There was a time when exhaustion was seen as something that came after hard work. A long day, a busy week, a sleepless night with a toddler—fatigue made sense. But many women in their 30s today are describing something very different: a kind of tiredness that lingers through weekends, survives vacations, and refuses to disappear even after a full night’s sleep.
For many, the first explanation offered is stress. Work stress. Parenting stress. Emotional stress. The assumption feels almost automatic. However, doctors say that persistent exhaustion in women is often more layered than that, and sometimes the body is signaling that something deeper needs attention.
Recent health observations and medical studies suggest that hormonal changes, iron deficiency, thyroid imbalance, poor sleep quality, and nutritional gaps are increasingly affecting women much earlier than expected. What makes it difficult is that the symptoms arrive gradually: a little brain fog, more irritability, feeling unusually drained after simple tasks, difficulty sleeping despite being tired all the time. Because these changes build slowly, many women simply adapt to them instead of questioning them.
A 2023 report by the Government of India’s National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5) found that anaemia continues to affect a large percentage of Indian women in reproductive age groups, a condition strongly linked with fatigue and poor concentration. And that exhaustion often becomes invisible because women have been conditioned to carry on through it.
When “Stress” Becomes an Easy Label for Everything
Doctors say one of the biggest problems is how quickly women’s fatigue gets reduced to stress alone. Dr. Anita David, Consultant Gynaecologist and Infertility Specialist at HOSMAT Hospitals, explains, “Many women in their 30s and 40s struggling with poor sleep quality, dropping energy levels, mood swings, and poor cognitive function are told they are simply stressed. However, the truth is, all of these signs are linked to early hormonal shifts due to perimenopause.”
Perimenopause is the transitional phase before menopause, and it can begin much earlier than most women expect, sometimes in the late 30s. During this phase, hormone levels begin fluctuating unpredictably, particularly oestrogen and progesterone. What many women do not realize is that hormones influence far more than periods. They affect sleep cycles, mood stability, body temperature, metabolism, memory, and emotional regulation. So when hormone levels shift, the body often feels unfamiliar long before menopause officially begins.
Women may notice they wake up repeatedly at night. Some experience sudden heat sensations or night sweats. Others feel mentally slower or emotionally overwhelmed by ordinary situations. Because these symptoms overlap with everyday stress, they often go unnoticed for years.
The Sleep Problem Nobody Talks About Enough
One of the strongest links doctors are now observing is the connection between hormonal changes and poor-quality sleep. Dr. Anita David says, “According to medical research, sleep disturbances can occur years before menopause with fluctuating levels of oestrogen and progesterone, disrupting the body's circadian rhythm or natural sleep-wake cycle.”
This matters because not all exhaustion comes from lack of sleep. Sometimes it comes from poor-quality sleep. A person may technically sleep for seven or eight hours and still wake up feeling depleted because the body is not entering restorative deep sleep properly. Frequent awakenings, lighter sleep, and hormonal disturbances interrupt the body’s repair cycle.
Dr. David further explains, “Frequent awakenings, night sweats, lighter sleep, poor quality of sleep leads to a state of continuous, chronic exhaustion which does not improve even after taking rest.” Research from the National Institutes of Health also notes that sleep disturbances become increasingly common during hormonal transition years and are associated with mood changes, anxiety, and reduced cognitive performance.
What makes this particularly difficult is that many women continue functioning despite the exhaustion. They keep working, caregiving, managing homes, and meeting expectations while silently operating on depleted energy reserves. Over time, the body begins paying the price.
The Hidden Medical Conditions Behind Constant Fatigue
Stress may intensify fatigue, but doctors say it is often not the original cause. Dr. Manjula Anagani, Padmashree Awardee and Clinical Director at CARE Hospitals, says, “What’s becoming increasingly common in clinics is women in their 30s describing a kind of tiredness that doesn’t improve even after rest. Many assume it’s just stress, work pressure, or parenting demands, but quite often there’s an underlying medical reason contributing to it.”
Among the most common reasons is iron deficiency. Iron helps carry oxygen through the blood. When levels fall, the body struggles to produce enough healthy red blood cells, leading to tiredness, dizziness, weakness, headaches, and poor focus. Women with heavy periods are particularly vulnerable. Dr. Anagani explains, “Iron deficiency remains one of the most overlooked causes, especially in women with heavy periods or irregular eating patterns.”
Another commonly missed issue is thyroid imbalance. The thyroid gland regulates metabolism and energy production. Even mild disturbances can leave women feeling unusually exhausted, mentally foggy, emotionally low, or physically sluggish. Dr. Anagani says, “Thyroid disturbances can also present very subtly in the beginning—low energy, poor concentration, hair fall, disturbed sleep—symptoms that are easy to dismiss initially.”
Nutritional deficiencies also play a major role. Strict dieting, skipping meals, protein deficiency, low Vitamin B12, and Vitamin D deficiency are increasingly common among urban women trying to balance weight management with busy schedules. The body can cope for a while, but eventually it begins sending warning signs.
Why Many Women Normalize Exhaustion Until It Becomes Severe
One reason this issue goes unnoticed is because women are often expected to tolerate discomfort. Being tired has almost become part of modern womanhood. Many women laugh off exhaustion as adulthood. Some describe themselves as “always tired” so casually that they stop recognizing it as a health concern.
Dr. Manjula Anagani points out, “The problem is that women tend to normalize feeling exhausted for long periods before seeking help, and these issues often go undetected unless looked at more closely.” That normalization can delay diagnosis for years.
Many women continue functioning through fatigue because their symptoms appear gradual rather than dramatic. Unlike sudden illness, chronic exhaustion creeps in slowly. Energy reduces little by little. Mood shifts become frequent. Concentration drops. Sleep becomes lighter. Hair fall increases. Motivation disappears. And because women continue managing responsibilities despite all this, their exhaustion often remains invisible to others too.
In some cases, fatigue may even overlap with chronic fatigue syndrome or mental health conditions like anxiety and depression, making proper medical evaluation even more important.
So What Actually Helps?
Doctors say the first step is simple but powerful: stop dismissing constant exhaustion as “normal.” If fatigue persists for weeks or months despite adequate rest, it deserves attention. Blood tests for iron levels, thyroid function, Vitamin B12, and Vitamin D can often identify issues early.
Sleep also needs to be treated as a health priority rather than a luxury. Simple changes help more than many people realize:
- Maintaining a consistent sleep schedule
- Reducing screen exposure before bed
- Eating balanced meals instead of restrictive diets
- Including enough protein and iron-rich foods
- Limiting excessive caffeine late in the day
- Engaging in moderate physical activity
- Seeking medical advice when symptoms persist
Dr. Anita David stresses, “Persistent fatigue in women should therefore not be dismissed as mere burnout. It may be indicative of an early biological transition, deserving timely recognition, better sleep assessment, and holistic care.”
There is also growing recognition that women need healthcare conversations that go beyond survival mode. Exhaustion should not become a personality trait. Constant depletion is not proof of strength. Sometimes the body is not asking women to push harder. It is asking them to finally listen.



