YOGA MAMAS is now kaer, LEARN MORE

Listening to Your Body: Training With Your Menstrual Cycle

SHARE
training with your menstrual cycle

Written in collaboration with Sadie Hamilton, Yoga Mamas Registered Kinesiologist

There’s a lot of noise out there about how your period affects your workouts. Some of it’s helpful. A lot of it is confusing. The truth is, we’re still learning. Much of the research only includes people with textbook cycles—leaving out many others who are navigating birth control, anovulation, perimenopause, pregnancy, and so many different realities.But just because the science isn’t perfect doesn’t mean your body isn’t speaking.If you’ve ever felt strong one week and sluggish the next—if some days your body feels light and powerful, and others it feels like moving through mud—you’re not imagining it. Your cycle weaves through every part of you. And when you learn to move with it, instead of against it, you create space for more ease, more strength, and more trust in your body.

What Shifts Through Your Cycle

You don’t need a PhD in hormones to understand your cycle. It’s enough to know that your energy, recovery, and stress response shift through the month. You can still perform and show up fully at any point in your cycle—but syncing your training to your body’s natural rhythms can help you feel more supported along the way.

Here’s what that can look like:

Menstrual + Early Follicular Phase (Day 1–14)

This phase begins with your period. Hormones are at their lowest, then begin to rise. You may feel a subtle opening here—more spaciousness in your energy and an easier time bouncing back after workouts.
→ How to move:
This can be a powerful time for lifting heavier, moving with intensity, or trying something new. If you feel strong—follow that. Your body might be especially responsive right now.

Ovulation (Around Day 14)

Estrogen reaches its peak, and you might feel vibrant and clear. But with that rise also comes a shift–your body may be a little more prone to inflammation or sensitivity in the muscles and joints.
→ How to move:
Still a beautiful time to push your training—but bring care into your movement. Warm up well. Move with intention and avoid stretching too deeply. Pay attention to what feels open and what feels tight.

Luteal Phase (Day 15–28)

Progesterone becomes more dominant, and your body begins to shift inward. Your temperature rises. You might feel a little more on edge, a little less springy. Sleep may be lighter.
→ How to move:
This is a good time and moving in ways that help you feel grounded and cared for. Consider incorporating technique, mobility, and functional strength work.

The Days Before Your Period (Last few days of your cycle)

These final days can feel like an emotional and physical exhale. Many people feel more tired, more tender, or more reflective here.
→ How to move:
Let rest be part of the work. This is a good time for recovery, breathwork, mobility, or simply moving in ways that help you feel grounded and cared for.

What Matters Most: Your Own Pattern

Every cycle is personal. While general patterns can guide us, the most important wisdom comes from your own experience. Track what you feel. Notice what shifts. Write it down if that helps. There’s power in knowing your own rhythm.
And remember: the goal isn’t perfection. The goal is connection—with your body, your energy, your life.

Gentle Reminders

You don’t have to push through just because a calendar says “go.” Try the 10-minute check-in: start moving. If your body still says no after 10 minutes, trust that.
You’re allowed to rest. You’re allowed to go hard. You’re allowed to pivot. The point isn’t to follow a rigid schedule—it’s to build a relationship with your body that’s rooted in trust.
Cycle syncing isn’t a rulebook. It’s a tool. A way of paying attention. A way of saying, “I’m listening.”

In Closing

This isn’t about holding yourself back. It’s about honouring the full picture of who you are. Your cycle is not a limitation—it’s a rhythm, a pulse, a guide. When you train with that rhythm, you don’t just get stronger. You get more in tune with the wisdom your body holds, every single day.

SHARE

Read More

Pregnant women have a lot to think and dream about.From tracking how baby grows every week, to creating your perfect

Marj became a birth worker after experiencing two awe-inspiring home births of her own. Driven to share the choices and

Co-Authored By Em (Client) and Kate Love (Registered Psychotherapist at Yoga Mamas) Maternity leave is often framed as a time

Connect With Us

Figma ipsum component variant main layer prototype invite component scale bullet shadow outline blur editor subtract arrow link connection draft background team link blur vector slice.