Even at my busiest, I have always considered myself to be extremely organized – remembering appointments and schedules without the need of a PDA, notepad, calendar or any other mind-aid. Heck, I remembered every family member's schedule! My nickname was 'the human filing cabinet.'  However lately, over the past year or so (I can't remember )  it seems that I am tripped up by things that I never had to think twice about – can't begin to tell you how many times in the past six months I have had to turn the house upside down looking for my car keys. I mean, it is absolutely ridiculous how stupid and unorganized I can be on any given day. Lost keys, lost cell phone, forgotten appointments – I even forgot my own birthday! Then when asked, I had a hard time remembering my age.

I will be in the middle of speaking and forget the point I'm trying to make. It is especially frustrating because my daughters cannot understand why mom (who has always been so 'together') is loosing her mind. When she says, "..having another senior moment?" – I want to scream! I have more than ten years to go before I'm an 'official' senior (that's 55, right?). That is almost as bad as brain fart. Whatever the label for absent-mindedness -  brain fog, burnout, scatter-brained, etc. it is very frustrating and takes a real effort to overcome.

At first, sticky-notes became a way for me to keep-it-together, but that did not last long. They would either fall down and get lost under my desk, or become lost in the sea of other sticky-notes. Hanging a key rack next to the garage door has solved the lost key problem – as long as I remember to hang them immediately!

One thing that has helped a great deal is keeping a large dry-erase calendar up in our laundry room, right next to the garage door. The blocks are large enough for everyone in the family to log their appointments along with any additional notes or phone numbers on an adjacent note section.  As the month progresses, the days past are erased and filled in with the next month's information. Everyone (including me) can glance at the calendar on their way out of the house.

Reading through some women's message boards, foggy memory seems to be a common thread of perimenopause or pre menopause symptoms. It was somewhat comforting to know how common this is even among women in their mid to late 30s. Do you have any successful techniques to share? I would love to know what has worked for you!