Table of contents
1. Syncing exercise with your cycle
2. Exercise for period cramps
3. Can exercise affect your period?
4. Getting started
Ever struggled to lift a weight you could normally lift with ease? Ever stopped midway through a run because you weren't quite feeling it? It’s your body trying to tell you something - this probably isn't the time of the month to be doing this gal. Our menstrual cycles are made up of four phases, and during those phases everything fluctuates; from our energy levels to our sex drive, our hormones to our susceptibility to pain, and our cravings to our anxiety. Yep, we’re more up and down than an episode of Succession.
72% of women say they have never received any education regarding exercise and their menstrual cycle, and 1 in 4 women admit to not understanding their menstrual cycle - so it’s no wonder that syncing your workout routine to your period is still unfamiliar to lots of women. But syncing exercise to your period could bring a host of benefits to your fitness, energy levels, skin, mood, and much more.
Syncing exercise with your cycle
Our cycle goes through four stages: menstruation, follicular, ovulation, and luteal. Hormone levels differ at each stage - which impacts our mental health, as well as our propensity for exercise - and understanding where our body is at during these different stages is central to cycle syncing.
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72% of women say they have never received any education regarding exercise and their menstrual cycle
“A nice analogy which is really helpful is to connect it with the seasons“, says Le’Nise Brothers, a nutritionist and yoga teacher, who specializes in women's health and the menstrual cycle.