As always, Saffy provides the grounding (and often judgmental) counterpoint, highlighting the gap between her mother's generation’s obsession with image and her own more pragmatic outlook.
The brilliance of the episode lies in its refusal to offer a sentimental or dignified portrayal of aging. Instead, it uses farce to expose the absurdity of how society views menopause and how women are conditioned to fear it. [S4E6] Menopause
The episode of the British sitcom Absolutely Fabulous serves as a sharp, comedic exploration of aging, identity, and the frantic denial of time's passage. Originally aired in 2001, the episode follows Patsy Stone as she grapples with the realization that she is entering "the change," while Edina Monsoon faces her own professional crisis against a younger, sharper rival. The Horror of "The Change" As always, Saffy provides the grounding (and often
For Patsy, menopause is not merely a biological transition but a catastrophic blow to her carefully curated persona of eternal, debauched youth. The episode humorously depicts her physical symptoms—such as and record-low bone density—as terrifying signs of frailty. Her attendance at a "Menopause Anonymous" meeting highlights the cultural stigma and personal terror associated with the end of reproductive life. Patsy’s struggle represents the broader societal pressure on women to remain "ageless," treating a natural process as a shameful secret to be managed with hormone patches and testosterone implants. Professional Displacement and Rivalry The episode of the British sitcom Absolutely Fabulous