09:44You might even need help.
09:46Bring JD with you.
09:47He can supervise.
09:49And yes, yes, we are losing your administration, but we are gaining so much more in Hotelbrary.
09:58No worries if not.
09:59Fingers crossed, emoji.
10:09But the Trump Hotel is still just a twinkle in Trump's eye.
10:13For now, his main focus is on that ballroom, if he can overcome all the legal obstacles.
10:18But good news, help may be on the way.
10:22Has this ever happened to you?
10:24You smashed up the east wing of a historic building and started building a ballroom no
10:28one asked for because you really like having balls and you need a ballroom to room your ball?
10:33Then you need ball and ball law.
10:35I dedicated my career to ballroom law.
10:38That was a mistake.
10:39But don't let my poor career choices stop you from getting justice.
10:43This is America.
10:45You have the right to demolish anything you want and build a ballroom in its place.
10:49Who's to say the Statue of Liberty shouldn't be the ballroom of liberty?
10:52Mount Rushmore?
10:53More like Mount Ballroom.
10:55Goodbye, Baltimore.
10:57Hello, Ballroom Tamar.
10:59You need us and we need this case.
11:01Please, I have so much debt.
11:03Ballroom law school is like ten times the cost of regular law school.
11:07Because every classroom is a ballroom.
11:10Why?
11:11Call 1-800-BALLROOM-TODAY.
11:14If you're a debt collector, I'm not here right now.
11:19When we come back, Lewis Black bets on America Collapsing.
11:23So don't go away.
11:40Welcome back to The Daily Show.
11:42When a news story falls through the cracks,
11:44Lewis Black catches it for a segment we call Back in Black.
11:56Since the dawn of time, humans have wondered what the future holds.
12:02Will I get rich?
12:04Will I live long?
12:06Will they ever bring back MILF Manor?
12:10These questions have stumped our greatest profits.
12:13But now, thanks to the internet, we don't have to worry about the future.
12:18We can just bet on it.
12:20Now to an industry skyrocketing in popularity, prediction markets.
12:24The online platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket are where people bet money on the outcome of future events.
12:31You can bet on sports.
12:32You can bet on world events.
12:33You can bet on, like, what song will be on the charts next week.
12:37Wow!
12:38Can I bet on how many times I'm gonna swear during this segment?
12:46I bet it's over ten because this shit is f***ing crazy, bitch.
12:54And that's three.
12:56That's three right there.
12:58Trust me.
12:58Bet the over.
13:01Of course, I remember a simpler time when gambling meant going to the racetrack
13:06and blowing your kid's college fund on a tip from a guy who seemed Italian.
13:12Back then, there were only three things you could bet on.
13:16Sports, dice, and unprotected sex.
13:20You could lose the last one two ways.
13:24An STD or child support.
13:27I can't count how many times I woke up in someone's bed like, uh, come on, chlamydia!
13:38But thanks to prediction markets, you can now bet on basically anything.
13:43And I mean anything.
13:45You can bet on, or, Kelsey says, invest in, nearly 3,500 markets on the company's platform.
13:53Things like Oscars, who's gonna be the next Federal Reserve chair.
13:56How many tweets will Elon Musk send in a week?
13:59Who the next James Bond will be?
14:00Who will be a bridesmaid at Taylor Swift's wedding?
14:03Oh, Christ. That's the stupidest bet I've ever heard.
14:07Any real Swiftie knows Taylor's gonna have a small private service without bridesmaids.
14:14Next time, try listening to the lyrics of her 2010 hit, Speak Now, you f***ing idiots!
14:24And that's for...
14:27Now, all of this frivolous gambling might have you hoping that the world is ending.
14:32And I have good news, you can bet on that, too!
14:37According to Polymarket, the odds of Jesus returning this year is 4%.
14:43Jesus Christ!
14:45A 4% chance!
14:48That means, and this is true,
14:51Jesus returning has four times better odds than the Jets winning the Super Bowl!
15:02And if that's not bad enough, people put Jesus returning at 4%,
15:08and Jeffrey Epstein coming back alive at 5%.
15:14That's right.
15:15It's neck and neck between one of history's greatest monsters and Jeffrey Epstein.
15:22I guess if...
15:23I knew it.
15:24We all knew it.
15:26We're not idiots.
15:28We write the stuff.
15:29We put it out there.
15:30We hope for the best.
15:32I knew this shit was gonna hit us.
15:36God damn it.
15:38Son of a bitch.
15:39And that doesn't count toward my number.
15:45I guess if Jesus is...
15:47The joke, to be honest, is about Jeffrey Epstein.
15:53God damn it.
15:55Son of a bitch.
15:57I hate to have to explain this stuff, but I don't want to go to jail.
16:04Okay.
16:06Sorry, that was a little extreme.
16:09I guess if Jesus is coming back, I'm gonna need the cash to bribe my way into heaven.
16:17Hey, St. Peter, I know you don't have room for a blasphemous Jew, but what about my friend Ben Franklin?
16:26Now, if you're worried about people losing all their money gambling, don't worry.
16:32A lot of these assholes are cheating.
16:34Massive bets on Trump's war with Iran raising questions of insider trading on the prediction market platform Polymarket.
16:41Hundreds of accounts placed wagers correctly predicting a U.S. strike on Iran before that strike was publicly known.
16:48Among them, an account trading under the username MagaMyMan made nearly a million dollars since the war started.
16:56Great job MagaMyMan.
16:59I don't know who you are, but I'll keep an eye out for a Rolls Royce with a don't tread
17:05on me flag.
17:06But for all I know, you could be Don Jr., who is an advisor to both Calci and Polymarket.
17:16What the f*** could he possibly advise them on?
17:21Where to drop his large bag of cash?
17:24Don't worry, Calci. He'll be awake for the next 48 hours.
17:28So the timing is flexible.
17:31But, hey, you don't have to be a member of Trump's family to make money on his decisions.
17:37Any fartlek can do it.
17:39Will Trump say low IQ this week?
17:46Let me tell you, before you even ask.
17:49She's a very low IQ person.
17:52Yes!
17:53Wow.
17:55Wow.
17:56That asshole won $100,000 predicting what the president is going to say next.
18:03Trump only says, like, three f***ing things.
18:07He's like a big mouth billy bass that hates Mexicans.
18:12It's not rocket science, f***ing suckers.
18:17Now, I've sworn ten times in this segment.
18:20Which means, if I say one more swear word, everyone who listened to me earlier is going to make a
18:27killing.
18:27But, I'll let you in on a little secret.
18:31I bet everything on me swearing less than that and took all your money.
18:36Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
18:42Oh, better luck next time, assholes.
18:46.
18:50.
18:51.
18:55So close, so close.
18:57Lewis Jack, everyone!
19:00Welcome back, we will be back.
19:01Dr. Mary Claire Pager will be joining you on the show who's so-so-so.
19:06.
19:14welcome back to the daily show my guest tonight is a board certified ob-gyn founder of the pause
19:21life and author of the forthcoming book the new perimenopause please welcome dr. mary claire
19:41haver
19:41hi oh we are so happy to have you here so happy to be here thank you this is thank
19:54you for writing this
19:55book i think this is going to be such an incredible guide for so many women who are going to
19:59be so
19:59grateful for you an evidence-based guide to surviving the zone of chaos exactly the zone of
20:06chaos is also what i call my bikini line as you should a little when i'm a little overdue for
20:11a
20:11wax um so many people have heard about this stage of menopause but not a lot of people have heard
20:17about the the perimenopause stage right walk us through what perimenopause is so she asks like
20:24she doesn't know since you asked so medically we define perimenopause as simply the transition from
20:31normal regular menstrual cycles to full menopause but it's a whole lot more than that and perimenopause
20:39begins actually in the brain so females we're going to get a little sciency here go for it females are
20:45born with all of our egg supply right so at birth we have one to two million eggs by the
20:49time we're 30
20:50we're down to about 10 percent of that original egg supply and by the time we're 40 we're down to
20:55three percent and full menopause is you're out of eggs that's it so the reason why we ovulate is
21:02because we have signals coming from the brain when estrogen levels naturally get low that tell the
21:07ovary okay let's ovulate this month and so for a healthy woman at like 28 pretend you know on day
21:1312 thanks for guessing my age don't google it so you're gonna do this on day four this on day
21:2012
21:20you're gonna ovulate on day 14 on and on and on it's just this beautiful predictable cycle that
21:24looks like an ekg month after month after month then we reach a critical egg threshold level where the
21:30signals from the brain stop working as well because there's not enough eggs to respond so the brain
21:35starts going crazy trying to force our own to get the hormones out and so what used to look like
21:42this beautiful pattern now i take spaghetti i throw it at the wall and this is the next seven years
21:47of
21:47your life oh god that sounds terrible with this administration oh god help us
22:02i'm like i'm sorry i used i just talked to women so hey guys yes there's a lot of men
22:07in the
22:07audience this is so exciting don't worry they put the men in perimenopause so that you would listen to
22:15so you are included in this conversation uh one of my favorite things in this book is that you have
22:21uh comments and stories from actual women who have gone through this one woman wrote this is like
22:27puberty with a vengeance my question is why does god hate women you know this is a normal natural
22:36transition that a hundred percent of us if we're lucky to to live that long we'll go through and
22:41the reason why i wrote the book is so many women are blindsided by the symptoms and they shouldn't be
22:46like we don't go through puberty without someone in our family in our lives guiding us through
22:50this is going to happen you're going to grow taller hair is going to grow in weird places and you're
22:54going to just start bleeding everywhere once a month right you know like you you get a heads
22:57up about that right yeah and so now we're going through perimenopause like as reverse blue lagoon
23:03i'm dating myself right you know we're all brook shields in the water and like no one is guiding
23:07us through it and so women are getting blindsided we see you know mental health disorders increase 40
23:13across the transition we see women quitting their jobs we see you know long-term relationships
23:18coming under strain and it doesn't have to be this way we have lots of tools to help guide you
23:23through this zone of chaos until you get out on the other side so one of the things that i
23:28found so
23:29interesting the way that you explain it because i felt it on the other side as a patient but never
23:34understood why is this the evidence to practice gap yes in the medical world yes explain what that is so
23:42there is about a 17 year old a 17 year gap from when a study comes out that is going
23:48to change the
23:49way we practice medicine before it is actually assimilated into clinical practice 17 years 17
23:55years so this could be medication for a heart attack this could be you know menopause information
24:01it is 17 years now something about the internet which has become the women's water cooler it's how we
24:06share medical information now is speeding that up we are getting lay people are getting access
24:11clinicians are getting more access because we can now go online and search the studies ourselves
24:16so i think that is speeding up but if i wait 17 years for this study that i read and
24:21then try to wait
24:22for the guidelines to change and then you know to go to a medical conference and then they talk about
24:26it and then i start trying it i'm going to have a patient like lose her entire perimenopause
24:31right right and the ability to get her treated well and you bring up the internet which i'm grateful
24:36that so many more women are talking about it you're leading the charge it's actually how we we met on
24:41social media because i was a patient where i find all my new friends yes is in my dms same
24:45just slide
24:46into those dms doctors all over the place i but but that was happening to me and i i love
24:52my doctors
24:53but i was experiencing symptoms that i thought were hormonal and i had a doctor ready to just write a
25:00prescription for lexapro and send me on my way and i am all for anti-depressants anti-anxiety meds
25:06if needed but i was feeling like this what i didn't think else is going to have the hormonal conversation
25:10right um that's a problem help because in medical school so i'm gonna date myself i was in medical
25:17school from 94 to 98 we had one one-hour lecture on menopause nothing on perimenopause okay then i
25:25graduate and from 98 to 2002 i'm in my ob-gyn residency program which was amazing and i learned
25:30so many important things you know we're surgeons we're obstetricians we're gynecologists we do so
25:34much we did not have a menopause clinic a perimenopause clinic all i learned about perimenopause was how to
25:39pronounce it and so nothing about the zone of chaos like that it just wasn't we didn't there was no
25:46treatment there's never been a single large-scale study on the treatment of perimenopause and so now it's
25:53kind of consensus opinion thank god for the menopause my friends in the menopause world all
25:57the menopause certification there's now a menopause society so we're getting there but you know it's
26:02really unreasonable for you to think you can go to your great ob-gyn or your family medicine or internist
26:07if they haven't sought training outside of the residency program most likely they're not going to
26:12be able to connect the dots between hormone changes and brain fog hormone changes and sleep
26:16disruption hormone changes and mental health changes which is really the first signs of perimenopause
26:22in the brain right not your periods not your hot flashes those are late perimenopause that's the
26:27end really the first things that our patients are seeing and if i see the nods going on in the
26:32audience is i'm not sleeping i'm struggling at my job yes i'm having executive dysfunction like
26:38adhd type symptoms and i'm either anxious ragey yes or depressed we're all three oh
26:46talk talk about potential solutions so we've all heard about hormone replacement well some of us
26:51have heard about hormone replacement therapy it was good then it was bad now it might be good again
26:57can you there was a study that came out pendulum so there was a landmark study it was pretty exciting
27:03that finally we were going to study women outside of reproduction it was really i was very excited about
27:09the study and it was to see if hormone therapy would actually decrease the rate of heart disease
27:14right we we thought it would because of anecdotal evidence and observational studies but we need
27:20randomized control studies to say this medicine actually does this so it had you know tens of
27:25thousands of patients enrolled but the average age of the patient was a lot older than average age
27:29of menopause it was 63 because they were trying to see is she going to have a heart attack or
27:33not
27:33right you know from with hrt is it going to make it better or not make it better or make
27:37it worse
27:37potentially so when the first initial rolling out of the the studies came they thought they saw
27:44a potential increase it wasn't statistically significant of breast cancer but they led with
27:49a press conference where most of the people on the paper weren't allowed to attend and it was this
27:54very dramatic estrogen causes breast cancer and like that was the shot heard around the world it was the
27:59number one medical news story of 2002 i remember sitting in my residency hearing about this and it
28:05we were recommending hormone therapy to almost everyone right who was a good candidate and all
28:11of a sudden it was like stop you might give her cancer and it was so hard to get that
28:14genie back in
28:15the bottle it's taken 23 years for us to really reanalyze the data and say actually this is really
28:21safe for the vast majority of patients we can start in perimenopause we can we can decrease her
28:26risk of part attacks will definitely protect her bones and it is the gold standard treatment for
28:31hot flashes oh and this just you just got the black box warning yes so what came with that study
28:37was
28:38this crazy scary black box warning that was you open up your medication and there's a big black box in
28:44black that says this medicine basically can kill you okay and that's not what the study said and so
28:51patients would get their prescription all excited to go home and get their symptoms relieved even for
28:54vaginal estrogen can i say vaginal on national tv i mean he said so this is basic cable you can
29:00say
29:01whatever the you okay okay vagina vagina vagina okay i can say it um so yeah the vaginal estrogen so
29:11but so several you know this has been we've asked the fda for decades to remove this black box warning
29:18it
29:18was not warranted for this medication so finally in november we were able to the fda was able to take
29:24the
29:24warning label down which has caused a shortage of estrogen patches yes so now we have a shortage of
29:33estrogen patches so anybody want to open an estradiol factory i'll invest um because it is really hard
29:40to find them right now oh we got some hormonal women during an authoritarian regime look the
29:46out um women need their hormones uh there's alzheimer's has affected both of our families yeah um talk
29:57about the connection the potential connection between alzheimer's and perimenopause so two-thirds of
30:05alzheimer's patients are female so there's a huge much higher risk for women versus men did you guys know
30:11that yeah so two-thirds and most of it is not genetic right 98 of alzheimer's is a non-genetic
30:20component you don't have that apoe4 gene and so when we look at the risks it's definitely something
30:25about being female like losing your hormones um and then of course there's lots of lifestyle things as
30:31well what we know about hormone therapy is we have to no one's doing new studies on hormone therapy
30:36sadly so we have to extrapolate from the older studies it doesn't appear to be harmful so going
30:41on hormone therapy is not going to increase your risk of developing alzheimer's what we think is
30:46that you're going to have secondary benefit and lowering inflammation living healthier having stronger
30:51bones potentially less heart disease that will also help keep your brain healthier but you know
30:56women are owed centuries of research here does he so so i go to pubmed which is where i look
31:02up
31:03research articles right and i type in the word pregnancy 1.2 million articles today okay important
31:09we need healthy pregnancies i love being an obstetrician when i used to do it i my 50th birthday
31:14president was stopped delivering babies to myself because if they didn't come at 3 a.m i'd still be
31:18doing it so um congratulations so yeah and um i type in the word menopause and we have about 99
31:25000
31:2712 to 1 so that's brain power that's nih funding that is academic institutions you know that is what
31:33we're focusing on in women's health if i type in the word perimenopause 9 000 wow 9 000 wow so
31:40we have
31:41a lot of work to do here yeah and you know this book is a guide to help you get
31:46tools resources know
31:47what questions to ask so that you can go through this transition as healthy as possible yeah i get
31:53these habits locked in the lifestyle habits so that you don't suffer my patients when they come to see me
31:58we put out the fire of menopause right she's not functioning she can't sleep she's you know she's
32:03in crisis we calm her down okay then we start looking at the next 30 years and we say maybe
32:10not
32:11with this current administration but you know you know we say what how do your how did your mother age
32:17how did your grandmother age and i don't have a single patient who wants to be brian johnson god bless
32:21him
32:21and live to 120 you know any of you ladies want to live to 120 no right and so not
32:27in this economy
32:29who can afford it right who can afford it they don't want to be a burden on their children
32:34they want the years they have to be full years without loss of independence and what we're both
32:39dealing with in our family is having women in our family who are suffering from dementia you know
32:45due to alzheimer's that maybe had some choices you know we could have limited this or delayed it
32:50you know and i want that i don't want this to be the inevitable for my children so for my
32:55two
32:56daughters so we start making the plans in that visit after we get the hot flashes stopped and her
33:01sleeping and her feel like she's got her life back how much fiber are you getting what kind of exercise
33:05are you doing how's your stress are you in therapy you know and so all the tools that she needs
33:11so that
33:12she can live her best life for as long as possible so it feels like a lot of this kind
33:18of falls on
33:19the shoulders of women themselves to take it take it upon themselves get educated know their bodies
33:25go in and have conversations with their doctors what advice would you give them right to best
33:30advocate for themselves so educate yourself as much as possible try to find someone who's menopause
33:36certified you can go to menopause.org order our website at thepawslife.com we have a list of providers
33:41who have been recommended by thousands of of our followers and they give a little testimonial and we
33:49have a list of certified providers on their website that's all over the united states and in canada
33:53so there are resources available but just plan it's not a well woman visit that's the other thing so if
34:00you're going to use insurance this is not your well woman exam your well woman exam is to get your
34:05breast exam your pap smear and all the basics this is a separate visit for you to really have the
34:10time
34:10not in stirrups so that you can discuss your don't bring my stirrups got it got it yeah so that
34:20you can
34:20get the most out of your visit and hopefully have someone educated enough to connect connect the dots
34:26and help you excellent advice um do do men experience perimenopause is that like like buying a corvette is
34:35that so women's hormones fall off a cliff oh um yeah so we go through chaos and then it falls
34:41and
34:42then men's have a slow gentle decline oh don't they're so gentle they need they need to be gentle
34:48with them that makes sense what what what is your hope that women take away from this that wonderful
34:54you know this isn't an inevitable and very normal transition happens to 100 of us if we're lucky to
34:59live long enough but there you should never suffer through it ever there should be zero suffering
35:03and that you come out of it on the other end i'm 57 years old i'm fully menopausal and i
35:08am living my
35:09best life yes i want that for everyone here's to living our best lives cheers yes cheers living our best
35:21lives the new perimenopause comes out april 7th and is available for free order dr mary claire
35:27hamer we're going to take a quick break we'll be right back up to us
35:48there's a bit of drama in the street number 10's uh outside number 10's front door during that press
35:54conference when larry the cat been around here for a long time was filmed by my colleague steve the
35:58cameraman catching a mouse and killing it and eating it it's the first time i've ever seen larry the cat
36:04do anything useful in downing street he normally appears to pose for photographs but now finally
36:09he's catching a mouse sorry
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