The Case for Tracking Her Cycle
Most men are functionally ignorant about the menstrual cycle. That is not entirely their fault. For much of history, and still for many women today, menstruation was treated as something shameful, something to hide from men altogether.
That silence produced euphemisms that were meant to soften discomfort. “Riding the red dragon.” “The communists are in the funhouse.” Humorous on the surface, but rooted in avoidance. In some cultures it also led to women being considered untouchable during their period, or even isolated. Protection and punishment wrapped into one.
That history matters, because it explains why so little real information circulates inside relationships. And it is exactly why I think it is worth breaking that silence, starting between partners.
It helped me. That is why I am sharing this.
What most men end up with is secondhand knowledge. Fragments from sisters or mothers. Inconsistent education, if any. The result is a blunt binary. She is on her period or she is not. That framing misses almost everything that matters.
The menstrual cycle is not an event. It is a rhythm that unfolds over roughly 28 to 35 days, with distinct phases that shape energy, mood, cognition, pain sensitivity, and stress tolerance.
So should you track your girlfriend’s cycle? Yes. Not to monitor or control. Absolutely not. But to align yourself with her lived reality. Done well, it provides context before misinterpretation sets in. For my partner, it replaced guessing with understanding.
This is not a rigid law, and it is certainly not just about bleeding.
As mentioned the period isn’t a binary state. The cycle has four distinct states or better said phases. Menstruation. Follicular. Ovulation. Luteal. Hormones rise and fall across these phases, affecting the body in countless ways.
Menstruation marks the reset. Energy is often low, the body turns inward, and rest becomes essential. Pain sensitivity can be higher. This is not a failure state. It is recovery.
As menstruation ends, the follicular phase begins. During the follicular phase, estrogen climbs. Many women feel sharper, stronger, more outward facing. Focus improves. Social tolerance increases. There is often a sense of momentum returning.
Ovulation follows. Estrogen peaks and testosterone rises. Libido often increases. Confidence and motivation tend to be higher. This is a fertile phase in every sense. Creative projects, plans, and new initiatives often feel easier here. This is a phase of expansion, connection, and creativity.
I usually write four new book drafts during this phase. Life is great.
Then comes the luteal phase. After ovulation, hormones drop and progesterone dominates. During the luteal phase, body temperature rises, breasts may feel sore, and PMS can bring irritability or withdrawal. This is the dark period. Happy hormones are depleted. Life is tough, inconveniences are tougher. Once the bleeding starts, it’s upward again. None of this is random. When you understand the pattern, you stop reacting to symptoms and start responding to causes.
The luteal phase is my killer. I lose the will to live. It is a brutal dip. It took a few cycles for my partner to catch up, but once he did, everything eased. Knowing that he understands why this happens to me makes it bearable.
Then we bleed and start anew.
For me, the point is empathy, not diagnosis. Tracking gives my partner context, not authority. He does not pretend to know what it feels like. He leads with curiosity rather than explanation.
Practical support matters more than words. A heating pad helps with cramps and lower back pain. Dark chocolate helps too. But what matters most are the small gestures throughout the cycle, not only when symptoms are most visible.
Asking if someone is on their period during an argument is a fast way to lose trust. Knowing which phase someone is in does not invalidate their feelings. Ask how you can help. Listen without fixing. Never compare her symptoms to another woman’s experience. Because all bodies differ and no experience is the same.
The bottom line
Shared information changes dynamics. I know it did in my relationship. There is relief in knowing that someone is aware of your inner weather. A low day stops being personal and starts being physiological. The cycle shifts from a monthly disruption into a shared rhythm we navigate together.
Talk about it. Use an app if she’s open to it. Pay attention. And keep the dark chocolate ready when the cycle comes full circle.












