Putting Menopause on the Map Comes to Longmont


Putting Menopause on the Map poster

Two nights.
One mission.
A room full of women ready to rewrite what midlife looks like.

Event spotlight

Dr. Wolfe is thrilled to be one of the speakers at Putting Menopause on the Map, a two-night educational event coming to the Longmont Museum on May 6 and May 12.

This event feels especially meaningful because it speaks directly to the reason Evermore Women’s Health was built. Women deserve better information, better support, and better care in midlife.

Too often, midlife symptoms are brushed aside, oversimplified, or folded into the vague category of “just getting older.” That leaves many women doing what they should never have had to do in the first place: comparing notes in private text threads, piecing together internet searches late at night, and wondering whether what they are feeling is real, common, treatable, or somehow supposed to be tolerated.

It is real. It is common. And for many women, it is treatable.

When

May 6 and May 12

Wednesday and Tuesday evenings, 6:00 PM to 8:30 PM.

Where

Longmont Museum

400 Quail Road, Longmont, Colorado 80501.

Good to know

One ticket, both nights

The Boulder event sold out, and this Longmont edition is expected to do the same.

Why this event matters

Perimenopause and menopause are major transitions, yet far too many women are left piecing together answers on their own. A minority of clinicians receive formal menopause training, which helps explain why so many women feel dismissed, confused, or told their symptoms are simply part of aging.

That gap in care matters. It affects sleep, mood, body composition, sexual health, confidence, work, relationships, and the basic feeling of being at home in your own body. When good information is missing, women often end up delaying care, doubting themselves, or assuming there is no meaningful help available.

That is part of why this event feels so aligned with Evermore’s mission. Evermore was built around the belief that women deserve time, continuity, evidence-based guidance, and clear next steps. Not a rushed conversation. Not a shrug. Not the sense that they are asking for too much by wanting real answers.

What to Expect

Over two evenings, local experts in medicine, nutrition, mental health, pelvic floor therapy, strength and conditioning, and metabolic health will share practical, evidence-based guidance on hormones, sleep, sexual wellness, bone health, body composition, and more.

The event is designed to be educational, but approachable. The goal is to make complex information more usable for all.

They are not imagining it, and they do not have to settle.
Evermore Women’s Health

Night one

On the first evening, the conversation starts with the signs and symptoms of perimenopause and menopause. It then moves into the territory that is too often left out of the standard script: how these transitions can affect bone, brain, and heart health, and what women should know about both hormone therapy and non-hormonal treatment options.

Most women get a thin, sanitized version of the story. Hot flashes. Maybe sleep disruption. End of list. What they are not usually given is a coherent explanation of how menopause can shape cardiovascular risk, cognitive function, mood, energy, libido, and long-term health. Precision matters here. Once women can name what is happening and understand the range of options in front of them, the conversation changes entirely.

Dr. Wolfe will be part of the May 6th speaker lineup, which makes this event especially meaningful for Evermore. Her work is rooted in helping women understand tradeoffs, make sense of evidence, and move forward with care plans that are thoughtful rather than generic.

Night two

The second evening turns toward the daily, lived side of midlife health: sleep, movement, nutrition, mental health, and body composition.

This is where so many women end up feeling stuck. They are doing the things they have always been told should work, and suddenly those same strategies do not seem to produce the same results. Energy changes. Recovery changes. Sleep quality changes. The body can feel unfamiliar.

We won't pretend there is one clean fix for all of that. What it can do is help women understand the landscape better, hear from a range of local experts, and leave with a more grounded sense of where to start.

What you’ll leave with

  • Clearer language for what may be happening in your body
  • Practical guidance on hormones, sleep, sexual wellness, bone health, and body composition
  • A stronger sense that you are not alone, and that better support exists

More than education

What makes this event stand out is that it is not just about information transfer. It is about relief.

Relief in finally hearing a conversation that sounds more like your real life.

Relief in realizing that other women have been having the same experience.

Relief in understanding that confusion is often a sign of a broken system, not a personal failure.

This is especially important in midlife care, where many women have been conditioned to minimize symptoms, push through discomfort, or assume that feeling off is simply the cost of getting older. A better model starts by taking women seriously.

Why the room matters

You will also be in a room with more than 75 women navigating similar changes, which is part of what makes this event so powerful.

There is something meaningful about being surrounded by women who get it.

That community piece should not be dismissed as a nice extra. For many women, isolation is part of the problem. They may know a friend or two who is talking openly about midlife changes, but many still feel like they are supposed to quietly manage symptoms on their own. Being in a room where the conversation is direct, informed, and shared can shift that in a real way.

The Boulder event sold out. Dr. Wolfe was part of the team that helped bring this event to Longmont. That kind of response makes one thing clear: women want to be seen, to be heard, and to have their lived experience treated with the seriousness it deserves. They are hungry for conversations about menopause that are credible, practical, and close to home. This is your chance to step into one. Dr. Wolfe especially invites you if you have tried to seek care and been told you're too young, too old, too high-risk, too complicated, or not a candidate for treatment due to a personal or family history of cancer. Bring a friend, get your ticket, and join us in Longmont.

There is something powerful about being surrounded by women who get it.
Event perspective

Event details

When

Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
6:00 PM to 8:30 PM each evening

Where

Longmont Museum
400 Quail Road
Longmont, CO 80501

Good to know

One ticket covers both nights.

If you have been wanting a clearer, more grounded conversation around menopause and midlife health, this is a strong event to attend. It is built for women who want information they can actually use, and who are tired of vague answers, mixed messages, or being told to simply wait it out.

Join us in Longmont

If Evermore’s mission resonates with you, and you know someone who has been searching for real answers, we hope to see you there.


Dr. Kristen Wolfe, MD

Dr. Kristen Wolfe, MD, is a board-certified OB/GYN and the founder of Evermore Women’s Health, a women-led, patient-centered practice dedicated to helping women navigate midlife with clarity, confidence, and evidence-based care. She specializes in perimenopause, menopause, sexual health, and the hormonal, metabolic, and preventive health needs that arise during this stage of life. She takes a collaborative, personalized approach to care, ensuring that each treatment plan is rooted in her patients’ goals, values, and real-world needs.

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