Bookwire's "Meet the Author"
Neela
Sakaria speaks with
Susun Weed, author of
NEW
MENOPAUSAL YEARS, THE WISE WOMAN WAY
ISBN: 1888123036
November 9, 2003
Neela Sakaria: Thank you for joining us Ms. Weed. Can you tell our readers
a bit about your professional background?
Susun Weed: I have been actively involved in helping women with their
health since 1972. I personally got interested in herbal medicine in
1965. It is interesting to me that my great grandmother, unknown to
me at the time, was an herbalist in her village in Switzerland. All
of my mother's sisters and my grandmother have herbal stories and seem
to know things about herbs. Basically, I can say that is true of everybody.
But once it became known that I was interested in herbs, there was a
tremendous amount of information that was available to me through my
extended family, that I hadn't known was available.
Neela: How long have you been writing about herbal remedies?
SW: My first book was published in 1984. All of my books have been
about women's health and herbal medicine. My first book was WISE
WOMAN HERBAL FOR THE CHILDBEARING YEAR.
Neela: What inspired you to sit down and write NEW
MENOPAUSAL YEARS?
SW: After writing my first book, I did a more general purpose herbal,
HEALING
WISE, for everyone. After that, I looked around and realized I was
getting into my mid-forties, with menopause on the horizon. I thought
I better learn as much as I can and write it all down before I lose
my memory! While I was working on the menopause book, it became very
clear to me that while women do not die of hot flashes, they do die
of breast cancer. So my next book was BREAST
CANCER, BREAST HEALTH! THE WISE WOMAN WAY.
Now, 12 years later, many of the predictions of my first menopausal
book have come true. I said that taking hormones would increase the
risk of heart disease and breast cancer, and would not help in terms
of maintaining mental acuity, and preventing fractures. Here we are
about 12 years later, and these predictions have come true. So, I had
to revise the book to help steer women away from the alternatives that
they are being pushed towards - primarily, soy and progesterone cream.
Neela: Are you happy with the response that the book has received?
SW: I am tremendously happy with the response that all of my books
have gotten. Many have been translated into French and German. The sell
throughout the world in the British Commonwealth as well as many other
countries. We get hundreds of emails from all over the world, from women
who are delighted. Many say they find these books to be like bibles,
and what is in there works and is safe. I have gone around and asked
people what works, and have put all of that in a form and in a pattern
that works for women.
Neela: How much research was involved in writing these books? What was
the process?
SW: I don't do direct scientific research. My research is more on the
order of talking to people and doing literature searches. I read more
than 100 periodicals on a monthly basis - ranging from natural history,
to science, to health, to archaeology, to specific things about the
breasts or reproductive health. All of that goes into my "cooking
pot," shall we say.
Neela: What are the most common misperceptions surrounding women and
menopause?
SW: I would say the primary misconception is that menopause is a time
when we have less hormones. In fact, it is a time when we have very
high levels of hormones. As part of that, people believe women lose
estrogen during menopause. In fact, we are born making 30 types of estrogen,
and the 30th type turns on at puberty and off at menopause. So in fact,
we continue to make those 29 types every day of our lives. As a post
menopausal woman, this vision of the revised New Menopausal Years, came
after I had gone through it. So it is full of juicy personal details
as well. As a post menopausal woman, I can tell you I'm not missing
anything at all.
Neela: You reach out to the public not only through your writing, but
through other methods as well (radio, television, web). Looking back,
do you feel satisfied with the work you have done as an educator on
women's health?
SW: When I turned forty in 1986, I made a commitment to spend the next
20 years making the Wise Woman Tradition an option. At this point, we
look around and see the words "Wise Woman Tradition" used
commonly by people and authors. I am very satisfied, I feel that I have
alerted women especially, to the idea that there is more than a choice
between modern medicine and alternative choice. There is a choice for
the world's oldest healing traditions, The Wise Woman Way, where we
nourish the unique wholeness of the individual.
Neela: What is the "healing cloak of the ancients"?
SW: It is a metaphor for the idea that all of those who have gone before
us, our ancestors, are the ancient ones. Each one of us represents a
thread in an ongoing weaving. When we return to taking care of ourselves,
we do something that is not just good for ourselves, but is good for
our communities and for the planet. It is really kind of a political
statement, to say that I can take care of my own self with simple, safe,
home remedies.
Neela: What challenges did you face in founding the Wise Woman Center?
SW: I have faced the challenges that many before me have faced. Uncertainty
about financial resources, whether or not I was going to be able to
do everything I wanted to do. I write, I run a healing center, I run
a publishing company, I train apprentices who live with me. I also milk
a herd of dairy goats! The Goddess has supported me in all of my endeavors,
and has allowed me to do everything I wanted. I have learned to take
it on faith, one day at a time, and admit that I can't control life.
Neela: What wisdom would you share with women who might be afraid of
the changes their bodies will face when menopause arrives - so afraid
that they may not want to learn?
SW: That was a big issue in my book on breast health. One of my distributors
refused to carry the book because it was a "scary topic."
I told her I'd give her the first case free, and if she couldn't sell
it, I'd take it back. They now order that book 3,000 copies at a time.
My books are called the perfect antidote to fear. To a woman who is
afraid of menopause, I'd say what did you do for puberty? Most women
will laugh say, I didn't do anything for puberty! I'd say right, and
you got through it. You don't need to do anything - menopause is just
as natural as puberty, and just as upsetting.
Neela: Is there anything else you'd like to share with our readers?
SW: I'd like to say that my books and my teachings spring
out of the three big ideas that I have had. One of those is called the
three traditions of healing. I talk about that in HEALING
WISE. Another one of those ideas is the six steps of healing - an
ordered approach to taking the confusion out of which remedies to use.
My menopause and breast cancer books are based on the six steps of healing.
My third big idea is drinking nourishing herbal infusions on a daily
basis to get teeming amounts of minerals and vitamins into our diets
and our bodies. I continue to work on the Wise Woman herbal theories.
I am working on a companion volume to HEALING WISE, called HEALING WELL.
Also coming up within the next five years will be DOWN THERE, THE WISE
WOMAN WAY - another simple, safe book of remedies.