Hormones 101: Understanding Your Cycle
Four hormones orchestrate your entire menstrual cycle. Understanding them transforms how you relate to your body, mood, and energy every single day.
Your Hormones Are Not the Enemy
Hormones get blamed for everything — mood swings, weight gain, acne, cravings. But the truth is, your hormones are a sophisticated communication system that keeps your entire body synchronized. When you understand them, they become your greatest ally.
Your menstrual cycle is governed by four key hormones that rise and fall in a beautifully coordinated dance. Each one has specific roles, and their interplay creates the four distinct phases you experience every month. Let's meet them.
The Four Key Hormones
Estrogen (Estradiol)
The energizer & builder
What it does: Estrogen is the hormone of growth and vitality. It thickens the uterine lining, increases serotonin and dopamine (boosting mood), supports bone density, keeps skin plump and hydrated, increases cervical mucus, enhances verbal fluency and memory, and increases insulin sensitivity.
When it peaks: Rises through the follicular phase, peaks just before ovulation (around day 12-13), dips briefly, then has a smaller second peak in mid-luteal phase before dropping to trigger your period.
You feel it as: Energy, confidence, social drive, clear skin, positive mood, mental sharpness, increased libido approaching ovulation.
Well-EstablishedProgesterone
The calmer & sustainer
What it does: Progesterone is the hormone of calm and preparation. It maintains the uterine lining (if fertilization occurs), raises body temperature by 0.3-0.5 degrees Celsius, has a natural anti-anxiety effect (it activates GABA receptors in the brain), promotes sleep, slows digestion, and increases appetite.
When it peaks: Essentially absent in the follicular phase. Rises sharply after ovulation, peaks around day 21 (mid-luteal), then drops precipitously if no pregnancy occurs, triggering your period.
You feel it as: Calmness (early luteal), warmth, sleepiness, increased appetite, nesting instinct. When it drops: PMS symptoms, mood changes, insomnia, anxiety.
Well-EstablishedFSH (Follicle-Stimulating Hormone)
The recruiter
What it does: FSH is the brain's signal to the ovaries to start preparing eggs. It stimulates the growth of ovarian follicles (tiny sacs that each contain an immature egg). Multiple follicles begin growing, but typically only one will become dominant and ovulate. FSH also stimulates estrogen production from the growing follicles.
When it peaks: Rises at the very beginning of your cycle (day 1-3, when estrogen and progesterone are low) and remains elevated through the early follicular phase. Drops as estrogen rises (negative feedback). Has a small surge alongside LH at ovulation.
You feel it as: The beginning of renewed energy after your period. FSH itself does not have direct mood effects, but the estrogen it stimulates drives the "spring-like" feeling of the follicular phase.
Well-EstablishedLH (Luteinizing Hormone)
The trigger
What it does: LH is the ovulation trigger. It remains low for most of the cycle, then surges dramatically (the "LH surge") to cause the dominant follicle to rupture and release an egg. After ovulation, LH transforms the empty follicle into the corpus luteum, which produces progesterone. This is the hormone detected by ovulation predictor kits (OPKs).
When it peaks: Dramatic surge approximately 24-36 hours before ovulation (around day 12-14). This surge is brief but powerful. Then drops back to low baseline levels for the rest of the cycle.
You feel it as: Some people report a brief burst of energy or heightened senses around the LH surge. The libido increase around ovulation is partly driven by the hormonal cascade LH initiates.
Well-EstablishedYour Cycle at a Glance
This diagram shows how your four key hormones rise and fall across the four phases of a typical 28-day cycle.
Menstrual
Days 1-5
All hormones low
Follicular
Days 6-13
Estrogen rises
Ovulation
Days 14-16
LH surge, estrogen peak
Luteal
Days 17-28
Progesterone dominates
The HPO Axis: Your Body's Control Center
The Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Ovarian (HPO) axis is the three-way communication system that controls your menstrual cycle. Think of it as a conference call between your brain and ovaries. Strong
The master regulator deep in your brain. Releases GnRH (gonadotropin-releasing hormone) in pulses. Sensitive to stress, weight, sleep, and exercise.
The "translator" at the base of your brain. Receives GnRH and responds by releasing FSH and LH into the bloodstream, which travel to the ovaries.
The "workers." Respond to FSH and LH by growing follicles, producing estrogen and progesterone, and (at ovulation) releasing an egg.
Estrogen and progesterone feed back to the hypothalamus and pituitary, completing the loop. This feedback can be negative (reducing FSH/LH) or positive (the estrogen surge that triggers the LH spike before ovulation).
Why This Matters
The HPO axis explains why stress can delay your period (the hypothalamus is sensitive to cortisol), why extreme dieting or exercise can stop your cycle (the hypothalamus suppresses GnRH when energy is insufficient), and why your cycle is a vital sign of overall health. A regular cycle means this communication system is working well.
How Hormones Affect You Every Day
Your hormones do not just affect your reproductive system. They influence virtually every system in your body. Here is how.
Mood
Estrogen increases serotonin, dopamine, and endorphins — you feel optimistic, social, and resilient. Progesterone activates GABA (calming) receptors — initially soothing, but its withdrawal before your period can trigger anxiety and irritability. The interaction between these two hormones creates the mood landscape of your cycle. Strong
Energy
Estrogen enhances insulin sensitivity and glucose uptake, giving you efficient energy in the follicular phase. Progesterone raises body temperature and metabolic rate in the luteal phase — you burn more calories but may fatigue faster. The energy peaks in late follicular / ovulation and dips in late luteal / early menstrual. Strong
Skin
Estrogen promotes collagen production, skin hydration, and wound healing — your skin often looks its best mid-follicular to ovulation. Progesterone increases sebum (oil) production — this is why breakouts often appear in the luteal phase, especially along the jawline and chin. Moderate
Digestion
Progesterone relaxes smooth muscle, including the gut wall — this slows digestion in the luteal phase, potentially causing bloating and constipation. When progesterone drops before your period, prostaglandins speed things up (period poops are real and normal). Strong
Sleep
Progesterone is mildly sedating (it metabolizes into allopregnanolone, a neurosteroid that promotes sleep). You may feel sleepier in the early-to-mid luteal phase. However, when progesterone drops sharply before your period, sleep quality often deteriorates. Elevated body temperature in the luteal phase can also disrupt sleep architecture. Moderate
Libido
Estrogen and testosterone both peak around ovulation, creating a natural increase in sexual desire. This makes evolutionary sense — ovulation is the fertile window. Libido typically dips in the luteal phase as progesterone dominates. Progesterone tends to have a dampening effect on desire. Individual variation is significant here. Moderate
Pain Sensitivity
Estrogen has analgesic (pain-reducing) properties — your pain tolerance is highest around ovulation when estrogen peaks. In the late luteal and menstrual phases, with low estrogen, pain sensitivity increases. This is partly why dental work, waxing, and medical procedures may feel more uncomfortable before and during your period. Moderate
Cognition
Estrogen enhances verbal fluency, memory consolidation, and learning — the follicular phase is often great for studying, writing, and creative thinking. Progesterone can slightly dampen verbal skills but may enhance spatial reasoning. Some people report "brain fog" in the late luteal phase as both hormones drop. Emerging
Hormone Testing: What, When, and Why
If you suspect a hormone imbalance, testing can provide answers. But timing matters — hormone levels change dramatically depending on where you are in your cycle. Strong
| Test | When to Test | What It Shows | Normal Range (Approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estradiol (E2) | Day 3 (baseline) or day 12-13 (peak) | Ovarian function, follicle development | Day 3: 25-75 pg/mL; Peak: 200-400 pg/mL |
| Progesterone | Day 21 (7 days post-ovulation) | Confirms ovulation; luteal function | Over 3 ng/mL confirms ovulation; 10+ ideal |
| FSH | Day 2-4 | Ovarian reserve, pituitary function | 3-10 mIU/mL (higher may indicate diminished reserve) |
| LH | Day 2-4 (baseline) or daily at mid-cycle (surge) | Pituitary function, ovulation timing | Baseline: 2-15 mIU/mL; Surge: 20-100+ mIU/mL |
| Testosterone (Total & Free) | Day 2-4 (morning, fasting) | Androgen levels; PCOS screening | Total: 15-70 ng/dL; varies by lab |
| Thyroid (TSH, Free T4) | Any time (not cycle-dependent) | Thyroid function affects cycle regularity | TSH: 0.5-4.0 mIU/L (some prefer under 2.5) |
| AMH (Anti-Mullerian Hormone) | Any time (not cycle-dependent) | Ovarian reserve (egg supply) | 1.0-3.5 ng/mL (age-dependent) |
| DHEA-S | Any time (morning preferred) | Adrenal androgen production | 35-430 mcg/dL (age-dependent) |
Important Testing Tips
- Day 21 only works for 28-day cycles. If your cycle is longer or shorter, test 7 days after ovulation (use OPKs or BBT to confirm ovulation day).
- One blood draw is a snapshot, not the full picture. Hormones are always changing. A single result should be interpreted in context with your symptoms and history.
- Hormonal contraception changes everything. If you are on the pill, patch, ring, or hormonal IUD, most of these tests are not interpretable because the contraception overrides your natural hormone levels.
- Ask for copies of your results. Normal ranges vary by lab. A result can be "in range" but still be suboptimal for you.
Common Hormone Imbalances
These are some of the most common patterns. If you recognize yourself in any of these, it is worth discussing with a healthcare provider. Strong
Estrogen Dominance
What it means: Estrogen is high relative to progesterone — not necessarily that estrogen itself is elevated, but that the ratio is off. Can occur with low progesterone (anovulatory cycles), poor estrogen metabolism, or environmental estrogen exposure.
Signs: Heavy or prolonged periods, PMS, breast tenderness, bloating, mood swings, fibroids, endometrial thickening, weight gain (especially hips/thighs).
What helps: Supporting progesterone production (adequate sleep, stress reduction, vitamin B6), improving estrogen metabolism (cruciferous vegetables, fiber, gut health), reducing environmental estrogens (BPA, phthalates).
Low Progesterone
What it means: The corpus luteum (formed after ovulation) does not produce enough progesterone, or ovulation does not occur consistently. Often related to stress, under-eating, over-exercising, or PCOS.
Signs: Short luteal phase (period comes too soon after ovulation), spotting before your period, anxiety, insomnia, difficulty maintaining pregnancy, irregular cycles.
What helps: Ensuring adequate caloric intake, managing chronic stress, vitex (chasteberry) has some evidence for raising progesterone, vitamin C (750mg/day showed some benefit in one study), and in some cases, bioidentical progesterone prescribed by a doctor.
High Androgens (Hyperandrogenism)
What it means: Elevated testosterone and/or DHEA-S, often associated with PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome). Affects up to 10% of menstruating people.
Signs: Acne (especially cystic, along jawline), excess hair growth on face/chest/abdomen (hirsutism), hair thinning on the scalp, irregular or absent periods, difficulty losing weight, skin tags.
What helps: Depends on the cause. Insulin resistance management (exercise, diet, sometimes metformin or inositol), anti-androgen medications if prescribed, spearmint tea has emerging evidence for mild androgen-lowering effects.
Thyroid Dysfunction
What it means: Your thyroid gland (in your neck) produces hormones that regulate metabolism and strongly influence reproductive hormones. Both hypothyroidism (underactive) and hyperthyroidism (overactive) can disrupt your cycle.
Signs of hypothyroid: Heavy periods, longer cycles, fatigue, weight gain, cold intolerance, brain fog, dry skin, constipation, hair loss.
Signs of hyperthyroid: Light or absent periods, shorter cycles, weight loss, anxiety, rapid heartbeat, heat intolerance, tremors.
What helps: Thyroid-specific treatment from an endocrinologist. Thyroid imbalances are very treatable once diagnosed. Always check thyroid function if your cycle suddenly changes without obvious cause.
Myth-Busting: Hormones Edition
Myth: "Hormones make you irrational."
Hormonal fluctuations create real, measurable changes in brain chemistry, pain sensitivity, and energy. Feeling emotional before your period is not irrationality — it is your neurotransmitters genuinely shifting. Research shows that the emotions experienced during PMS are just as "real" as emotions at any other time; the triggers simply have a lower threshold. Dismissing hormonal experiences as irrational is itself irrational.
Truth: Hormones are a communication system, not a flaw.
Your hormones are constantly adapting to your environment, stress levels, nutrition, and sleep. They are trying to keep your body balanced. When symptoms arise, it is often a signal that something in the system needs attention — not that your body is broken.
Myth: "PMS is just in your head."
PMS is a clinically recognized condition affecting 75% of menstruating people to some degree. The severe form, PMDD (Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder), is now in the DSM-5 and affects 3-8% of menstruating people. Brain imaging studies show measurable changes in serotonin receptor binding, amygdala activity, and prefrontal cortex function in the luteal phase. This is biology, not imagination.
Truth: PMS symptoms are physiologically real and often treatable.
From nutrition (magnesium, calcium, B6) to exercise, cognitive behavioral therapy, SSRIs (for PMDD), and lifestyle modifications — there are many evidence-based approaches to managing PMS. You do not have to suffer through it.
Myth: "Hormonal birth control 'fixes' your hormones."
Hormonal contraceptives do not fix hormone imbalances — they override your natural cycle with synthetic hormones. This can be a valid treatment choice for symptoms (pain, heavy bleeding, acne, endometriosis), but it masks rather than resolves underlying imbalances. The "period" on hormonal contraception is a withdrawal bleed, not a true menstrual period.
Truth: Hormonal contraception is a tool, not a cure.
It can be an appropriate treatment for many people. But if you want to understand and address root causes (like PCOS, thyroid issues, or nutrient deficiencies), you may need to work with a provider who investigates beyond prescribing the pill. Both approaches have their place.
Myth: "You can balance your hormones with a detox."
No juice cleanse, supplement stack, or "hormone detox" can meaningfully change your hormone levels. Your liver already detoxifies estrogen (and does it 24/7 without special supplements). Many products marketed for "hormone balance" have no evidence behind them and some can actually be harmful.
Truth: Sustainable habits matter more than quick fixes.
Consistent sleep, adequate nutrition, regular moderate exercise, stress management, and addressing specific medical conditions — these are what actually support healthy hormone function. It is not glamorous, but it works. See our Nutrition Guide and Exercise Guide for evidence-based approaches.
Now That You Know Your Hormones...
Track your cycle to see how these hormonal shifts show up in your daily life. The more you observe, the better you understand your unique patterns.