Passage 7: The Rhythm of Transition — Oscillation, Not Closure

Passage 7: The Rhythm of Transition — Oscillation, Not Closure

Perimenopause is the clearest proof I have that transition isn’t linear—and that change often includes grief. You can wake up and feel like yourself—clear, capable, even a little brave—and by evening feel like your body has changed the rules again. Heat rises. Sleep splinters. Focus slips. Even your own scent can feel unfamiliar.

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Passage 6: Stages of Change: Why readiness isn’t willpower

Passage 6: Stages of Change: Why readiness isn’t willpower

If productivity were the measure of readiness, I’d be fine. I can produce. I can teach. I can create. I can deliver. You’re probably not surprised; you may have even watched me do it. But put a simple life-logistics task in front of me—sign the estate documents, open the mail, handle the thing that makes adulthood obligations feel real—and suddenly I lose traction. My competence doesn’t translate.

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Passage 5: The Window of Tolerance (A real-time map for your nervous system in transition.)

Passage 5: The Window of Tolerance (A real-time map for your nervous system in transition.)

Let’s start with a simple question: how are you right now? Not in your life or location, but in your body. Before you answer with a story, take a moment and scan for signals… Do you feel tense and tight? Jittery and braced? Or slow and heavy—like your energy is running on a dimmer switch? Or are you steady enough to stay grounded, even as the terrain shifts beneath you?

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Passage 4: Allostasis & Allostatic Load (when “holding it all together” becomes its own kind of wear and tear)

Passage 4: Allostasis & Allostatic Load (when “holding it all together” becomes its own kind of wear and tear)

There’s a particular strangeness to this week on the calendar. It’s late December—the days between one year and the next. Not quite holiday. Not quite “back to it.” Calendars clear just enough for white space to appear. The inbox quiets down. Meetings fall away.

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Passage 3: Transitions as Care (who holds you in the in-between?)

Passage 3: Transitions as Care (who holds you in the in-between?)

The first time Isamu was admitted to the UCSF Medical Center, I left the hospital at 3:00 in the morning, carrying his absence in a plastic tote bag. His jeans. The T-shirt and flannel he'd arrived in. His socks and shoes, still holding the shape of his feet. The nurse had helped me peel his clothes off earlier that night, when his headache became unbearable and he could no longer sit upright without vomiting.

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Passage 2: Thresholds (rites of passage and the shape of change)

Passage 2: Thresholds (rites of passage and the shape of change)

Across cultures, continents, and centuries, people have always made maps of the territory of transition. Birth, adolescence, partnership, death—these were never meant to be private experiences. They were marked, named, and held in community. They were marked, named, and held in community.

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Passage 1: On Endings (and the body’s first response to change)

Passage 1: On Endings (and the body’s first response to change)

The body often knows before we do. An email lands, a conversation shifts, a familiar rhythm we've relied on starts to fray. And even before we name it as an ending, something in us has already registered the change, signaling that we've stepped out of accustomed territory and into the unknown. Sleep patterns break. Appetite loses its usual shape. There's a hum of vigilance just under the skin.

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Anatomy of Transition: Your Introduction to this Limited Series

Anatomy of Transition: Your Introduction to this Limited Series

The body tells the truth about change before the mind has words for it: sleep alters, appetite wobbles, attention narrows or scatters. That's because transition isn't just an event; its a process with its own anatomy. Something ends. There's a middle that asks more of us than we first imagined.

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What Your Midlife Symptoms Are Really Telling You

In this episode, Andrea discusses why burnout and fatigue might be guiding you toward your next act, not just another supplement. Andrea also shares how functional nutrition, narrative medicine, and deep self-awareness can create real, lasting healing.

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What's Missing From The Conversation on Longevity

In this episode, Andrea discusses the unique challenges women face in midlife and beyond, why there’s no one-size-fits-all protocol for perimenopause and post-menopause, the role of hormone therapy, how Andrea applies the functional medicine matrix, why we need to pay attention to nervous system regulation, redefining identity and purpose as we age, and more.

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Field Notes: Shapes of Sorrow

Field Notes: Shapes of Sorrow

Today. July 16th marks my birthday. And later this week, the anniversary of Isamu’s death—twenty-three years ago.

These two dates live in tandem on the calendar. Just two days between them. And every year, I feel it—an invisible weight pulling through my chest, my breath, my skin. A kind of cellular knowing that this week hints at more than a passage of time. It’s another threshold.

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Reclaiming Health through Functional Medicine

In this episode, Andrea discusses the importance of understanding the root cause of health issues rather than merely treating symptoms. Listeners will gain insights on how this holistic approach empowers individuals to reclaim ownership of their health and navigate their wellness journeys with confidence. 

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Mending 11: boundaries
Narrative Medicine Andrea Nakayama Narrative Medicine Andrea Nakayama

Mending 11: boundaries

Welcome to mending, a monthly haven where words meet inner wisdom, and stories intertwine with the art of health and healing. At the heart of Narrative Medicine is a belief in the power of the human story. Words, among other human expressions, have the ability to enlighten and connect us to our most vulnerable or even seemingly insignificant moments in life.

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Field Notes: The Arc of Aging

Field Notes: The Arc of Aging

In the early morning hours—when the world is quiet and the page is still listening—I often find myself returning to the stories I’ve inherited, those I’ve told many times, and others I’m only just beginning to reclaim. Lately, as I explore the world of longevity, those stories have circled around aging—not simply as a biological process, but as a reflection of culture. A culture that tells those in midlife and beyond: you’re disappearing. Your symptoms are glitches. Your wisdom has an expiration date.

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Mending 10: origins
Narrative Medicine Andrea Nakayama Narrative Medicine Andrea Nakayama

Mending 10: origins

Welcome to mending, a monthly haven where words meet inner wisdom, and stories intertwine with the art of health and healing. At the heart of Narrative Medicine is a belief in the power of the human story. Words, among other human expressions, have the ability to enlighten and connect us to our most vulnerable or even seemingly insignificant moments in life.

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Mending 9: thresholds
Narrative Medicine Andrea Nakayama Narrative Medicine Andrea Nakayama

Mending 9: thresholds

Welcome to mending, a monthly haven where words meet inner wisdom, and stories intertwine with the art of health and healing. At the heart of Narrative Medicine is a belief in the power of the human story. Words, among other human expressions, have the ability to enlighten and connect us to our most vulnerable or even seemingly insignificant moments in life.

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Wellbeing From Within

In this episode, Andrea discusses Narrative medicine - why ‘the story’ is so important when approaching health and wellbeing; how to practice ‘deep listening’ in your daily life; why connecting with purpose can be the key that unlocks meaningful longevity and much more!

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