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PODCAST · health

Second Opinion

Get the clarity you need on the hottest topics in health and wellness with Second Opinion. Hosted by Rosemarie Beltz, this podcast brings you fresh perspectives from experts, innovators, and disruptors tackling life-changing issues. Each episode unpacks the latest research, debunks the hype, and delivers insights to help you make informed decisions. If you're ready for engaging, enlightening, and occasionally unexpected takes on health and wellness, tune in and discover your second opinion.

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    Gardening After 40: The Surprising Power for Your Brain, Body & Midlife Reset The science, psychology, and emotional shift driving Gen X back to the soil.

    Gardening After 40: The Surprising Power for Your Brain, Body & Midlife ResetThe science, psychology, and emotional shift driving Gen X back to the soil.What if the thing you thought was your mom’s—or your grandmother’s—hobby…was actually one of the most powerful tools for your mental health, your longevity… and your identity in midlife?And what if planting something in the ground…wasn’t about flowers at all—but about finally deciding to stay? EPISODE OVERVIEWThis episode explores gardening—not as a trend or pastime—but as a biological, psychological, and deeply personal shift happening in midlife.Drawing from nearly 30 years inside medicine, combined with lived experience, Rosemarie Beltz examines why more Gen X adults are being pulled toward gardening—and what it reveals about stress, identity, stability, and long-term health.This is not a conversation about plants.It’s about what grows when you stop living in motion… and start paying attention. WHAT YOU’LL LEARNIn this episode:Why gardening functions as real exercise—burning 165–300+ calories in just 30 minutesHow soil exposure may influence serotonin and mood regulationWhat research shows about gardening and cognitive decline, memory, and dementia riskWhy gardening improves nutrition, metabolic health, and cardiovascular risk factorsThe connection between routine, nervous system regulation, and emotional stabilityWhy gardening surged globally during the pandemic—and what that reveals about human behaviorThe difference between external productivity vs internal groundingHow gardening quietly teaches patience, resilience, and letting go WHO THIS EPISODE IS FORThis episode is for:Midlife professionals who want credible, grounded insight—not wellness noiseHigh-functioning individuals navigating change, loss, or recalibrationAnyone feeling successful on paper—but unsettled internallyListeners curious about longevity, lifestyle medicine, and real-life applicationThis episode is not for:Quick fixesperformative self-careor surface-level “just relax” adviceWHY THIS CONVERSATION MATTERS NOWGardening is no longer a niche hobby.It is increasingly recognized as:a tool for mental health and stress reductiona contributor to physical fitness and metabolic healtha support for cognitive function and long-term brain healtha driver of community connection and social resilienceThis isn’t nostalgia.This is public health.HOW THIS EPISODE MAY SHIFT YOUYou may find yourself:Looking at hobbies differently—not as “extras,” but as essential inputsReconsidering what “health” actually means in midlifeFeeling drawn to create one small, grounded space in your lifeRecognizing that growth may not require more effort… but more presenceREFLECTIVE MOMENTSAs you listen, consider:Where in your life are you still in constant motion?What have you outgrown—but haven’t released yet?What actually feels like you now?What would it look like to stay… long enough to let something grow?Stay with that for a moment. PRACTICAL START (NO OVERWHELM)If something resonated:Start small.One plantOne herbOne space you tend consistentlyBecause this isn’t about gardening perfectly.It’s about showing up… and returning. SOURCES & RESEARCHThis episode draws from research and public health data including:Preventive Medicine Reports — gardening and mental healthNational Institutes of Health (NIH) — physical and cognitive benefitsUNC Health Talk — caloric expenditure and cardiovascular impactBrown University Health — stress, memory, and vitamin DBlue Zone research (longevity regions including Okinawa and Sardinia)Community gardening and public health data on nutrition, social cohesion, and urban health A PERSONAL NOTE FROM ROSEMARIEThese episodes are becoming more personal.Because midlife is personal.And the truth is—this isn’t just about what we know… It’s about what we’re willing to see, feel, and stay with.MID-LIFE DECISION COMPLIMENTARY GUIDEIf you’re in a season of making bigger decisions—about your health, your time, or where you invest your energy—Download:The Midlife Guide to Choosing the Right Healthcare Provider (and Avoiding Costly Mistakes) → Available at RosemarieB.comBecause choosing wisely…is part of planting roots too.If this episode resonated:Follow Second Opinion on your favorite platformShare it with one thoughtful person Because high-level conversations—the ones that actually shift perspective—don’t happen alone. ABOUT THE SHOWSecond Opinion is a podcast for intelligent, curious mid-lifers navigating health, reinvention, and real life.Blending:sciencelived experienceand editorial clarityThis is where better questions lead to better decisions. PRODUCTION NOTESecond Opinion is independently produced by Rosemarie Beltz in New York City. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  2. 41

    Seed Cycling for Hormones: Why Women of All Ages Are Talking About It

    Seed Cycling & Hormones: What Women Are Being Told—and What’s Missing (From Your 20s to Menopause: Why Women Are Turning to Seed Cycling)Seed cycling is having a moment.But if I’m being honest—this conversation isn’t really about seeds.It’s about what happens when women—across generations—start pausing… and asking better questions about their bodies.Because whether you’re in your 20s, navigating your first hormonal shifts, or in midlife trying to make sense of changes no one really explained— the questions are actually the same.They just show up at different times.In this episode, I sit down with the founders of Two Moons Health for a conversation that moves beyond trend and into something much more layered.We talk about seed cycling, yes— but also what women are being told… what’s missing… and where things start to feel unclear.Where does the science actually stand?Where is it still evolving?And why are so many women—across generations—starting to look outside traditional pathways for answers?From my perspective—after nearly three decades in healthcare— this is the shift I’m seeing:Not more options.More curiosity.More women reading.Questioning.Connecting dots that were never fully explained.We get into:The tension between food and supplementsThe gap between clinical medicine and lived experienceWhy some symptoms are normalized instead of exploredAnd what it actually means to take a more active role in your healthThis is not a “yes or no” conversation.It’s a how do you think about this conversation. WHAT THIS EPISODE IS REALLY ABOUTWhy seed cycling is trending—and what’s behind the interestThe disconnect between what’s studied and what’s experiencedHow hormone conversations are shifting across generationsFood vs supplements: what actually mattersThe rise of women as informed decision-makersBuilding something in a space that isn’t fully definedTHE CONVERSATIONWhat makes this interesting to me— is the intersection.You have a founder who saw a pattern and decided to build something.And a physician who understands the system—but also its limitations.That’s where the real conversation lives.WHAT YOU’LL START TO NOTICEThis isn’t just a midlife conversation anymore.Women in their 20s, 30s, 40s and beyond are asking the same questions—just at different moments in life.Seed cycling is the entry point.Not the answer.The system isn’t broken—but it’s not complete.And more women are starting to feel that.Curiosity is the shift.Not chasing trends— but learning how to evaluate them.RESOURCESExplore more from Two Moons Health: 👉 https://twomoonshealth.comWhat makes this company interesting isn’t just the product—it’s how it started.Two Moons Health was founded by Terry Chang, JD and Dr. Ulrike Kaunzner, MD—an attorney and a physician whose friendship evolved into a shared curiosity around women’s health, hormonal patterns, and the gaps they were both seeing from very different vantage points.Their work sits at the intersection of clinical medicine, lived experience, and a more thoughtful approach to natural hormone support. What began as a shared curiosity evolved into a simplified, capsule-based approach to seed cycling—rooted in both science and personal experience.“Two Moons” reflects that foundation: connection, cyclical health, and a willingness to question traditional frameworks. WHO THIS EPISODE IS FORWomen navigating hormonal shifts at any stageDaughters learning earlier what their mothers weren’t taughtMothers rethinking what they’ve been toldAnyone who has ever felt like something wasn’t fully explainedListeners who want clarity—not noiseIf this struck a nerve— send it to someone who needs to hear it.Follow Second Opinion wherever you listen.Second Opinion is independently produced by Rosemarie Beltz in New York City— a healthcare professional turned journalist, bringing nearly three decades of clinical experience into conversations that prioritize clarity, curiosity, and informed decision-making. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  3. 40

    Colonoscopy, Colon Health & Longevity: The Screening That Saves Lives

    Why your colon may be the most overlooked driver of midlife health—and what to do about it nowWhat if one of the most preventable cancers is also one of the most avoided conversations?And what if a single decision in midlife could quietly shape your long-term health more than most of what we call “wellness”?We’ve normalized investing in wellness—supplements, longevity protocols, performance metrics. But one of the most effective tools for preventing disease isn’t trending… and it’s often delayed.Because the colon isn’t just about digestion—it’s deeply connected to inflammation, immunity, and long-term disease risk.In this solo episode, Rosemarie Beltz brings her clinical experience and current global research into focus—examining why colon health deserves a central place in the longevity conversation.The ReframeColonoscopy is often misunderstood as a diagnostic procedure.In reality, it is one of the few interventions in modern medicine that can detect and prevent cancer in the same moment.We’ve been taught to think of colonoscopy as something to react to. This episode challenges that idea.As colorectal cancer rises globally—particularly in younger adults—this conversation reframes screening as a proactive, informed decision, not a reactive one.The Insight PromiseYou’ll gain a clear, evidence-based understanding of how the colon functions, what influences its health, and how midlife physiology, lifestyle patterns, and modern interventions are shaping risk in real time.What You’ll LearnWhy colorectal cancer is increasing globally—especially in adults under 50How the colon functions beyond digestion, including its role in inflammation and immunityThe difference between a healthy colon and one at risk for diseaseHow midlife hormonal and metabolic changes affect colon health in both men and womenWhat actually happens during a colonoscopy—and why most people misunderstand the experienceHow to choose the right physician and facility, and why environment and preparation matterWhy This Conversation MattersColorectal cancer develops slowly—often over a decade or more.That timeline creates something rare in medicine: an opportunity to intervene early, prevent progression, and change outcomes before symptoms ever appear.Avoidance doesn’t eliminate risk—it delays awareness.And increasingly, this is a global pattern—not a regional one.About This Episode (Solo Feature)This is a solo episode guided by Rosemarie Beltz- A healthcare professional and journalist with  nearly 30 years of experience in high-acuity surgical environments, combined with current research from leading medical institutions.Rather than a guest interview, this conversation integrates:clinical observationglobal epidemiological dataevidence-based screening guidelinesreal-world patient decision-making patternsIt reflects the perspective of someone who has spent decades in operating rooms—where the difference between early detection and delayed care is not theoretical.About the HostRosemarie Beltz is a cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly three decades of experience working alongside surgical teams in operating rooms across the country.She is the host of Second Opinion, a podcast exploring health, decision-making, and reinvention in midlife through the lens of science and lived experience.The show is independently produced in New York City and reaches listeners across more than 40 countries.Shareable Takeaways“Colonoscopy isn’t just screening—it’s prevention in real time.”“The most powerful longevity decisions aren’t complicated—they’re the ones we avoid.”“A healthy colon is quiet. Disease is what makes it loud.”“Prevention is rarely dramatic—but its absence is.”Listen & FollowFollow Second Opinion wherever you listen.If this episode sparked something for you, send it to one thoughtful friend—because the most important health conversations rarely happen alone.Sources & Scientific ReferencesThis episode was built from a combination of clinical experience and current research across U.S. and global health institutions.American Cancer SocietyCenters for Disease Control and PreventionWorld Health OrganizationInternational Agency for Research on CancerU.S. Preventive Services Task ForceNational Institutes of HealthJAMA Oncology (early-onset colorectal cancer trends)PubMed-indexed colorectal cancer researchGlobal epidemiology data on obesity, diabetes, and colorectal cancerConnect with Second OpinionWebsite: RosemarieB.comAvailable on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and YouTubeWe’ve normalized investing in wellness—but we still avoid the conversations that could actually save our lives.Colonoscopy isn’t just screening—it’s prevention. And in a world where colorectal cancer is rising earlier and globally, understanding your body isn’t optional—it’s power.Better decisions in midlife aren’t about doing more—they’re about understanding what matters most and acting on it with clarity. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

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    When You Lose a Pet: Why It Hurts So Much in Midlife

    When You Lose a Pet: Why It Hurts So Much The science of grief, the weight of love, and how to find your way forwardWhat if the grief you’re feeling after losing a pet… isn’t something to “get over”—but something your body and brain are wired to experience?In this deeply personal solo episode, Rosemarie Beltz—cardiovascular perfusionist and medical journalist—explores the profound emotional and physiological impact of losing a beloved pet in midlife.After the recent loss of her 15-year-old Bichon Havanese companion, Oscar, Rosemarie shares an intimate, unfiltered look at grief as it’s actually lived: the silence, the guilt, the disruption of daily life, and the unexpected questions it raises about time, identity, and mortality.Blending nearly 30 years of clinical experience with emerging research in neuroscience, psychology, and cardiovascular health, this episode examines why pet loss can feel as devastating as losing a human loved one—and why so many people feel alone in that experience.You’ll learn:Why the brain processes pet loss similarly to human lossHow oxytocin withdrawal affects emotional and physical healthWhat “disenfranchised grief” means—and why it mattersHow midlife transitions intensify the experience of lossThe real reason guilt shows up after euthanasia decisionsHow grief can manifest physically, including “broken heart syndrome”But more importantly…This episode offers something rarely given in conversations about grief: Permission.Permission to feel it fully.Permission to not rush the process.Permission to understand that grief is not weakness— it’s the continuation of love.If you’ve ever lost a dog, a cat, or any animal who felt like family…this conversation will meet you exactly where you are.Research shows that losing a pet activates the same brain regions associated with human grief, while also triggering a measurable drop in oxytocin—the hormone responsible for bonding and emotional regulation.In some cases, the emotional stress of loss can even contribute to Takotsubo cardiomyopathy, commonly known as “broken heart syndrome,” which mimics a heart attack and is most frequently seen in women over 40.Translation:This isn’t “just emotional.”Your body is processing loss on a physiological level.Key TakeawaysPet loss is a form of grief that is both psychologically valid and biologically realThe absence of daily routines (feeding, walking, presence) creates a profound disruption in identity and nervous system regulationFeelings of guilt after euthanasia are common—and rooted in responsibility, not failureMidlife amplifies loss due to simultaneous life transitions and shifting identityGrief is not something to eliminate—it’s something to integrateAction StepsIf you’re navigating this right now:1. Awareness Name what you’re feeling: “This is grief. This is love with nowhere to go.”2. Adjustment Create one small daily anchor—something that gently replaces the rhythm you’ve lost.3. Alignment Redirect your love through memory, reflection, or intentional connection.Because love doesn’t disappear. It changes form.Midlife MomentYou didn’t just lose a pet.You lost a rhythm… a witness… a piece of your everyday life.And in that loss, many people experience something deeper—an awareness of time, change, and their own mortality.But awareness is not an ending.It’s an awakening.Midlife teaches us this:You can be deeply grateful… and completely heartbroken… at the same time.Dedication This episode is dedicated to Oscar—my 15-year Bichon Havanese companion, quiet witness, and constant source of unconditional love.A life that was small in size…but immeasurable in heart and presence.And to my parents—who helped me raise him during seasons of long hospital hours, unpredictable schedules, and going back to school.They cared for Oscar as if he were their own.He was never just my dog… he was ours.  And they feel this loss just as deeply.With deep gratitude, I also want to acknowledge the veterinary teams who cared for him—and for me—during his final days.At The Heart of Chelsea Animal Hospital and VEG Animal ER in Manhattan.Their compassion, professionalism, and humanity in one of life’s hardest moments did not go unnoticed.In a space where medicine meets emotion…they brought both skill and heart.Resources and ReferencesHealth for Animals Global Pet Report (2024) — Global pet population + human health impactAmerican Heart Association / NEJM — Takotsubo CardiomyopathyPsychology Today — Pet bereavement and emotional processingAKC Canine Health Foundation — grief and physical healthHelpGuide.org — coping with pet lossConnect and ContinueFor more evidence-based insights and midlife guidance:Visit RosemarieB.com Download: The Midlife Guide to Choosing the Right Healthcare Provider (and Avoiding Costly Mistakes)Share and CommunityIf this episode resonated with you, share it with one thoughtful person.Because grief feels isolating—but it doesn’t have to be.Follow and ReviewIf you value conversations that blend science, lived experience, and thoughtful perspective:Follow Second Opinion on your favorite platformLeave a review where you tune inYour support helps this show reach more people seeking better answers and support.ListenAvailable on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeartRadio, and YouTube.About the Show Second Opinion is a podcast for curious, high-functioning adults navigating health, reinvention, and longevity in midlife.Hosted by Rosemarie Beltz—a cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of clinical experience—this show blends medical insight with real-life perspective.Because better questions… lead to better outcomes.Second Opinion is produced independently by Rosemarie Beltz in New York City. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

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    Longevity After 40: What Actually Matters for Aging Well

    What if aging isn’t the problem—but how we’ve been taught to think about it is?By midlife, most people aren’t lacking information. They’re navigating conflicting advice, subtle physical shifts, and a quiet question that rarely gets answered clearly: what actually determines how well you age?The ReframeLongevity has become a cultural obsession—wrapped in supplements, metrics, and optimization strategies that promise control. But the science tells a different story. The majority of how we age is shaped by daily patterns, not extreme interventions. This episode reframes longevity as something far more grounded, measurable, and personal.The Insight PromiseIn this solo episode, Rosemarie Beltz—cardiovascular perfusionist and medical journalist—brings nearly 30 years of clinical experience together with research from Harvard Health and Mayo Clinic to clarify what truly impacts health-span after 40.This is not about doing more. It’s about understanding better.What You’ll LearnWhy longevity is defined by health-span, not just lifespanWhat VO₂ max reveals about long-term survival and performanceHow cellular senescence (“zombie cells”) contributes to agingWhy much of the longevity industry lacks meaningful human dataWhat Blue Zone populations reveal about living well—without optimizationHow midlife changes energy, recovery, and decision-makingWhy This Conversation MattersAt this stage of life, the question isn’t whether you care about your health—it’s how clearly you understand it.This conversation connects science to lived experience, offering a more precise way to think about aging, performance, and long-term health decisions. Not through fear or urgency—but through clarity.About the HostRosemarie Beltz is a cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of experience in high-acuity surgical environments and the host of Second Opinion—a podcast exploring health, reinvention, and decision-making in modern life.Independently produced in New York City, the show reaches a global audience of thoughtful, high-performing listeners seeking credible, nuanced conversations.Shareable Takeaways“Longevity isn’t something you buy—it’s something you build.”“Midlife isn’t decline. It’s refined decision-making.”“You don’t need more information—you need better interpretation.”Listen & FollowIf this episode gave you a clearer way to think about longevity, share it with someone navigating this stage of life alongside you.Follow Second Opinion for evidence-informed conversations that cut through noise and bring clarity to complex health decisions. You can also explore more resources and a complimentary guide at the podcast website.Sources MentionedHarvard Health Publishing Mayo Clinic NIH PubMedConnectWebsite: RosemarieB.com Instagram: @SecondOpinionPodcast LinkedIn: Rosemarie BeltzSecond Opinion is where science meets lived experience—helping you make clearer, more informed decisions in midlife and beyond. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  6. 37

    Love After 40: Trust, Chemistry, and “Honest Sex” in Modern Dating | With Shana James

    Why does dating often feel harder after 40—even for thoughtful, successful adults who have done the work?Relationship coach Shana James believes the issue isn’t that good partners don’t exist. It’s that many people are trying to build modern relationships with outdated expectations.In this episode of Second Opinion, healthcare professional and medical journalist Rosemarie Beltz explores the psychology of modern dating, emotional safety, and what actually creates connection in midlife.By the time we reach our 40s and 50s, most of us carry history—careers, divorce, parenting, heartbreak, independence, and changing bodies. Dating isn’t just about attraction anymore. It’s about how two fully formed lives intersect.Shana James has spent more than two decades helping men and women understand each other more clearly and build relationships rooted in honesty, communication, and trust.This conversation explores why dating often feels different in midlife—and what actually works.⸻In This Episode• Why dating after 40 often feels more complicated than expected• The cultural shifts shaping relationships between men and women• What Shana learned from coaching thousands of clients about emotional vulnerability• Why chemistry can be misleading when evaluating compatibility• What emotional safety actually looks like in early dating• How hormonal shifts and life experience influence attraction and communication• Why many thoughtful adults feel burned out by modern dating—and how to reset⸻“Chemistry sparks attraction. Consistency builds trust.”⸻Why This Conversation MattersMidlife is often framed as a time when romantic options narrow.Yet many relationship experts argue the opposite: people over 40 may actually be better positioned to build meaningful partnerships—because clarity replaces fantasy.Dating after 40 isn’t necessarily easier.But it can be far more intentional.⸻About the GuestShana James, MA is a relationship coach, TEDx speaker, and author of Honest Sex: A Passionate Path to Deepen Connection and Keep Relationships Alive.With more than 20 years of coaching experience, she helps men and women rebuild trust, communicate honestly, and create deeper emotional and physical intimacy.She also hosts the podcasts Man Alive and Practicing Love and has led workshops in the global Authentic Relating movement.Website:https://shanajamescoaching.com⸻About the PodcastSecond Opinion explores health, relationships, reinvention, and decision-making in modern midlife.Hosted by Rosemarie Beltz, a healthcare professional and medical journalist with nearly three decades of clinical experience.Produced independently in New York City.⸻Share This EpisodeIf this conversation resonated, share it with someone navigating relationships, dating, or reinvention in midlife.Follow Second Opinion wherever you listen.⸻ 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  7. 36

    Spring Reset: Habits, Rituals, and Why Letting Go Feels Harder in Midlife. Neuroscience, emotional memory, and the psychology of real change

    Spring Reset: Habits, Rituals, and Why Letting Go Feels Harder in MidlifeEvery spring something subtle begins to shift.The light lingers longer in the evening. Windows open. Energy returns after the slower rhythm of winter. And for many people, the season brings a quiet but powerful impulse: the desire to reset.For centuries, cultures around the world have treated spring as a time for renewal. Homes are cleaned before Nowruz, Passover preparations include clearing out the household, and traditional Chinese New Year rituals begin with sweeping away the past year’s energy.Today, neuroscience and psychology offer insight into why this seasonal instinct feels so powerful.In this solo episode of Second Opinion, host Rosemarie Beltz explores the science behind the spring reset — and why midlife often becomes the moment when people begin asking deeper questions about identity, habits, and the life they want to build moving forward.Drawing on nearly three decades of clinical experience inside medicine, Rosemarie examines how emotional memory, self-deception, and the difference between habits and rituals influence real change. She also explores why letting go of old patterns can feel more difficult in midlife — and why clarity often emerges at this stage of life.For listeners navigating careers, relationships, and evolving priorities, this episode offers a thoughtful reflection on how change actually happens.And perhaps more importantly, where it begins.⸻What You’ll Learn in This Episode• Why spring often triggers psychological and behavioral reset moments• The biological connection between sunlight, circadian rhythms, and mood• Why change can feel harder in midlife than earlier in life• The psychology of self-deception and the stories we tell ourselves• How clutter and environment affect stress hormones like cortisol• The neurological difference between habits and rituals• Why emotional memory can keep people stuck in old patterns• How letting go reduces emotional charge and restores clarity• A simple three-step framework for creating a personal spring reset• Why midlife may be the most powerful time to realign life decisions⸻About the HostRosemarie Beltz is a cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of experience working in operating rooms across the United States. Through her work in medicine and medical journalism, she has spent decades observing how people navigate health decisions, life transitions, and personal reinvention.She created Second Opinion to explore the intersection of science, identity, relationships, and longevity in midlife.The podcast now reaches listeners in more than 25 countries and is available on major platforms including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, iHeart Radio, and YouTube.⸻A Midlife ReflectionMidlife is often portrayed as a time of crisis or decline.But for many people, it becomes something very different.A moment of clarity.The years of experience accumulated through careers, relationships, successes, and disappointments begin to reveal patterns more clearly. What once felt uncertain becomes easier to recognize.And sometimes the most important step forward begins with a simple question:What am I still carrying that I no longer need?Letting go rarely means losing something important.More often, it means making space for the life that is still unfolding.⸻Research and Concepts Referenced• Circadian rhythm research on light exposure and serotonin regulation• Psychological studies on cognitive dissonance and self-deception• UCLA Center on Everyday Lives of Families research on clutter and cortisol• Behavioral psychology research on ritual formation and stress reduction• Neuroscience research on emotional memory and limbic system activation⸻ResourcesVisit the website for more insights and resources:https://rosemarieb.comYou can also download the complimentary guide:The Midlife Minute Luxe Guide to Selecting Your Ideal Healthcare Provider (and Avoiding Costly Mistakes)This practical resource helps listeners navigate medical decisions more confidently.⸻Listen & ConnectIf you found this episode thoughtful or helpful:• Follow Second Opinion on your favorite podcast platform• Share the episode with a colleague or friend• Leave a review to help more listeners discover the showThe best conversations about health and life transitions rarely happen alone.Second Opinion is produced by Rosemarie in New York City.🤍Rosemarie 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  8. 35

    Perimenopause Nutrition & Brain Fog | Eat for Cortisol, Blood Sugar, Clarity

    Episode Description This episode explores perimenopause nutrition and brain fog—not from a trend-driven perspective, but through evidence, lived experience, and thoughtful analysis.In this conversation, Rosemarie Beltz examines why “doing everything right” can suddenly stop working in midlife, why it matters now, and what high-functioning women often misunderstand about cortisol, blood sugar, gut health, and food quality during hormonal transition.This episode is for listeners who value clarity over noise, nuance over extremes, and insight that actually applies to real life.Rosemarie is joined by Sarah Lynn Wayne, holistic nutritionist and midlife wellness consultant, whose work bridges nutrition science, nervous system awareness, and practical physiology for women navigating perimenopause.What You’ll Learn in This Episode• Why “eat less and exercise more” deserves a second look in perimenopause • What clinical experience shows about brain fog, cortisol shifts, and blood sugar instability • Why nutrient density matters more than calorie counting in midlife • How gut health influences hormone production and cognitive clarity • The role of protein timing, mineral intake, and detoxification in hormonal recalibration • Common mistakes women make when using GLP-1 medications without foundational support • Why alcohol—even in small amounts—can quietly impact brain function and endocrine health • How digital overload affects cortisol, cognition, and midlife resilience • Practical strategies to stabilize energy without overhauling your lifeWho This Episode Is For• Midlife listeners who want credible, grounded health insights • Professionals tired of surface-level biohacking advice • Women navigating brain fog, fatigue, weight shifts, or hormonal recalibration • Anyone seeking second opinions rooted in physiology—not trendsThis episode may not be for listeners looking for quick fixes, hype, or one-size-fits-all protocols.Key Takeaways• Midlife is not a failure of willpower—it is a shift in physiology • Brain fog is common—and often reversible with targeted support • Eating for cortisol and blood sugar stability changes the conversation • Muscle preservation and mineral density matter more than scale weight • Sustainable change begins with awareness, not urgency • The nervous system influences everything—from cravings to cognitionAbout the GuestSarah Lynn Wayne is a holistic nutritionist and wellness consultant specializing in perimenopause and midlife hormone transitions.After navigating severe brain fog and hormonal disruption in her early 40s, she shifted her practice to focus on helping women work with their biology—not against it.She offers personalized assessments and her signature 3-Day Brain Fog Reset, designed to help women restore cognitive clarity, stabilize hormones, and rebuild metabolic resilience from the inside out.Learn more about Sarah’s work and programs: 🌿 Website: hwww.sarahlynnwayne.comAbout the HostRosemarie Beltz is a cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of clinical experience and the host of Second Opinion—a platform where science meets story and age is always your advantage.Her work bridges medical insight, journalistic integrity, and real-life midlife recalibration for high-functioning professionals seeking better questions—and better answers.The Second Opinion Podcast is produced by Rosemarie in New York City.Listen & SubscribeIf this episode resonated, subscribe to Second Opinion on Apple, Spotify, or your preferred platform.Share it with someone navigating perimenopause, brain fog, or a midlife reset who values credible conversation over quick fixes.New episodes weekly.ConnectWebsite: https://rosemarieb.com Instagram: @rosemariebeltz LinkedIn: Rosemarie Beltz 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  9. 34

    Midlife Insomnia, Perimenopause & Heart Risk: Why Sleep Changes After 40

    When was the last time you woke up tired and told yourself it was normal?Not sick. Not burned out. Just… tired.For many women over 40, exhaustion quietly becomes part of everyday life. We normalize fragmented sleep, middle-of-the-night wakeups, and mornings that never quite feel restorative. But what if sleep isn’t just a lifestyle issue?What if it’s a signal?In this solo episode of Second Opinion, host Rosemarie Beltz—cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of clinical experience—explores the science behind midlife insomnia, hormonal shifts, and cardiovascular risk.March is National Sleep Awareness Month, and the research is clear: we are living through a global sleep crisis. According to the ResMed Global Sleep Survey (2025) of more than 30,000 people across 13 countries:• 7 out of 10 adults struggle with sleep • Nearly three nights per week are unsatisfactory • 22% of people simply “live with it” • 71% of workers have called in sick due to poor sleepBut the story becomes more complex—and more concerning—when we look at midlife.Women between 40 and 60 consistently report worse sleep than men, particularly during perimenopause and menopause, when hormonal changes affect nearly every system involved in sleep regulation.This episode explores why sleep disruption during midlife is not simply inconvenient. It is neurological, metabolic, and cardiovascular.And for many women, it is misunderstood.Episode OverviewSleep is often framed as a soft wellness topic—something associated with bedtime routines, herbal tea, or productivity hacks.But the research tells a different story.A growing body of literature—from JAMA Network Open, Circulation, and NIH-funded studies—demonstrates that insufficient sleep is associated with increased risks of:• cardiovascular disease • stroke • type 2 diabetes • hypertension • obesity • mood disorders • cognitive declineA major JAMA Network Open cohort study found that chronic sleep deprivation is associated with a 29% increase in mortality risk.Not fatigue.Mortality.In this conversation, Rosemarie explains why midlife women are uniquely affected, examining the hormonal changes that reshape sleep architecture and increase vulnerability to conditions like obstructive sleep apnea, insomnia, and circadian rhythm disruption.Drawing on her clinical background and research insights, she reframes sleep not as a lifestyle luxury—but as a critical pillar of cardiovascular and neurological health.What You’ll Learn in This Episode• Why the world is experiencing a documented global sleep crisis • How estrogen and progesterone influence sleep architecture • Why perimenopause increases insomnia and nighttime awakenings • The connection between sleep deprivation and cardiovascular disease • Why sleep apnea risk rises in postmenopausal women • How REM sleep disruption affects memory, mood, and brain health • The role of melatonin, cortisol, and circadian rhythm changes in midlife • Why poor sleep may accelerate brain aging according to the CARDIA study • How sleep disruption affects relationships and emotional regulation • Evidence-based strategies midlife women can implement to improve sleepMidlife TakeawayFor decades, many of us believed functioning on four or five hours of sleep was a sign of resilience.Midlife reveals the truth.Sleep is not a luxury—it is a biological necessity that protects the heart, brain, and nervous system.As hormonal transitions reshape physiology, the body becomes less tolerant of chronic sleep deprivation. What once seemed manageable can begin to affect mood, cognition, metabolism, and cardiovascular health.Understanding these shifts allows women to respond intelligently—not with frustration, but with strategy.Because midlife isn’t fragile.It’s responsive.And when we protect sleep, we protect long-term health.References & ResearchResMed Global Sleep Survey (2025) JAMA Network Open – Sleep deprivation and mortality risk National Institute on Aging (NIH) research on sleep and cardiovascular disease American Heart Association – Life’s Essential 8 CARDIA Study – Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults PubMed – “The Global Problem of Insufficient Sleep and Its Public Health Implications” Circulation – Sleep and cardiovascular outcomes in midlife womenContinue the ConversationIf this episode resonated, consider sharing it with someone navigating midlife health transitions.Second Opinion is now heard in over 25 countries worldwide, and the goal remains the same: thoughtful, credible conversations about health, longevity, and reinvention.And if you’re looking to become a more informed healthcare consumer, visit:https://rosemarieb.comDownload the complimentary resource:Midlife Minute Luxe Guide to Selecting Your Ideal Healthcare ProviderIf you enjoy the show, please follow, share, and leave a review. It helps more people discover the conversation.Second Opinion is produced by Rosemarie in New York City. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  10. 33

    Midlife Fitness After 40: It’s Not Motivation — It’s a System

    This episode explores midlife fitness after 40—not from a trend-driven perspective, but through physiology, lived experience, and thoughtful analysis.In this conversation, Rosemarie Beltz examines the common assumption that fitness struggles in midlife are a motivation problem. Instead, she reframes the conversation around hormones, recovery, strength training, and sustainable systems—why that shift matters now, and what women in perimenopause and menopause often misunderstand about exercise after 40.This episode is for listeners who value clarity over noise, nuance over extremes, and insight that actually applies to real life.What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeWhy willpower is often blamed when physiology is the real variableWhat strength training actually does for women over 40How perimenopause and menopause shift recovery, energy, and body compositionWhy “more cardio” is rarely the solution in midlifeThe role hormones play in muscle, metabolism, and resilienceHow GLP-1 conversations intersect with muscle preservation and long-term healthWhy sustainable systems outperform intensity and short-term challengesHow to build a fitness approach that respects time, biology, and capacityWho This Episode Is ForWomen over 40 navigating fitness, hormones, and recoveryMidlife listeners who want credible, grounded health insightProfessionals who understand systems in business but haven’t applied them to their physiologyAnyone recalibrating their relationship with exercise after years of pushing harderThis episode may not be for listeners looking for quick fixes, aesthetic shortcuts, or one-size-fits-all solutions.Key TakeawaysMidlife fitness is not a motivation issue—it’s a systems issueHormones change context, not capabilityMuscle is protective in midlife—metabolically, structurally, and neurologicallyRecovery becomes strategic, not optionalSustainable structure beats intensity every timeAbout the HostRosemarie Beltz is a cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of clinical experience and the host of Second Opinion—a podcast dedicated to thoughtful, evidence-informed conversations at the intersection of health, reinvention, and lived experience.Through clinical insight and journalistic clarity, she explores what high-functioning mid-lifers need to know—and what they’re rarely told.Second Opinion is produced in New York City.About the GuestJodi Smith is a midlife fitness strategist and the founder of the Fit Forever method—a systems-based approach to strength training designed specifically for women over 40.Her work focuses on helping women build muscle, protect metabolism, and train in alignment with hormonal shifts rather than against them. Rather than prescribing more intensity, she emphasizes structure, recovery, and sustainable progression.Through physiology-informed coaching, Jodi helps women move from frustration to strategy—prioritizing strength, resilience, and long-term health.Learn more about her coaching and training programs at: https://fitforeverladies.com/Listen & SubscribeIf this episode resonated, subscribe to Second Opinion on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or your preferred platform.Share this episode with someone who values credible conversation over cultural noise.ConnectWebsite: RosemarieBeltz.com Instagram: @rosemariebeltz LinkedIn: Rosemarie Beltz 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  11. 32

    Midlife Heart Health: Menopause, “Normal” Fatigue & the Checkup That Matters

    Episode Summary Midlife heart health is not about panic — it’s about calibration.In this American Heart Month solo episode, Rosemarie Beltz — cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of clinical experience — breaks down what actually happens to cardiovascular risk during menopause, why “normal” fatigue may be measurable, and how high-functioning midlifers can recalibrate before a crisis.This episode explores:• The connection between menopause and heart disease • Why arterial stiffness accelerates during the menopausal transition • Coronary microvascular disease and why “normal tests” don’t always mean no problem • Why heart disease remains the leading cause of death globally • The importance of a midlife heart health checkup • GLP-1 medications and evolving cardiometabolic science • Why high performers need better data — not less careIf you are navigating midlife, perimenopause, menopause, stress, sleep shifts, or unexplained fatigue — this episode offers clarity, not fear.This conversation builds on Rosemarie’s earlier interview with interventional cardiologist Dr. Kimberly Skelding on menopause and cardiovascular risk — part of Second Opinion’s longitudinal approach to midlife health.Who This Episode Is For• Women 40+ navigating perimenopause or menopause • Midlife men avoiding preventive care • High-functioning professionals who postpone their own labs • Global listeners seeking evidence-based clarity • Anyone who has been told “your tests are normal” but still feels offKey Takeaways• Midlife is not when heart disease starts — it’s when accumulation becomes measurable. • Menopause is a vascular inflection point, not a moral failure. • Coronary microvascular disease is more common in women, especially in low-estrogen states. • A midlife heart checkup is calibration — not reassurance. • GLP-1 medications are evolving cardiometabolic medicine, but fundamentals still matter. • High performers require precision data, not dismissal.Research & Clinical Sources Referenced• CDC — Heart Disease Facts and Statistics • CDC — American Heart Month Toolkit • American Heart Association — Coronary Microvascular Disease • SWAN Study (Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation) — Arterial stiffness and menopause transition • FDA — Wegovy (semaglutide) cardiovascular risk reduction approval • AHA Journals — Vascular aging in menopauseRelated Episodes If this episode resonated, continue here:• Menopause & Heart Health: A Clinical Conversation with Dr. Kimberly Skelding A foundational discussion on vascular risk, symptoms often dismissed in women, and precision cardiology in midlife.• Midlife Fitness: Train Smarter, Not Harder Strength training, hormones, and cardiometabolic health after 40.• Sleep & the Midlife Nervous System How sleep fragmentation drives hypertension and metabolic risk.Second Opinion builds conversations longitudinally — not episodically.Global Listener NoteCardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death worldwide.To listeners across Canada, the UK, Ireland, Australia, Europe, Africa, and Asia — midlife vascular shifts are not regional. They are physiological.Midlife women everywhere deserve better data.If this episode was valuable:• Follow or subscribe to Second Opinion • Leave a review  • Share this episode with someone navigating midlife fatigue or stress • Book your midlife heart health checkupAbout Second OpinionSecond Opinion is hosted by Rosemarie Beltz — cardiovascular perfusionist, medical journalist, and midlife health authority. Where science meets story. Where age is always your advantage.Produced from New York City. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  12. 31

    Estrogen After the Black Box Era: Menopause Medicine Reclaimed in 2026

     Menopause Medicine Reclaimed.A Second Opinion on Hormone Therapy After the Black Box Era — Why Estrogen Was Misunderstood and What Modern Care Looks Like in 2026Episode DescriptionThis episode explores menopause medicine and hormone therapy after decades of confusion—not from a trend-driven perspective, but through evidence, lived experience, and thoughtful analysis.In this conversation, Rosemarie Beltz sits down with Dr. Betsy Greenleaf, a triple board-certified physician and leader in women’s pelvic, hormone, and integrative health, to examine how the Women’s Health Initiative reshaped menopause care, why estrogen was widely misunderstood, and what is changing in 2026.Together, they unpack the “black box era,” the institutional blind spots in women’s midlife health, and why individualized hormone care still struggles inside a standardized medical system.This episode is for listeners who value clarity over noise, nuance over extremes, and insight that actually applies to real life.What You’ll Learn in This EpisodeIn this episode, we discuss:Why “it’s just aging” deserves a second lookWhat the research — and clinical experience — really show about hormone therapyHow the Women’s Health Initiative shaped decades of fearWhy the FDA’s 2025–2026 updates to boxed warnings matterThe difference between bio-identical hormones, synthetic hormones, and birth controlWhy labs alone can mislead in perimenopauseHow estrogen receptors influence brain, heart, bone, and vascular healthThe intersection of menopause and cardiovascular riskWhen SSRIs are appropriate — and when they may miss the root issueWhy gut health, stress, and cortisol affect hormone responseHow to advocate for yourself when you feel dismissedPractical next steps for finding competent, current careWho This Episode Is ForThis episode is for:Midlife listeners who want credible, grounded health insightProfessionals tired of surface-level menopause adviceWomen navigating perimenopause, menopause, or post-menopausePartners who want to better understand hormonal transitionsAnyone seeking informed, individualized care rather than ideologyThis episode may not be for listeners looking for quick fixes, hype, or one-size-fits-all answers.Key TakeawaysMenopause is not a malfunction — it is a physiological transitionContext matters more than headlinesHormone therapy is a tool — not a cure-allEvidence evolves — but bias can lingerLabs guide, but symptoms tell the storySustainable change begins with understanding, not urgencyThe best decisions are informed — not reactiveAbout the GuestDr. Betsy Greenleaf is a triple board-certified physician specializing in uro-gynecology, hormone health, and integrative medicine. She is a national voice in menopause education and the founder of the PAUSE Institute, dedicated to individualized, root-cause care for women and men in midlife and beyond.Learn more:PAUSE Institute  https://pauseinstitute.com Pelvic Floor Store https://pelvicfloorstore.comWomen’s Pelvic Meditation: https://femversity.com/pelvicmediation-sign-upHormone Quiz: https://link.apisystem.tech/widget/quiz/Xxe3hNPG5Iora9LqUILT Follow Dr. Greenleaf on social media for ongoing education https://www.instagram.com/drbetsygreenleafAbout the HostRosemarie Beltz is a cardiovascular perfusionist with nearly 30 years of clinical experience and the host of Second Opinion — a platform dedicated to thoughtful conversations at the intersection of health, reinvention, and lived experience.She blends medical literacy with human insight, asking better questions so midlife decisions become clearer — not louder.Listen & SubscribeIf this episode resonated, subscribe to Second Opinion on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon or your preferred platform.Share it with someone who values credible conversation and wants a smarter discussion about menopause medicine.ConnectWebsite: RosemarieB.com Instagram: @RosemarieBeltz LinkedIn: Rosemarie BeltzSecond Opinion is created, written and produced by Rosemarie Beltz 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  13. 30

    Do You Need a Mental Health Day? Loving Yourself Enough to Manage Stress

    What if the heaviness you’re feeling isn’t a flaw to power through — but a signal worth respecting? In midlife, stress doesn’t just live in your head. It lives in your sleep, your patience, your body, and sometimes… your heart.In this solo episode of Second Opinion, Rosemarie Beltz unpacks what a “mental health day” actually is (and what it isn’t), why high-functioning people are often the last to take the break they’ve already earned, and how a planned reset can be a form of prevention — not a collapse. Drawing on Harvard Health’s reporting on mental health days as a “pre-charge” before burnout, and Mayo Clinic Health System guidance on intentional time away to recharge, this episode reframes rest as leadership.In this episode, you’ll hear:How to recognize when your psychological load is quietly tipping into burnout (before it becomes a crisis) Why “pushing through” can worsen stress physiology — including impacts on blood pressure, sleep, and health behaviors The workplace reality: nearly one-quarter of U.S. workers report taking zero vacation days — even when they have PTO A simple self-check framework: exhaustion, apathy, and dread — rated honestlyHow to plan a mental health day that restores your baseline instead of leaving you more depleted This episode is for you if you’ve been “fine” a little too convincingly — and you’re ready to treat recovery like a real part of your health strategy.Listen, reflect, and share this with someone in midlife who’s been carrying a lot quietly.Better questions lead to better decades — because in midlife, age is an advantage. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  14. 29

    Experience as Leverage, A Second Wind Conversation: From Perfusion to Property — Work, Wealth, and Choice After 40

    Midlife isn’t a breakdown. It’s a data point. When you’ve built a life that looks solid on paper—but your body, bandwidth, or curiosity says “there’s more”—it’s time for a different kind of conversation. In this Second Wind episode, Rosemarie Beltz sits down with Teri Trifiletti, a former cardiovascular perfusionist who quietly leveraged her clinical career into real estate ownership, greater autonomy, and a life designed with intention.In midlife, the question isn’t whether you’re capable. It’s whether the life you built still fits.In this episode of Second Opinion, Rosemarie Beltz launches Second Wind—conversations for high-functioning adults who aren’t broken, but ready to evolve. The focus isn’t dramatic reinvention. It’s strategic expansion: using your experience as leverage, not a limitation.Rosemarie is joined by Teri Trifiletti, a former cardiovascular perfusionist who spent more than two decades in high-acuity cardiac surgery before transitioning fully out of the OR. While still practicing, Teri began investing in real estate, learning through ownership and building a portfolio over time. A relocation to Charlotte became the pivot point that helped her step into full-time property management—creating more flexibility, more control, and a different relationship with work.This conversation is about what many professionals quietly carry: the golden handcuffs of stability, the invisible toll of constant readiness, and the moment you realize success is not the same as freedom.Key themes explored:Why “successful on paper” can still feel misaligned in real lifeHow clinical skills transfer directly into ownership, entrepreneurship, and leadershipThe hidden courage required to leave certainty—even when you’re good at itWhat perfusion teaches you about risk, pressure, documentation, and decision-makingA grounded entry point into real estate that doesn’t require a license or hypeHow to get unstuck by separating real constraints from mindset loopsThis episode is for you if you’re grateful for what you’ve built—but you’re ready for more choice, more autonomy, and a life that supports your nervous system, not just your résumé.Listen in, then take five quiet minutes afterward to ask: What would change if your experience worked for you—fully?Second Opinion is where science meets story—and better questions lead to better decisions. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  15. 28

    Feeling Behind in January Isn’t a Failure — It’s Biology
The Difference Between Falling Behind and Responding to Reality

    Feeling Behind in January Isn’t a Failure — It’s Biology The Difference Between Falling Behind and Responding to RealityJanuary has a way of making capable, high-functioning people feel like they’re already behind. But that feeling isn’t a personal failure — it’s a biological response.In this solo episode of Second Opinion, host Rosemarie Beltz unpacks why January often feels heavier than we expect, especially in midlife. Drawing from stress physiology, circadian biology, and lived clinical experience, she reframes the pressure to “reset” and explains what’s actually happening in the body and brain when motivation dips and clarity feels harder to reach.This conversation isn’t about pushing harder or fixing yourself. It’s about understanding the difference between falling behind and responding intelligently to reality — and why midlife is often the moment that distinction becomes clear.In this episode, you’ll explore:Why January disrupts energy, mood, and motivation at a physiological levelHow decision fatigue and cognitive load show up more sharply in midlifeWhy motivation isn’t a reliable starting point — and what works insteadThe role of systems in reducing stress and supporting sustainable changeHow to release shame and recalibrate without quitting or checking outThis episode is for you if you’re successful on paper, thoughtful by nature, and quietly questioning whether the traditional January reset actually serves you anymore.Listen in, take what resonates, and share this episode with someone who needs permission to slow down without losing momentum.Second Opinion exists to help you ask better questions — about health, timing, and the choices that shape how we live — so midlife becomes a season of clarity, not pressure.Second Opinion is created, written, and produced by Rosemarie Beltz. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  16. 27

    Why So Many Capable People Feel Stuck After 50... The quiet gap between experience and action

    Why So Many Capable People Feel Stuck After 50 The quiet gap between experience and actionThis episode is for you if you’re successful on paper, unsettled in real life, and ready to move from overthinking to aligned action—without making reinvention dramatic.Midlife can feel disorienting when you’re sitting on competence, experience, and a growing awareness that something no longer fits. In this conversation, host Rosemarie Beltz sits down with Sairan Aqrawi—engineer turned business strategist and reinvention mentor—to explore what actually helps people move forward in midlife: clarity, action, and consistency.Sairan’s story begins long before any career pivot. Evacuated from Iraq through a U.S. military operation in 1996, she arrived in the U.S. with a suitcase, $300, and a depth of resilience that would later shape her work. That lived experience now informs how she supports midlife women and men navigating career transitions, identity shifts, caregiving demands, and the pressure of other people’s timelines.Together, Rosemarie and Sairan dismantle the myth of “too late,” name the trap of faux action (preparing without momentum), and reframe midlife as a prime decade for selective ambition—where time, health, relationships, and energy become non-negotiable.Key themes you’ll hear:Why midlife is a reassessment—and how language shapes outcomesThe clarity–action–consistency framework (and where most people get stuck)How identity evolves after disruption, immigration, and caregivingWhy competence—not age or gender—is what truly carries authorityA practical first step: uncovering your “hidden gem” through consistent complimentsAs a gift to Second Opinion listeners, Sairan is offering a complimentary 15-minute discovery session for anyone who mentions the podcast interview. If this conversation sparked clarity—or questions—you can connect with her via her website https://www.sairanaqrawi.com or reach out on Instagram or LinkedIn.Listen in, reflect, and choose one small action that proves you’re still in motion.Second Opinion is where science meets story—and age is always the advantage.Warmly, Rosemarie 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  17. 26

    When Everything Matters, Nothing Moves...
The Case for Choosing One Direction in Midlife

    If you’ve ever felt capable, motivated, and yet strangely stuck, this episode offers a quieter explanation. Midlife doesn’t stall because of a lack of ambition—it stalls because everything feels important at once.In this solo episode, Rosemarie Beltz explores why focus feels harder in midlife and why the solution isn’t more discipline, bigger goals, or relentless motivation. Instead, she offers a grounded reframe: choosing one meaningful direction—and building systems that support real life—can restore clarity, momentum, and calm.Drawing from behavioral science, lived clinical experience, and personal reflection, this episode reframes goal-setting through a midlife lens—one that respects complexity, energy, and long-term health rather than hustle.In this episode, you’ll explore:Why having too many goals quietly drains momentumHow divided focus impacts stress, energy, and decision-makingWhy willpower fails—and what actually holds when life gets busyThe difference between goals, systems, and identityHow choosing one direction can improve many areas of life at onceThis episode is for you if: You’re navigating growth, change, or reinvention in midlife—and want clarity without chaos, ambition without burnout, and progress that feels sustainable.Take a breath. Tune in. And consider what might shift if you stopped trying to fix everything at once—and simply chose your direction.Second Opinion is where science meets lived experience—and better questions lead to better decisions.This episode—and this podcast—are built thoughtfully, one conversation at a time. Second Opinion is written, recorded, and produced by me, Rosemarie, often between long clinical days and very real life. As this show grows, so does my commitment to creating grounded, evidence-informed conversations that respect your time, your intelligence, and your lived experience. If you’re listening, sharing, or returning each week, you’re part of that growth—and I don’t take that lightly. Thank you for being here. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  18. 25

    The Midlife Connection Problem. Why loneliness rises just as relationships matter more

    Why do so many capable, successful adults feel lonelier in midlife than they ever expected?“Loneliness in midlife isn’t a weakness — it’s a signal.”Midlife is often framed as a time of competence, confidence, and professional stride — yet research shows it’s also one of the loneliest stages of life.In this episode of Second Opinion, host Rosemarie Beltz sits down with Sarah Lynn Wayne to explore why connection becomes harder just as it becomes more essential.Blending science, lived experience, and nervous-system insight, this conversation reframes midlife relationships — not as failing, but transforming — and offers a grounded, compassionate perspective on what’s actually happening beneath the surface.What You’ll Hear in This ConversationWhy midlife friendships often fade — even when life looks “full”How hormonal shifts and stress change the way women experience connectionThe difference between healthy boundaries and quiet isolationWhy quality of connection matters more than quantity in midlifeHow safe relationships regulate the nervous systemPractical ways to rebuild connection without overwhelm or self-blameWho This Episode Is ForMidlife listeners navigating changing friendships, partnerships, or communityProfessionals who feel capable on the outside but disconnected on the insideAnyone questioning why relationships feel harder — and wondering what’s normalThis episode is not about fixing yourself. It’s about understanding what’s changing — and responding with clarity instead of judgment.Key TakeawaysMidlife loneliness is common — and it’s not a personal failureRelationships are a core health strategy, not a “nice to have”Hormonal and nervous-system changes influence connection more than we realizeFewer, safer relationships often matter more than wider social circlesMidlife relationships aren’t declining — they’re evolvingAbout the GuestSarah Lynn Wayne is a Nutritionist, Intuitive Wellness Consultant, and healer with over 17 years of experience supporting women through perimenopause and midlife transitions. Her integrative approach blends functional nutrition, nervous-system awareness, and intuitive guidance to help women stop fighting their bodies and start listening — so they can reclaim vitality in their health, relationships, and lives.🔗 Learn more or work with Sarah: https://www.sarahlynnwayne.com/assessmentAbout the HostRosemarie Beltz is a healthcare professional, medical journalist, and host of Second Opinion — a podcast where science meets story, and better questions lead to better decisions in midlife.Listen, Follow, ShareIf this conversation resonated, follow Second Opinion on your favorite podcast platform — and share it with someone navigating midlife in their own way.ConnectWebsite: https://RosemarieB.com  • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@rosemariebeltz5826Signed with love and a dash of Midlife Magic,  ✨ Rosemarie  🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  19. 24

    Before the Year Turns: What Midlife Clarifies

    A New Year’s Eve reflection on attention, endurance, and choosing lessEpisode DescriptionThis New Year’s Eve episode of Second Opinion is not about resolutions or reinvention.It’s about clarity.Host Rosemarie Beltz—medical journalist and clinician with nearly 30 years in healthcare—offers a grounded, reflective look at what midlife quietly clarifies as one year closes and another begins. Drawing from clinical insight, lived experience, and years inside complex systems, she explores why midlife isn’t asking us to do more, but to carry less.This episode examines attention as a finite resource, the cost of open loops, and why subtraction—not addition—often becomes the most intelligent move in the second half of life. With calm authority and journalistic restraint, Rosemarie reframes common assumptions about midlife, productivity, and endurance—without hype, self-improvement language, or pressure to change.A thoughtful listen for anyone ending the year awake, reflective, and interested in entering the next season with precision rather than performance.In This Episode, We ExploreWhy midlife is less about reinvention and more about discernmentHow attention, energy, and mental load shape midlife decisionsThe hidden cost of carrying too much—cognitively and physicallyWhy subtraction often creates more progress than additionThe role of sleep, focus, and protected time as infrastructure—not habitsWhat it means to close the year without resolution cultureWho This Episode Is ForMidlifers (40+) who value science, clarity, and lived experienceListeners who are tired of motivational noise and optimization cultureAnyone seeking a calm, intelligent way to reflect at year’s endProfessionals navigating complexity, responsibility, and transitionAbout the HostRosemarie Beltz is a medical journalist and clinician with nearly 30 years in healthcare. She is the host of Second Opinion and creator of Midlife Minute, where she explores health, clarity, reinvention, and decision-making in midlife through evidence-based insight and thoughtful conversation. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  20. 23

    Midlife Is a Lipid Neighborhood: Cholesterol, Insulin & The “Got Plaque, Get a CAC” Wake-Up Call (Season 2 Premiere w/ Josh Wageman, PhD, DPT)

    Season 2 starts here. And we’re coming in hot—with clarity, comedy, and one of the most misunderstood topics in modern medicine: cholesterol.In this Season Two premiere, I’m joined by Josh Wageman, PhD, DPT—lipid specialist, former Ivy League athlete, and yes… a youth pastor—who has a gift for making complex science feel human (and finally understandable). His core message? Cholesterol isn’t just “good vs. bad.” It’s a system. And midlife is when the system starts telling the truth.We break down why your labs may not “add up,” why insulin is the quiet driver behind so many chronic diseases, and why the goal isn’t obsessing over one number—it’s protecting your heart, your brain, and your future.If you’ve ever stared at your lipid panel and thought, “Wait… what does this actually mean for me?” — this episode is your reset.In this episode, we cover:Why cholesterol stays confusing (even for proactive, educated patients)Josh’s “home security system + lipid neighborhood” framework for preventionThe connection between insulin resistance and cardiovascular risk (even with “normal” glucose)Why fasting insulin can reveal what standard labs miss“Got plaque, get a CAC”: why a coronary artery calcium score can change the entire conversationHDL, LDL, triglycerides, ApoB, Lp(a): what matters, what’s misleading, and what needs contextThe statin conversation—without fear, drama, or tribalismWhy alcohol can raise HDL (and why that doesn’t always mean “better”)How to think like a high performer: movement, prevention, and the long game of longevityMy Season Two intention: My goal for my life is complete longevity—living my most optimal life. And this season, I’m bringing you with me: my curiosity, my questions, and the conversations I wish every mid-lifer had access to sooner.Because getting a second opinion isn’t just smart medicine. It’s smart living.Connect and  follow the show:Website and  listener submissions: RosemarieB.com Send your questions, guest suggestions, and story ideas—I read every one. If this episode supported you, please follow the show and leave a quick review. It helps more mid-lifers find better answers.Signed with love and a dash of Midlife Magic,  ✨ Rosemarie Book mentioned:The Home Security System and the Lipid Neighborhood by Josh Wageman (available on Amazon and Audible)The Home Security System and the Lipid Neighborhood: Un-Complicating Cholesterol and Cardiovascular Disease: Wageman, Josh: 9798992169218: Amazon.com: Books 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  21. 22

    Midlife Is a Solstice: A Christmas and Holiday Reflection on Letting Go of 2025

    In this intimate bonus holiday episode, Rosemarie records from Brooklyn during the final days of December — a week that holds both Christmas and the Winter Solstice, the longest night of the year and the turning point toward returning light.This episode is a permission slip for mid-lifers who feel stretched, reflective, or quietly exhausted at the end of 2025.Blending science, symbolism, and lived experience, Rosemarie explores why midlife mirrors the Winter Solstice so closely — a season of stillness, truth, release, and renewal — and why peace has become more important than performance.You’ll hear a personal reflection on perfection paralysis, nervous system wisdom, and why waiting until January is old energy. Rosemarie also shares why she’s releasing Season Two early, including a powerful kickoff conversation designed to help listeners get a head start on their 2026 health.This episode is not about pushing, fixing, or optimizing. It’s about arriving.In This Episode, You’ll Hear :• Why midlife is its own “solstice season” — and why clarity often comes through slowing down • How perfection paralysis disguises itself as high standards and productivity • The biology of stress, rest, and why December hits the nervous system differently • A simple Solstice reflection ritual: Release / Keep / Seed • How Christmas evolves in midlife — from performance to meaning, boundaries, and legacy • Why Season Two of Second Opinion is starting early (and why your health doesn’t need to wait until January)Who This Episode Is For:• Mid-lifers who feel reflective, tired, or “behind” at year’s end • Anyone craving peace, clarity, and intention instead of hustle • Listeners navigating health, reinvention, and personal recalibration • Those ready to begin 2026 with wisdom — not pressureWhat’s NextSeason Two of Second Opinion begins with a powerful conversation focused on preventive health, clarity, and midlife longevity — dropping earlier than planned because better health doesn’t start on January 1.Stay close.If This Episode ResonatedPlease follow, subscribe, and share Second Opinion with someone who needs a softer landing into the end of the year. Your support helps this independent show reach more people who are seeking better questions — and better answers — in midlife.With gratitude, reflection, and love, Rosemarie Beltz 🤍 Host of Second Opinion Where science meets story — and age is always your advantage. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  22. 21

    Why Midlife Hits Different (It’s Not You): Understanding the Nervous System After 40. Why the End of the Year Can Feel Harder.

    If midlife feels louder, more stimulating, or more exhausting than it used to — you’re not imagining it.In this solo episode of Second Opinion, host Rosemarie Beltz explores why midlife truly hits different and how the nervous system plays a central role — especially during perimenopause, menopause, and the end-of-year season.Drawing on neuroscience, stress physiology, and hormonal health, Rosemarie breaks down what the nervous system actually does, why stress tolerance changes after 40, and why the holidays often amplify fatigue, emotional reactivity, and overwhelm.This is not about fixing yourself. It’s about understanding the system you’re living in — and learning how to work with it, not against it.Blending science with personal reflection, this episode offers clarity, compassion, and practical insight for anyone navigating midlife with curiosity and intention.🧠 IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARNWhat the nervous system does and why it governs stress, sleep, mood, and energyWhy midlife stress feels different after 40How perimenopause and menopause affect nervous system sensitivityWhat neuroception is and why you can feel on edge “for no reason”Why the holidays don’t break your nervous system — they expose cumulative loadThe difference between “resetting” and recalibrating the nervous systemScience-backed ways to support nervous system regulation in midlifeWhy misalignment — not lack of motivation — often leads to exhaustionEnd-of-year reflection questions to carry into 2026❄️ A PERSONAL MOMENTRosemarie shares a quiet winter morning in New York City during the first snowfall of the season — and how a brief pause with a cup of coffee helped calm her nervous system, even while being called into work for an emergency.A reminder that regulation isn’t about escaping life — it’s about learning how to move through it with awareness.✍️ END-OF-YEAR REFLECTION QUESTIONSWhere am I running on adrenaline instead of alignment?What identity am I clinging to that my body is done sustaining?What’s one daily signal of safety I can practice consistently?What would my future self choose today — not in January?What gets to be simpler next year so my nervous system can be stronger?🎧 ABOUT SECOND OPINIONSecond Opinion is a podcast where science meets story — and midlife is not a problem to solve, it’s a system to understand.Hosted by Rosemarie Beltz, journalist and cardiovascular perfusionist, the show explores health, hormones, longevity, reinvention, relationships, and resilience through credible science and lived experience.🔔 FOLLOW & SHAREIf this episode resonated, please follow or subscribe wherever you listen, and share it with someone who might need this conversation.Your support helps Second Opinion reach more midlifers looking for real answers — not more distractions and noise.Take care of your nervous system — it’s been taking care of you for decades.~I'm Rosemarie, coming to you from Brooklyn. This is Second Opinion — where science meets story, and age is always your advantage. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  23. 20

    The Midlife Holiday Glow-Up: Why You May Not Want to Wait Until January

    If you don’t want to start January feeling behind, exhausted, or like you abandoned your own wellbeing… this episode is for you.Today I’m breaking down why midlifers should glow up NOW — not later. December is actually the most powerful time to support your health, immunity, stress, confidence, and clarity, especially in our 40s, 50s, and 60s.Inside this episode: ✨ Why holiday stress hits harder in midlife ✨ Adrenaline vs. authenticity — and how to shift ✨ The science of sleep, immunity, boundaries, and decluttering ✨ Why glow-ups are now inner and outer ✨ Essentialism during the busiest month of the year ✨ Real stories from my week: hospital cases, Sutton Café, Bloomingdale’s, my sister’s 50th ✨ And the 5-part Midlife Holiday Glow-Up Plan (health, wealth, beauty, declutter, love)If you’re ready to treat December as your launch pad, not your loophole — this is your reset.5 Glow-Up Pillars We CoverHealth: sleep, immunity, appointments, movementWealth: quick year-end financial clarityBeauty + Longevity: skincare, strength, red light, mocktailsDeclutter: closet, fridge, inbox, environmentLove + Connection: celebration, rituals, meaningful restWho This Episode Is ForMidlife men and women who want: • Less stress • More energy • Better sleep • Stronger immunity • A clearer, more grounded start to 2026If this helped you…💛 Like the video 📝 Comment & tell me your December glow-up pillar 📩 Share with a friend who keeps saying “I’ll start in January” 🎧 Follow Second Opinion on Apple & SpotifySeason Two is coming — guests are booked, interviews are rolling, and we are glowing up together.✨ Thanks for watching!💛 Rosemarie 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  24. 19

    Prioritizing Yourself in December: A Midlife Guide to Inner Peace, Presence & a Holiday Season That Actually Feels Good

    Most people wait until January to “start fresh,” but midlifers know better: December is where the real reset begins.In this solo episode, Rosemarie invites you to reimagine the holiday season through the lens of inner peace, intentionality, boundaries, and the neuroscience of joy. Blending personal storytelling from New York City, science-backed insights, and wisdom inspired by Deepak Chopra, she offers a practical and soulful guide to navigating the holidays without abandoning yourself.If you’re feeling stretched, overwhelmed, or emotionally overextended this time of year — this episode is the permission slip you didn’t know you needed.🌟 Episode HighlightsWhy midlifers cannot wait until January to prioritize their health and emotional wellbeingThe real reasons the holidays feel heavier in midlife (sleep disruption, emotional labor, caregiving, hormonal shifts)Deepak Chopra’s insight: your outer world reflects your inner worldHow to stay grounded around family or friends with different values, expectations, or energyA simple Mindful Listening practice to help you stay present without absorbing other people’s stressHow small moments of connection (“micro-resets”) protect your cardiovascular and emotional healthA spontaneous NYC moment that became Rosemarie’s “first miracle of the season”The Midlife Holiday Recalibration: five shifts that support inner peace and presenceRituals and tools to regulate your nervous system during a demanding monthWhy looking for everyday miracles is neuroscience — not woo✨ The Midlife Holiday Recalibration: Five Shifts That Truly Serve YouSimplify + Delegate Let traditions evolve. Let people help. Make the season 20% easier.Set Real Boundaries (With Others + Yourself) Protect your sleep, your energy, and your emotional bandwidth.Support Your Nervous System Quiet mornings. Hydration. Gentle movement. Mindful alcohol choices.Make Intentional Decisions Ask: Does this support the holiday I actually want?Look for Everyday Miracles Gratitude rewires the brain and transforms your experience.🧘‍♀️ Simple Actions to Anchor These ShiftsThe 3-Question Check-In:What matters most this month?What drains me?What miracle am I open to?One Morning Ritual + One Evening Ritual to bookend your nervous systemPresence Over Perfection — because people remember how it felt, not how it looked✨ Science Sources MentionedHarvard HealthAmerican Heart AssociationRutgers HealthPsychology TodayNeuroscience of gratitude and stress regulationDeepak Chopra: Mindful Listening & mindset practices⚜️Key Quote from the Episode“Midlife isn’t about controlling the season — it’s about navigating it without abandoning yourself.”📍 Recorded in New York CityBack from California and immersed in the energy of holiday-season NYC, Rosemarie shares reflections from a city that gets louder and brighter — even as your inner world grows clearer.🎧 Enjoying the Show?If this episode supported you: ✔ Follow the podcast on Apple, Spotify, iHeart, or anywhere you listen ✔ Leave a quick review — it helps more midlifers find the show ✔ Share this episode with someone who needs a calmer, more grounded DecemberThank you for being part of the Second Opinion community. Where science meets story… and age is your advantage. 💫 Merry and Happy Holidays, 💛 Rosemarie 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  25. 18

    The Frequency of Gratitude: What Thanksgiving Teaches Us About Midlife

    The Frequency of Gratitude: What Thanksgiving Teaches Us About MidlifeSecond Opinion with Rosemarie BeltzGratitude isn’t just a feeling — it’s a frequency. A scientifically-backed, midlife-shifting recalibration that can lower cortisol, boost happiness chemicals, and literally rewire the brain for resilience and joy.In this Thanksgiving solo episode, Rosemarie brings you to Manhattan Beach, California, where an unexpected encounter with a community “Gratitude Tree” reveals the deeper truth about gratitude — and why midlife is the moment it all hits differently.Warm, reflective, science-backed, and personal, this episode invites you to rethink what gratitude really means… especially when life has been loud, messy, or beautifully complicated.In This Episode, We Explore:✨ The science of gratitude — dopamine, serotonin, cortisol, neuroplasticity ✨ Why midlife changes how we experience gratitude ✨ The Manhattan Beach Gratitude Tree and the message it delivered ✨ The unexpected things Rosemarie is grateful for (yes, even the difficult people + $500 rent hikes) ✨ How gratitude shifts the brain from reactivity to regulation ✨ Why gratitude is a health strategy, not just a holiday theme ✨ Three tiny gratitude prompts to start today — especially if this year was heavy ✨ A global reflection for listeners around the worldKey Takeaways:✔️ Gratitude lowers stress hormones and strengthens emotional resilience ✔️ Midlife clarity comes from contrast — the “before and after” moments ✔️ Even hard experiences can redirect us toward better things ✔️ Gratitude grows through awareness, appreciation, acceptance, and action ✔️ You don’t need a perfect year to find meaningful gratitude — you just need one small thing to startQuestions to Reflect On (Midlife Diaries Forward):What challenged you this year that you’re secretly grateful for?Who showed up for you — even in small ways — and have you told them?What’s one thing you appreciate about yourself right now, without fixing anything?Sources Mentioned:Harvard Health • Mayo Clinic Health System • PositivePsychology.com • PMC • Psychology TodayIf You Enjoyed This Episode:✨ Follow or subscribe to support the show — it genuinely helps us reach more midlifers ✨ Share this episode with a friend who might need a moment of grounding ✨ Leave a review — your words help others find conversations that matterAnd if it’s not your vibe later? You can always unsubscribe — that’s the beauty of midlife. We don’t cling… we choose.About the Show:Second Opinion is where science meets story — hosted by healthcare professional and journalist Rosemarie Beltz. This podcast empowers midlifers with credible insights, personal reinvention stories, and research-backed tools for longevity, vitality, and meaningful living.Connect with Rosemarie:🌐 Website: RosemarieB.com 📸 Instagram: @rosemariebeltz 🎧 Listen on: Apple Podcasts • Spotify • Everywhere you get your podcastsProduced By Rosemarie Beltz 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  26. 17

    The Midlife Pivot: How to Rewrite Your Career (Without Burning It All Down)

    Feeling the pull to change careers in your 40s or 50s? Journalist and healthcare professional Rosemarie Beltz breaks down the science, strategy, and soul of starting over — without starting from scratch. This solo episode of Second Opinion dives into data, purpose, and the personal story behind rewriting your next chapter without burning it all down.🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  27. 16

    Starting Over Without Burning Out: The Energy of Focus Over Hustle — What Atomic Habits Taught Me About Beginning Again

    A midlife reflection on clarity, nervous-system balance, and rebuilding from peace — not pressure.What if the hardest part of starting over isn’t what you rebuild — but what you release? In this solo episode, Rosemarie opens up about the messy, beautiful process of beginning again after a year of pivots and personal reinvention. Drawing lessons from Atomic Habits, she explores how focus—not hustle—creates sustainable growth, why your nervous system is the real gatekeeper of success, and how aligned action outperforms perfection every time. If you’ve felt scattered, behind, or burned out, this episode will remind you: you don’t need to finish strong—you just need to finish aligned. Second Opinion — where science meets story, and age is your advantage. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  28. 15

    What If Everything You Thought You Missed… Was Just Beginning?

    Welcome to Season Two of Second Opinion — the podcast where science meets story, and curiosity just might be the real fountain of youth.Hosted by Rosemarie Beltz — broadcast medical journalist, cardiovascular perfusionist, and midlife reinvention truth seeker — Second Opinion dives into the truth behind health, longevity, and purpose in midlife.If you’ve ever thought, “Wait… is this it?” — it’s absolutely not.This season, we’re cutting through the noise to get real about what matters now — from cellular health and hormones to reinvention, relationships, resilience, and the science of starting over.Our guests? Clinicians, innovators, and real midlifers redefining vitality — people who make you laugh, think, and rethink what’s possible.Because this isn’t your parents’ midlife — it’s ours. Smart. Bold. Beautifully unapologetic. And we’re just getting started.So grab your coffee, your collagen, maybe your reading glasses — and join us. Second opinions aren’t just for medicine anymore — they’re for everything: your health, your work, your relationships, your next chapter.🎧 Listen now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon, or wherever you get your podcasts.Because midlife isn’t the end of the story — it’s the plot twist.About the Host: Rosemarie Beltz is a Columbia-trained journalist and nationally certified perfusionist who bridges the gap between medicine, media, and modern midlife. Her work has appeared on NBC, CBS, and The Today Show. She’s the creator and host of Second Opinion and Midlife Minute, empowering the forty-plus community to live longer, stronger, and more intentionally.🌐 Learn more: www.RosemarieB.com 📱 Follow on Instagram: @midlifeminute | @rosemariebeltz 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  29. 14

    Under Construction: Life, Podcast, and All

    Episode Summary:In this special behind-the-scenes update, Rosemarie shares what’s really been going on since wrapping Season One of Second Opinion. From buying a new home (yay!) to navigating contractor chaos and creative timelines, this honest check-in is all about embracing imperfection, staying in motion, and showing up anyway.You’ll hear how Season One reflections, life transitions, and literal dust have shaped what’s coming next for the podcast—and why Second Opinion is more personal, powerful, and needed than ever.This is midlife in progress. No filters. No fluff. Just truth, momentum, and meaningful moves.What You’ll Hear:The real-life reason Season Two hit a (slightly dusty) delayHow being "under construction" became both metaphor and realityWhat Rosemarie learned from unboxing Season OneThe beauty of pausing, reflecting, and resettingA global milestone: 13 episodes, 10 countries (!)Why Second Opinion is just getting started 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  30. 13

    Season One Wrap-Up: Why This Show Exists (And What’s Coming Next)

    Season One is officially a wrap—and it’s been real. In this honest and energizing solo episode, Rosemarie Beltz reflects on the journey that inspired Second Opinion, the lessons she’s learned behind the mic, and what’s coming next for this growing midlife community.You'll hear about:Why midlife isn’t a crisis—but a recalibrationHighlights from Season One: from cellular health to financial wellnessWhat to expect in Season Two—new segments, new voices, and a smarter approach to thriving at any ageWhy second opinions can be life-saving—far beyond the doctor’s office 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  31. 12

    The Life-Saving Power of a Second Opinion: Medical Errors, Misdiagnosis & Taking Control of Your Health

    What if the first diagnosis… isn’t the right one?In this episode, Rosemarie sits down with Dr. Paula Sauer—a physical therapist, breath coach, and global educator—to explore the life-saving potential of asking more questions and trusting your gut. From preventable medical errors to unnecessary surgeries and cultural norms that silence patients, this candid conversation reveals why speaking up can save your life. Whether you’ve ever felt dismissed by a doctor or unsure of your next step, this episode arms you with real strategies and insider insight on:Why second opinions aren’t rude—they’re essentialHow misdiagnosis happens, even in the best hospitalsTips for preparing for your next appointment (and how to advocate with confidence)The cultural and systemic reasons behind medical silence, especially in women and older adultsWhat every patient needs to know about shame, time pressure, and modern healthcare trapsIf you’ve ever wondered, “Should I get a second opinion?” — this episode is your answer. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  32. 11

    Hungry for More: GLP-1s, Midlife Metabolism, and the Deeper Meaning of Hunger, with Dr. Adrienne Youdim

    What if your cravings had nothing to do with willpower—and everything to do with what you’re truly hungry for?In the season one finale, Rosemarie sits down with Dr. Adrienne Youdim, triple board-certified internist, obesity medicine specialist, and author of Hungry for More. Together, they dive deep into the emotional and biological roots of hunger, the truth about GLP-1 medications like Ozempic and Wegovy, and why midlife metabolism is more complex—and more revealing—than we’ve been led to believe.They explore the science of epigenetics, how emotional stress shows up as physical hunger, and what it really takes to make lasting change in your health. Plus: the connection between ancestry and appetite, the hidden power of self-compassion, and why stillness—not striving—might be your greatest tool for transformation. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  33. 10

    What Your Doctor Isn’t Telling You About Heart Health, with Dr. Ian Riddock

    Think you know your numbers? Think again. Rosemarie sits down with board-certified cardiologist and lipidology expert Dr. Ian Riddock to crack open the truth about cholesterol, statins, and what’s really driving heart disease.We go way beyond “good” vs. “bad” cholesterol—diving into the world of lipoproteins, triglycerides, Apolipoprotein B, and Lipoprotein(a). From fit athletes with hidden plaque to patients whose labs look “normal” but are walking time bombs, Dr. Riddock reveals how outdated testing and blind spots in care are putting us at risk—especially in midlife.Plus, we talk GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy, debunk sugar vs. fat myths, and give you the checklist you need to truly understand your risk (and advocate for better care). Because when it comes to heart disease, what you don’t know really can hurt you. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  34. 9

    A Pharmacist’s Guide to Personalized Wellness From Cell Health to Peptides, with Steve Hoffart

    If you’ve ever stared at your supplement shelf and thought, “Why do I still feel like garbage?”—this episode is for you. Steve Hoffart, a pharmacist, compounding specialist, and certified expert in anti-aging medicine, joins Rosemarie for a deep dive into personalized health that actually works. From why your mitochondria might be tanking your energy to how supplements and peptides are being used (and misused) in today’s wellness world, Steve breaks it all down with all the clarity and none of the fluff.You’ll learn:Why cellular health is the foundation of everything—and how to support itWhat your bloodwork might be missingThe truth about the supplement industry and how to choose wiselyHow peptides are shaking up the longevity spaceWhat role pharmacists can (and should) play in precision health 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  35. 8

    Midlife Money Moves: Ditch the Shame, Build Wealth, and Sip That Latte with Billy Zerillo

    Think financial freedom means cutting out your daily latte? Think again. In this episode, Rosemarie's getting real about money with financial advisor Billy Zerillo, aka The Money Talk Advisor. Billy’s got the inside scoop on why women are often sold budgeting tips while men get investing advice — and how to flip that script. From tackling financial overwhelm to shaking off shame and embracing your financial power, we cover it all. Whether you’re crushing it in your career, plotting your next big life change, or just wondering where your cash keeps disappearing to, this episode is your sign to take a second opinion on your finances. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  36. 7

    Tapas, Taboo & the Truth About Midlife Sex: A Conversation with Sexologist Emily Power Smith

    Think your best sex is behind you? Think again.In this refreshingly honest episode, Rosemarie sits down with internationally trained sexologist and therapist Emily Power Smith to break down the myths, shame, and silence around sexuality—especially in midlife. From understanding the difference between sexuality and sensuality (hint: it’s not just semantics) to navigating menopause, low libido, body image shifts, and solo pleasure, this conversation covers it all with science and compassion.Emily unpacks the surprising stats about sexual satisfaction, how our biology and busy lives intersect, and why sex doesn’t have to be a three-course meal—it can be tapas. Whether you’re partnered, single, or somewhere in between, Emily offers empowering insight on how to reconnect with pleasure and redefine what sex looks like at any stage of life. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  37. 6

    Parenting, Perfectionism & Perimenopause: The Mental Load of Modern Women with Cliona Cosgrove

    Women are having children later, working harder, and carrying more responsibilities than ever before. In this episode, we explore the evolving landscape of motherhood, career, and mental health with Dr. Cliona Cosgrove, a clinical psychologist, mediator, and meditation teacher.Dr. Cosgrove shares her journey from aspiring artist to mental health expert and how she blends mindfulness, psychology, and lived experience to support parents and professionals alike. Together, Rosemarie and Cliona discuss the pressures of perfectionism, the emotional toll of balancing family and career, and how women are rewriting the narrative on aging, self-care, and resilience. Tune in to learn how mindfulness and self-awareness can help you manage stress, set boundaries, and prioritize your well-being amid life’s many demands. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  38. 5

    Mastering the Art of Handling Bullies & Toxic People with Dan O’Connor

    Ever had to deal with a toxic boss, a workplace bully, or a narcissistic coworker? You’re not alone—and this episode is for you. Rosemarie's talking with communication expert, best-selling author, and "Wizard of Words" Dan O’Connor to unpack the art of shutting down toxic people with confidence and clarity. Dan shares game-changing strategies for reclaiming your power, handling workplace bullying, and navigating difficult interactions—whether it's with a gaslighting boss or a passive-aggressive coworker.We’ll also dive into: ✔️ Why workplace bullying has skyrocketed in the past decade✔️ How to set boundaries and stand up for yourself without escalating conflict✔️ The surprising role of forgiveness in moving forward✔️ Practical scripts to respond to toxic behavior in real timeIf you're ready to level up your communication and stop toxic people in their tracks, this is an episode you can’t afford to miss. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  39. 4

    From Breaking News to Breaking Barriers: Embracing Agelessness with Amanda Lamb

    After 35 years as a powerhouse journalist covering crime on TV, Amanda Lamb took a bold leap—leaving the newsroom grind to step into the world of podcasting, authorship, and empowering women in midlife. In this episode of Second Opinion, host Rosemarie Beltz sits down with Amanda to discuss her evolution from hard-hitting news reporter to the creator of Ageless, a podcast that champions women navigating career pivots, personal reinvention, and societal expectations.Amanda shares the behind-the-scenes reality of TV journalism—the grueling hours, appearance pressures, and the moment she realized it was time to walk away. She opens up about the power of saying no, the lessons she’s learned from women of all ages, and why she believes reinvention isn’t just possible—it’s essential. Whether you're in midlife or just contemplating your next big move, this conversation will leave you inspired to chase your passion on your own terms.Follow the rest of Amanda's story here. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  40. 3

    The Hidden Heart Risks of Midlife & Menopause with Dr. Kimberly Skelding

    Heart disease is the #1 killer of women—but why aren’t we talking about it? In this eye-opening episode of Second Opinion, Rosemarie sits down with trailblazing interventional cardiologist Dr. Kimberly Skelding to uncover the often-overlooked connection between menopause and heart health.We dive into the real reasons why heart attacks in women are frequently missed, how pregnancy complications can predict future cardiovascular risks, and the surprising impact of estrogen on our arteries. Plus, Dr. Skelding shares must-know strategies for protecting your heart in midlife and beyond—including the truth about HRT, hidden heart attack symptoms, and the life-saving tests your doctor might not be ordering.This episode is packed with powerful insights that could save your life. Tune in now! 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  41. 2

    The Midlife Sleep Struggle: Sleep Apnea, Insomnia, and How to Rest Better with Dr. Daniel Barone

    Struggling to get a good night’s sleep? You’re not alone! Dive into the science of sleep with Dr. Daniel Barone, Associate Medical Director at the Weill Cornell Center for Sleep Medicine and author of Let’s Talk About Sleep and The Story of Sleep: From A to Zzzz.We explore why sleep becomes more challenging in midlife—especially during menopause—and how hormonal shifts, stress, and lifestyle factors all play a role. Dr. Barone breaks down common sleep disorders like sleep apnea and insomnia, the truth about melatonin and sleep supplements, and the latest innovations in sleep medicine (including a potential pill for sleep apnea!). Plus, he shares practical sleep hygiene tips and answers burning questions about blue light, caffeine, and the gut-brain connection. If you’re ready to reclaim your sleep and improve your health, this is an episode you don’t want to miss. Hit play, and let’s get some rest! 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  42. 1

    Reclaiming Your Power: Midlife Reinvention, Boundaries, and Awakening Your Feminine Soul with Tara Marino

    Is midlife the end—or just the beginning? Rosemarie sits down with Tara Marino, founder of Elegant Femme, to discuss how women can embrace midlife as a time of reinvention, renewal, and empowerment. Tara shares her deeply personal journey of loss and transformation, revealing how she turned her pain into purpose. Together, they explore how to awaken the feminine soul, set boundaries that truly honor self-love, and break free from societal expectations. Whether you’re navigating an empty nest, career shifts, or simply seeking deeper fulfillment, this conversation is your invitation to step fully into your next chapter—on your own terms.  🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  43. 0

    The Science of Aging and How to Reverse It—A Deep Dive with Dr. Kash

    Can we really slow down aging? Are aesthetics just for the young? And what’s the future of regenerative medicine? Aging isn’t just about getting older—it’s about how we age. In the first episode of Second Opinion, host Rosemarie Beltz sits down with Dr. Kaveh Kashani (Dr. Kash) to uncover the latest in aesthetic and regenerative medicine. From hormone replacement therapy and IV therapy to PRP and peptides, Dr. Kash breaks down the science behind aging, the key factors that influence how we look and feel, and the cutting-edge treatments available to help us age smarter. Whether you’re in your 30s and starting to notice changes, or in midlife looking for ways to rejuvenate from the inside out, learn how to take control of your health and longevity. 🔗 Follow & Subscribe to never miss an episode. If you love the show, leave a review—it helps others get a second opinion!💡 Have a topic you’d love for us to cover? Reach out at www.rosemarieb.com.

  44. -1

    Your Fresh Take on Health Starts Here!

    What would you do? As a healthcare provider and TV reporter, Rosemarie Beltz has been asked that question countless times. Now, she’s bringing her expertise and curiosity to Second Opinion, a podcast that dives deep into the hottest topics in health and wellness.In this exciting new show, Rosemarie sits down with leading experts, innovative thinkers, and disruptors to tackle life-changing issues—like age rejuvenation, brain health, the weight loss drug revolution, and reinventing your career. Together, you’ll uncover the latest research, separate the hype from the facts, and gain the insights you need to make informed decisions.Ready for a fresh take on health and wellness? Subscribe to Second Opinion now, and let’s get started!

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Get the clarity you need on the hottest topics in health and wellness with Second Opinion. Hosted by Rosemarie Beltz, this podcast brings you fresh perspectives from experts, innovators, and disruptors tackling life-changing issues. Each episode unpacks the latest research, debunks the hype, and delivers insights to help you make informed decisions. If you're ready for engaging, enlightening, and occasionally unexpected takes on health and wellness, tune in and discover your second opinion.

HOSTED BY

Rosemarie Beltz

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Second Opinion have?

Second Opinion currently has 44 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Second Opinion about?

Get the clarity you need on the hottest topics in health and wellness with Second Opinion. Hosted by Rosemarie Beltz, this podcast brings you fresh perspectives from experts, innovators, and disruptors tackling life-changing issues. Each episode unpacks the latest research, debunks the hype, and...

How often does Second Opinion release new episodes?

Second Opinion has 44 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Second Opinion?

You can listen to Second Opinion on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Second Opinion?

Second Opinion is created and hosted by Rosemarie Beltz.
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