-- Shares Facebook Twitter Reddit Email If you have ovaries and uterus, and are somewhere in your late 40s or beyond, you will have a body-informed epiphany. It might be barely noticeable. It may stop you in your tracks.

You can see when it happens to and for Linda, Bridget Christie’s heroine in “The Change,” because it slaps her upside the head. The wife and mother of two is clearing plates and trash after her 50th birthday party, planned by a husband who enjoys all the attention and didn't do any work to make it possible . She even had to bake her own cake.

As she cleans house, Linda quietly taps a button on her digital watch to time each chore, recording the tally in a journal once it is completed. Then she opens an upper cabinet and is pummeled in the noggin by an avalanche of unmatched Tupperware – someone else’s task left for her to do. But the epiphanic ding! hits her as she’s smoothing a Band-Aid onto her forehead wound, and considers the superhero that decorates it: the Incredible Hulk.

The Hulk, she writes in her goodbye note to her husband Steve (Omid Djalili), is the only menopausal role model in the history of TV and film. He reads this to his mother over the phone after Linda has roared away on her old motorcycle. “It's not funny, Mum!” Steve said.

“I can't find the towels!” Related TV's changing view of the change: The menopause conversation is getting better, finally Oh, but it is funny – because it’s true. Dr. Bruce Banner is not a phy.