Hot & Unbothered


 A grown woman’s guide to hormones, weight loss, and feeling like yourself again 

 
There is a particular confidence that settles in during a woman’s forties. It isn’t loud, but it is undeniable, shaped by years of managing careers, households, friendships, crises, and expectations. It comes from knowing what matters—and what doesn’t. 

And then, just as that clarity takes root, our bodies decide to renegotiate the terms. 

Sleep grows elusive. Metabolism slows. A glass of wine feels different. Heat rises in board meetings. Brain fog interrupts sentences mid-thought, and the scale resists even the most disciplined routine. 

Welcome to your forties, baby. 

No one quite explains this chapter—the one where capability is at its peak, yet hormones begin their quiet shift. It can feel unfair. After everything accomplished, this? 

The truth is far less dramatic and far more biological. 

Chad Van Horn, a board-certified physician assistant accredited by the NCCPA and recognized among the Top 100 “Best Aesthetic Providers in America,” works with women navigating this recalibration every day. Trained at Barry University in Miami, he approaches hormone and metabolic health with precision rather than panic. 

“The biggest misconception,” he says, “is that hormone therapy and weight loss are all or nothing.” 

Smart women know better. Hormone replacement therapy, when thoughtfully prescribed, is not about chasing youth. It is about restoring equilibrium as estrogen and testosterone decline. Sleep shifts. Mood fluctuates. Libido changes. Metabolism slows. These are measurable transitions, not personal failures. 

“Many don’t realize the real reasons and benefits of HRT and just how life-changing it can be for the right person,” Van Horn explains. His patients commonly report improved energy, better sleep, sharper mental clarity, improved libido, and a steadier emotional state. Not the frantic energy of twenty-five, but the grounded stamina that carries through a full day without crashing by early evening. 

Determining candidacy is deliberate. Van Horn begins with a lifestyle assessment, medical history, and baseline labs. Hormone therapy is typically reserved for midlife and beyond. Weight-loss medications are considered for women who want assistance leaning out, have no medical contraindications, and have not reached their goals through traditional efforts alone. 

Then there is the weight conversation—the one happening everywhere and nowhere at the same time. The slimmer friend insists she’s “just walking more.” Someone mentions cutting sugar. No one quite admits what’s actually helping. For decades, the directive was simple: eat less, move more. 

Yet behind the green juices and Pilates reformers, GLP-1 medications such as semaglutide and tirzepatide are reshaping the conversation by addressing appetite regulation and glucose metabolism at the hormonal level. These medications reduce cravings and excess sugar absorption while improving metabolic efficiency, acknowledging that willpower was never the entire equation. 

“It can actually be highly customized to the person and their situation and goals,” Van Horn says. These medications are not shortcuts; they are metabolic tools administered under supervision. 

When hormone optimization is combined with GLP-1 therapy, results can accelerate. “If metabolism is like having a more efficient processing warehouse, GLP-1 is like having additional workers in the warehouse,” he explains. Balanced hormones improve metabolic efficiency, while GLP-1 medications assist with appetite and glucose control. 

Discernment is essential. Hormone therapy once carried sweeping warnings about cancer and heart disease, though evolving research has challenged earlier assumptions. Van Horn remains cautious with women who have strong genetic cancer histories or markers such as BRCA or HER2, emphasizing informed consent. He would also refer out patients with insulin-managed type 2 diabetes, pancreatic issues, or a history of alcoholism. 

Supervision matters. In a marketplace crowded with pop-up med spas offering suspiciously low prices and cookie-cutter injections, red flags include a lack of proper licensing, sales-driven consultations, and one-size-fits-all protocols. 

Stopping GLP-1 medications without adjusting habits can result in weight regain. “If you remove the agent of change, and go right back to the same habits that caused the weight gain in the first place, you will gain the weight again,” he says. The goal is not lifelong dependency. Some women cycle off and return if needed, while others remain on a low maintenance or “micro” dose to preserve results strategically. 

Beyond aesthetics, the implications are significant. Heart disease remains the leading cause of mortality in the United States, and risks climb with diabetes and metabolic dysfunction. “These GLP-1 medications are doing a lot more good than harm,” Van Horn says. Looking ahead, he sees peptides as the next frontier, noting that researchers are beginning to better understand their role in metabolism and gene regulation. 

The forties bring sharper instincts and a refreshing intolerance for mediocrity—in relationships, careers, skincare, and self-care alike. The hormonal shifts are not betrayals; they are signals that our chemistry is evolving and deserves modern support. 

Forty is not a crisis. It is a recalibration—with better information, better medicine, and far less apology. 

Hot, unquestionably. 
Unbothered, entirely. 

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