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menopause

Why Women 40+ Should Aim for 30 Grams of Protein Per Meal

Rachel Larson · June 8, 2026 ·

If you’ve been eating the same way for years but suddenly feel softer around the middle, weaker during workouts, hungrier throughout the day, or more fatigued than you used to, you’re not imagining it.

One of the biggest physiological shifts that occurs during perimenopause and menopause is a gradual loss of muscle mass. Starting as early as our 30s, women naturally begin losing muscle tissue. As estrogen levels decline during peri-menopause and menopause, that process accelerates, making it easier to lose muscle and harder to maintain strength, metabolism, balance, and overall vitality. Literature shares that women can lose up to 10% of their muscle mass within the first five years following menopause if not actively strength training and consuming adequate amounts of protein.

The good news? Muscle loss is not inevitable.

Strength training is one of the most powerful tools we have to maintain and build muscle as we age. But your workouts can only do so much if your body doesn’t have the raw materials needed to repair and rebuild muscle tissue.

The Missing Piece for Many Women

Most women simply aren’t eating enough protein to support muscle maintenance. In fact, many women consume only 10-15 grams of protein at breakfast and similar amounts at lunch, saving the majority of their protein intake for dinner. Unfortunately, that’s not the most effective way to support muscle health.

As we age, our bodies become less responsive to small doses of protein. Researchers call this anabolic resistance, meaning it takes a stronger protein signal to stimulate muscle protein synthesis—the process of repairing and maintaining muscle tissue.

For women over 40, the key is getting enough protein consistently throughout the day. We can only digest and absorb up to 40 grams of protein at a time – more than that will not increase muscle building.  It will be converted to energy use which is inefficient and expensive, so it’s best to eat protein often and at every meal throughout the day.  

Aim for 30 Grams at Every Meal

A practical target for most active women is approximately 30 grams of protein at breakfast, lunch, and dinner, along with protein-rich snacks containing 15-20 grams of protein.

This approach helps provide your muscles with a steady supply of amino acids throughout the day while supporting:

  • Muscle maintenance and recovery
  • Healthy metabolism
  • Blood sugar balance
  • Improved satiety
  • Reduced cravings
  • Consistent energy

Think of protein as the anchor of every meal.

Before deciding what else goes on your plate, ask yourself: “Where is my protein?”

This simple shift toward a “protein first” mindset can dramatically improve your nutrition without counting calories or following restrictive diets.

Start Your Day Strong

One of the easiest changes you can make is eating a protein-rich breakfast within 60 minutes of waking.

After an overnight fast, your body is primed for nourishment. Starting your day with adequate protein helps support muscle maintenance while keeping energy and hunger levels more stable throughout the day.

Many women find that once they prioritize protein at breakfast, they experience fewer cravings, better focus, improved energy, and less mindless snacking later in the day.

3 Options for What 30 Grams of Protein Looks Like Each Meal

Breakfast:

  • 3 eggs plus 1 cup Greek yogurt
  • Protein smoothie with protein powder, Greek yogurt, and milk
  • Cottage cheese bowl with berries and nuts

Lunch:

  • 4-5 ounces grilled chicken breast
  • Large salad topped with salmon
  • Turkey wrap with a side of cottage cheese

Dinner:

  • Grilled steak with vegetables
  • Baked salmon and roasted potatoes
  • Chicken stir fry with vegetables and rice

Choose Protein-Rich Snacks

Snacks are another opportunity to support muscle health.

Instead of reaching for foods that are primarily carbohydrates, aim for snacks containing 15-20 grams of protein.

Great options include:

  • Greek yogurt
  • Cottage cheese
  • Protein shakes
  • Turkey roll-ups
  • Edamame
  • Beef sticks paired with fruit
  • High-protein bars with minimal added sugar

Don’t Forget Your Vegetables

While protein is the star of the show, vegetables deserve a place on every plate. After you identify your protein source, fill the rest of your plate with veggies. Keep in mind, vegetables are also a protein source providing 3g of protein per serving. Bonus!

Vegetables provide fiber, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and plant compounds that support digestion, gut health, immune function, and overall wellness. They also help keep you feeling fuller longer and support healthy blood sugar regulation.

A simple meal-building formula is:

Protein first. Vegetables second. Fill in the rest with healthy whole grains.

When you build meals this way, you’ll naturally increase both protein and fiber intake—two nutrients many women don’t get enough of.

We’ll take a deeper dive into fiber, gut health, and how to easily increase your vegetable intake in next week’s article.

Start with three simple habits:

  1. Eat within 60 minutes of waking.
  2. Prioritize 30 grams of protein at each meal.
  3. Choose protein-rich snacks containing 15-20 grams of protein.

These small shifts can help preserve muscle, improve energy, reduce cravings, support healthy aging, and maximize the results of your workouts.

At Flostate, we believe movement and nutrition work together. Pairing regular strength training with adequate protein intake is one of the most effective ways to build a strong, capable body that serves you well through menopause and beyond.

Ready to Put This Into Action?

Looking for a simple way to build strength and preserve muscle after 40? Try Flostate’s Daily Lift program or explore our library of hundreds of on-demand strength workouts designed to help women build lean muscle, increase bone density, boost metabolism, and stay strong, energized, and confident through every stage of life.

Questions? Reach out at info@theflostate.com. We can’t wait to hear from you!

Women’s Workshop: Health in Perimenopause and Menopause

Alice Halvorson · January 14, 2026 ·

This workshop is for women in their 40s, 50s, and beyond who want to better understand how shifting hormones impact their bodies-and what they can do right now to feel stronger, more energized, and supported through this season of life. Rachel Larson, Registered Dietitian and Fitness Expert, will share nutrition, stress reduction, and exercise strategies to help you reduce hot flashes and night sweats, improve sleep and mood, support gut and bone health, build and maintain lean muscle, boost metabolism and reduce midsection weight gain. You’ll leavewith a clear action plan and a take-home guide so you can start applying what you learn immediately. Then, Alice Halvorson, Fitness Expert, will guide you through a 45-minute yoga session designed with pelvic floor friendly movement, breath work, and core stability to help you feel grounded, strong, and confident in your body.

Limited space – SIGN UP HERE*

Friday, February 20th
9:30 am – 11:30 am
Ojibway Park Building
$60 for Woodbury Residents/ $75 for Non-Woodbury Residents
Registration is through the City of Woodbury. You will be redirected.

How to Build and Maintain a Healthy Pelvic Floor for Women 40+

Rachel Larson · December 14, 2025 ·

If you’re a woman in your 40s, 50s, 60s—or beyond—and you’ve noticed changes in your core strength, bladder control, or overall stability, you’re not alone. For many women, midlife brings physical shifts that can feel confusing or even frustrating. The good news? There is so much you can do to support your core and pelvic floor through these years—and you don’t have to blame yourself or push harder to see results.

Let’s break down what’s happening in the body and how to respond in a way that’s smart, sustainable, and empowering.


1. Hormonal Changes Matter—And This Is Not Your Fault

As estrogen begins to decline during perimenopause and menopause, tissues throughout the body are affected—including the pelvic floor. Estrogen helps maintain muscle tone, tissue elasticity, and circulation. When levels drop, the pelvic floor can become less responsive or weaker, which may lead to occasional urinary leakage during activities like sneezing, coughing, running, or jumping.

This does not mean you’re doing anything wrong. It means your body is changing.

Many women benefit from discussing options such as vaginal estrogen or other hormone therapies with their healthcare provider. These treatments can help support pelvic tissue health and function and are often underutilized simply because women assume symptoms are “just part of aging.” You deserve informed care and options.


2. Midlife Strength Requires a Smarter Strategy—Not Less Fuel

Another major shift that happens as estrogen declines is a reduced ability to build and maintain muscle and bone density. This is exactly why traditional advice like “eat less and exercise more” can backfire during this stage of life.

Instead, this season calls for:

  • Lifting heavier weights (appropriately and progressively)
  • Prioritizing strength training to protect muscle and bone
  • Increasing protein intake to support muscle repair and growth

This is not the time to under-fuel your body. It’s the time to fuel wisely and train intentionally. Strength is protective—it supports posture, balance, metabolism, and yes, pelvic floor health too.


3. Kegels Still Matter—But They’re Only Part of the Picture

Daily Kegels can be a powerful tool for improving pelvic floor strength and awareness. Practicing them consistently helps you reconnect to these often-ignored muscles and improves coordination and control.

For best results:

  • Practice daily Kegels (short, focused sets)
  • Integrate pelvic floor engagement into functional movement and workouts
  • Learn how to fully relax and lengthen the pelvic floor as well as strengthen it

The pelvic floor isn’t meant to be clenched all day. It’s meant to respond dynamically to movement, breath, and load. Combining isolated work and integrated movement creates the biggest gains.


4. How Flostate Supports Your Pelvic Floor—From All Angles

At Flostate, we believe optimal pelvic floor health comes from a balanced approach. That’s why our Pelvic Floor Restore On-Demand Collection is designed to:

  • Activate under-recruited muscles
  • Strengthen for support and confidence
  • Lengthen and release tension for full function

These workouts are intentional, approachable, and grounded in how the body actually works during midlife and beyond. Repetition and consistency matter most. You can do these workouts on their own or layer them onto your existing strength, cardio, or yoga routine for added support.

Small, consistent efforts add up to meaningful change. Explore our Pelvic Floor Restore collection in our On Demand Library. https://theflostate.com/on-demand/


You Are Not Broken—You Are Adapting

Your body isn’t failing you—it’s asking for a new kind of care. With the right education, strength training, fueling, and targeted pelvic floor work, you can feel strong, stable, and confident at every stage of life. This is about working with your body, not against it—and Flostate is here to support you every step of the way.

7 Nutrition & Exercise Tips That Actually Work for Perimenopause

Rachel Larson · September 10, 2025 ·

If you’re between 40 and 70, chances are you’ve noticed your body changing in ways you didn’t expect—or maybe didn’t sign up for. Perimenopause and menopause can bring more than hot flashes. Think: restless nights, brain fog, mood swings, stubborn weight gain, and energy that just doesn’t feel the same.

Here’s the good news: while these changes are normal, they don’t have to define you. Experts like Dr. Stacy Sims (Next Level) and Dr. Mary Claire Haver (The New Menopause) remind us that this stage of life is a powerful opportunity to reset how we move, eat, and care for ourselves. With a few key strategies, you can feel more vibrant, resilient, and strong than ever.


7 Nutrition & Exercise Tips to Help You Thrive

1. Make Protein Your Friend

As estrogen declines, your body naturally loses muscle at a faster rate—a process called sarcopenia. The best way to fight back is to prioritize protein. Aim for 25–30 grams at each meal, and try to spread it evenly throughout your day. Think eggs for breakfast, salmon or chicken at lunch, and beans, lentils, or tofu at dinner. This not only supports muscle but also helps regulate appetite, energy, and even blood sugar. Pairing protein with strength training makes the benefits even greater.

2. Lift Heavy (For You)

Strength training is the most powerful tool you have in midlife. It protects bone density, improves posture, keeps joints healthy, and even boosts metabolism. You don’t have to lift like a bodybuilder—just challenge your muscles with resistance 2–3 times a week. That might mean squats with dumbbells, push-ups, resistance band rows, or Pilates reformer sessions. The key is progressive overload: adding weight, reps, or resistance over time so your body continues to adapt and grow stronger.

3. Mix Up Your Cardio

Cardio is still important, but the way you do it matters. Long, steady sessions can sometimes leave you feeling drained, especially when hormones are shifting. Instead, try mixing moderate-intensity activities (like brisk walking, cycling, or swimming) with short bursts of higher intensity (like hill sprints or intervals). Research shows this combination supports heart health, preserves brain function, and helps manage weight—without overstressing your system. And the best part? You don’t need long sessions—20–30 minutes is often plenty.

4. Keep Blood Sugar Steady

Shifting hormones can make your body more sensitive to blood sugar swings, which show up as fatigue, irritability, and even more intense hot flashes. Build meals around protein and fiber, then add healthy fats like avocado, nuts, or olive oil. Limit refined carbs and added sugars, but don’t cut out carbs altogether—your body needs them for energy and recovery. Instead, choose complex carbs like quinoa, oats, sweet potatoes, or berries that digest slowly and keep you steady. Even small shifts, like pairing fruit with nuts, can make a big difference.

5. Love Your Gut (and Fiber)

Your gut is home to trillions of bacteria that influence everything from mood to hormone balance. Fiber feeds the good bacteria while also supporting digestion and heart health. Women in midlife should aim for 25–30 grams of fiber daily. The best sources of fiber come from fruits, vegetables and whole grains including leafy greens, beans, chia seeds, apples, brussel spouts, sweet potatoes and raspberries. A diverse, fiber-rich diet also helps regulate estrogen metabolism, which can smooth out symptoms like bloating and mood swings. Probiotic-rich foods like yogurt, kefir, or sauerkraut can give your gut an extra boost, too.

6. Protect Your Sleep

Sleep is often one of the first things to get disrupted in perimenopause, thanks to night sweats, racing thoughts, or shifting hormones. But quality sleep is crucial for hormone regulation, memory, and recovery. Create a calming wind-down routine—stretch, meditate, or read before bed. Keep your room cool and dark, avoid alcohol close to bedtime, and if possible, get outside in natural light during the morning. Strength training and cardio also support deeper sleep, but keep intense workouts earlier in the day. If sleep continues to be elusive, consider magnesium supplementation or gentle nighttime yoga.

7. Hydrate & Replenish

Estrogen plays a role in fluid balance, so hydration needs to shift during this stage of life. Aim for regular water intake throughout the day, and consider adding electrolytes if you sweat heavily or exercise often. Minerals like magnesium, calcium, and vitamin D are especially important now—magnesium supports sleep and mood, calcium and vitamin D protect bones, and together they all help keep muscles and nerves functioning properly. Food sources are great (leafy greens, nuts, dairy, fortified foods), but supplements can help fill the gaps if needed. Even small steps, like starting your day with water and a pinch of sea salt, can make a difference.


This is a New Beginning, Not the End

It’s easy to feel like midlife means slowing down, but that’s far from the truth. With the right tools, this season can be a time of strength, clarity, and self-discovery.

That’s why we’re so excited to invite you to our upcoming Women’s Wellness Workshop: Navigating Perimenopause, hosted by Awake Pelvic Health and Flostate Fitness.

Saturday, September 27th
9:30 – 11:30 am
700 Commerce Drive #130, Woodbury, MN 55125
$79 per person or $120 for two tickets
Click here to purchase workshop tickets

What to Expect:

  • LEARN: Dr. Hannah Strom will bring clarity on perimenopause—covering hormones, pelvic floor, bone health, sleep, mood, and lifestyle tips. Dietitian Rachel will share how nutrition can support your hormones, gut, energy, and long-term health.
  • MOVE: A 60-minute yoga practice with Alice, blending pelvic floor-friendly movement, breathwork, and strength, followed by journaling and reflection.
  • CONNECT: Time to share snacks and conversation with women who get it—leaving you refreshed, understood, and empowered.

Space is limited to 12 participants, so reserve your spot today! If tickets are sold out, email us at info@theflostate.com to join the waitlist.

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The Flostate | PO Box 251155, Woodbury, MN 55125 | info@theflostate.com | 651-412-1778

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