Understanding PMDD: When the Menstrual Cycle Significantly Impacts Mental Health










Understanding PMDD: When the Menstrual Cycle Significantly Impacts Mental Health | The Wellness Place Bassendean

Understanding PMDD: When the Menstrual Cycle Significantly Impacts Mental Health

By Elysia Bullen, Registered Counsellor & Psychotherapist

Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD) is a severe, cyclical mood disorder that can have a profound impact on a woman’s mental health, relationships, and quality of life. While premenstrual emotional changes are often minimised or normalised, PMDD involves symptoms that are intense, predictable, and significantly disruptive. For women seeking PMDD counselling Bassendean specialists can provide, understanding this condition is the first step toward relief.

Many women living with PMDD spend years feeling misunderstood or dismissed. This article offers a clear and compassionate overview of PMDD and its mental health impacts, highlighting the importance of informed and validating support.

What Is PMDD?

PMDD is a condition characterised by severe psychological and emotional symptoms that occur during the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (typically one to two weeks before menstruation) and ease shortly after menstruation begins.

Unlike PMS, PMDD is not caused by abnormal hormone levels. Instead, it reflects an increased sensitivity to normal hormonal fluctuations, particularly changes in progesterone and its metabolites, which interact with neurotransmitter systems in the brain. This sensitivity can significantly affect mood, emotional regulation, and cognition.

Mental Health Symptoms of PMDD

PMDD primarily affects mood and emotional wellbeing during a woman’s luteal phase. Symptoms may include:

  • Severe low mood, hopelessness, or despair
  • A significant decrease in motivation and interest in daily activities
  • Intense irritability, anger, and/or rage
  • Heightened anxiety or panic
  • Emotional overwhelm or tearfulness
  • Feelings of worthlessness and shame
  • Difficulty concentrating or “brain fog”
  • Social withdrawal and relationship strain
  • In some cases, intrusive thoughts and suicidal ideation

A defining feature of PMDD is its cyclical pattern. Many women report feeling like themselves again once menstruation begins, which can lead to confusion, self-doubt, or minimisation of their experience.

The Emotional Impact of a Cyclical Condition

Living with PMDD can be emotionally exhausting. The recurring nature of symptoms may contribute to shame, guilt, and anticipatory anxiety about upcoming cycles. Over time, this can erode confidence and trust in one’s own emotions.

Relationships are often affected, as loved ones may struggle to understand sudden changes in mood or behaviour. Without appropriate recognition and support, women may internalise blame or fear they are “too much” or unstable.

PMDD and Misdiagnosis

PMDD is commonly misdiagnosed as depression, anxiety disorders, bipolar disorder, or personality-related difficulties. While symptoms may overlap, PMDD is distinguished by its timing and predictability in relation to the menstrual cycle. Tracking symptoms across several cycles is often an important step in identifying PMDD and accessing appropriate care.

A Whole-Person Approach to Support

PMDD sits at the intersection of biology, psychology, and lived experience. Hormonal sensitivity interacts with factors such as stress, trauma history, sleep, nutrition, metabolic health, and relationship dynamics. For this reason, effective support is rarely one-dimensional — an integrated approach is often most supportive.

The Role of Counselling

Counselling can provide a validating and informed space for women living with PMDD. A trauma-informed, respectful space where hormonal mental health conditions are taken seriously and explored with nuance can make a profound difference. Therapeutic work may involve psychoeducation, reducing shame and self-blame, supporting emotional regulation, preparing for luteal-phase vulnerability, and navigating relationship impacts.

If your mental health feels markedly different at certain points in your cycle, this is worth exploring. You do not have to navigate this alone.

Call The Wellness Place on (08) 9379 3838 or visit our contact page to book an appointment.


Article by Elysia Bullen, Registered Counsellor & Psychotherapist, Perth.


Is Chiropractic Safe? Let’s Talk About the Evidence








Is Chiropractic Safe? Myths vs Evidence | The Wellness Place Bassendean


Is Chiropractic Safe? Let’s Talk About the Evidence

You’ve probably seen both passionate endorsements and alarming warnings about chiropractic. When it comes to your health, confusion isn’t helpful. At The Wellness Place in Bassendean, we believe you deserve straight answers about chiropractic safety.

Myth 1: “Chiropractors aren’t real doctors”

In Australia, chiropractors complete a minimum five-year university degree and are registered with AHPRA — the same body that regulates medical practitioners. They meet the same rigorous standards.

Myth 2: “Neck adjustments cause strokes”

The landmark Cassidy et al. study (2008, Spine) examined over 800 stroke cases and found no evidence of excess stroke risk from chiropractic care compared to GP visits. The association between chiropractic and stroke was the same as GP visits — suggesting the underlying symptoms drove people to seek care, not that the care caused the stroke. Your risk is roughly 1 in 2 million to 1 in 5 million adjustments.

Myth 3: “Once you start, you have to keep going”

No ethical chiropractor will pressure you into long-term commitments. At TWP, we assess, treat, and review. Ongoing care is always your choice.

Myth 4: “Chiropractic is dangerous”

Malpractice premiums for chiropractors are 10 times lower than medical doctors — because claims data backs the safety record. Minor soreness after an adjustment is common (30-60% of patients) and resolves within 24 hours. Serious complications are exceptionally rare.

The Bottom Line

Chiropractic is one of the most thoroughly researched and safest non-invasive treatment options available. Australian training standards are world-class and serious adverse events are vanishingly rare.

Have questions? Call (08) 9379 3838 or visit thewellnessplace.com.au. 9 Old Perth Road, Bassendean.