Period Self-Care Guide
Your cycle is not just something to survive -- it is a rhythm you can work with. This guide walks you through self-care rituals tailored to each phase of your menstrual cycle, helping you rest when you need rest and thrive when your energy rises.
Why Phase-Based Self-Care Matters
Your body goes through a remarkable transformation roughly every 28 days. Hormone levels rise and fall, affecting your energy, mood, creativity, social needs, and even your skin. Instead of fighting these shifts, phase-based self-care means aligning your routines with your body's natural rhythm.
Research shows that people who track their cycles and adjust their habits accordingly report higher satisfaction with their daily routines, less frustration with "off" days, and a stronger sense of bodily autonomy. This is not about perfection -- it is about giving yourself permission to honor what your body needs right now.
Start by identifying which phase you are currently in using our Cycle Day Finder. Then explore the self-care suggestions for that phase. You do not need to do everything -- pick one or two practices that resonate and try them for a cycle or two. Use the Symptom Tracker to note how you feel.
This is your body's invitation to rest. Progesterone and estrogen are at their lowest, energy is typically reduced, and your uterus is doing the physical work of shedding its lining. This phase is not a failure of productivity -- it is a necessary reset.
Rest Permission
Give yourself explicit permission to slow down. This can be the hardest part of menstrual self-care in a culture that values constant productivity. Remind yourself: resting during your period is not laziness -- it is biologically appropriate.
- Cancel or reschedule non-essential plans without guilt
- Go to bed 30-60 minutes earlier than usual
- Say no to extra commitments during these days
- Take naps if your schedule allows
- Choose gentle movement over intense exercise
Comfort Items
Surround yourself with things that provide physical comfort. The goal is to soothe your nervous system and reduce stress hormones that can worsen cramp pain.
- Warm drinks: herbal teas (ginger, chamomile, raspberry leaf), warm water with lemon, or golden milk
- Soft, loose clothing: no waistbands pressing on your abdomen
- Heat sources: heating pad, hot water bottle, or microwaveable heat wrap on your lower belly or back
- Comfort media: re-watch a favorite show, listen to a soothing podcast, or read a light novel
- Weighted blanket or extra-soft throw for lounging
Warming Practices
Heat is one of the most evidence-supported comfort measures during menstruation. A 2012 Cochrane review found that continuous low-level topical heat is as effective as ibuprofen for menstrual cramp relief.
- Warm baths with magnesium-rich Epsom salts (magnesium may help relax uterine muscles when absorbed through the skin)
- Layer blankets and wear warm socks -- many people find their extremities feel colder during menstruation due to blood flow redistribution
- Drink warming foods: soups, stews, broths, and warm grains. Many traditional food systems recommend warming foods during this phase
- Gentle heat on the lower back can help with posterior cramp pain that radiates from the uterus
Brew a cup of your favorite warm drink. Sit somewhere comfortable. Place one hand on your lower belly. Take five deep breaths, exhaling longer than you inhale. Say to yourself: "My body is doing something remarkable right now. I deserve this rest." Sip your drink slowly.
Estrogen is rising steadily now, and with it, your energy, optimism, and curiosity. Many people describe this phase as feeling like a fresh start. Your brain is primed for new information, novel experiences, and creative thinking.
Creative Projects
Rising estrogen is associated with enhanced verbal fluency, creativity, and cognitive flexibility. This is an excellent time to channel that energy:
- Start that creative project you have been thinking about -- painting, writing, crafting, music
- Brainstorm and plan. Your brain is especially good at generating new ideas right now
- Learn something new: take an online class, start a book on an unfamiliar topic, try a new recipe
- Problem-solve. Tackle challenges you have been putting off -- your brain has fresh perspective
- Reorganize or redecorate your space. Channel the "new beginnings" energy into your environment
Social Connections
Rising estrogen tends to increase sociability and communication skills. You may feel more open, articulate, and interested in others:
- Plan friend dates, dinner parties, or group activities
- Have important conversations you have been delaying
- Network, meet new people, attend events
- Call the friend or family member you have been meaning to catch up with
- Volunteer or engage in community activities
New Experiences
Your tolerance for novelty and change is higher during this phase. It is a wonderful time to:
- Explore a new neighborhood, trail, or park
- Try a restaurant with a cuisine you have never had
- Test a new workout class or sport
- Read outside your usual genre
- Attend a live event -- concert, talk, performance
Write down three things you are excited about or curious about right now. Choose one and take one small action toward it today. It could be as simple as bookmarking a class, texting a friend to make plans, or sketching an idea. Ride the wave of rising energy.
Estrogen peaks and a surge of luteinizing hormone triggers ovulation. Testosterone also rises briefly. This is typically when energy, confidence, and communicative ability are at their highest. Many people feel their most vibrant and outgoing during this window.
Celebrate Your Body
This phase is a beautiful time to appreciate what your body can do:
- Wear something that makes you feel amazing -- whatever that means for you
- Practice body appreciation: stand in front of a mirror and thank three parts of your body for what they do (not how they look)
- Take a photo of yourself if that feels good -- not for anyone else, just because you are radiant
- Treat yourself to something sensory: a new scent, a soft fabric, or a nourishing skin product
Movement
Your physical stamina and recovery time are typically at their best around ovulation. This is the time to challenge yourself:
- Try a high-intensity workout, dance class, or competitive sport
- Go for a long hike or bike ride
- Take a group fitness class and feed off the communal energy
- Attempt a personal best if you strength train -- your body is primed for performance
- Try that adventurous activity: rock climbing, surfing, martial arts
Confidence Practices
Leverage your heightened confidence and communication skills:
- Give that presentation, have the difficult conversation, pitch the idea
- Negotiate -- whether it is a salary, a boundary, or a household responsibility
- Record voice memos or videos of yourself feeling confident -- listen to them during your lower-energy phases for a boost
- Write down your accomplishments and strengths. This list becomes a lifeline during harder days
Put on a song that makes you feel powerful. Dance -- in your kitchen, your bedroom, wherever. Let your body move however it wants. No rules, no performance, just the joy of having a body that moves. End with three deep breaths and a smile.
Progesterone rises after ovulation, bringing a shift toward inward focus. You may feel more introspective, detail-oriented, and sensitive. The second half of the luteal phase (premenstrual days) is when PMS symptoms may appear as both estrogen and progesterone drop. This is not a broken phase -- it is a time for completion, nesting, and honest reflection.
Boundary Setting
Rising progesterone can lower your tolerance for things that usually do not bother you. This is actually valuable information:
- Practice saying no without over-explaining. "I cannot make it" is a complete sentence
- Reduce your social commitments. You do not owe anyone your energy
- Set phone and social media boundaries -- screen time can feel more draining in this phase
- The things that irritate you premenstrually often reflect genuine needs being unmet. Pay attention to what bothers you -- it has information
Comfort Food (The Healthy Version)
Cravings during the luteal phase are real and have a biological basis -- your metabolic rate increases by approximately 100-300 calories per day. Honor cravings without abandoning nutrition:
- Craving chocolate? Choose dark chocolate (70%+) which provides magnesium, a mineral that may help with PMS symptoms
- Craving carbs? Opt for complex carbohydrates: sweet potatoes, whole grain pasta, oats. These support serotonin production
- Craving salt? Roasted chickpeas, salted nuts, or miso soup satisfy salt cravings while adding nutrients
- Add anti-inflammatory foods: fatty fish (salmon, sardines), leafy greens, berries, turmeric
- Stay hydrated -- bloating is worse with dehydration, counterintuitively
Cozy Routines
- Finish projects rather than starting new ones -- your detail-oriented brain excels at completion tasks
- Create a cozy evening routine: warm bath, gentle stretching, herbal tea, soft lighting
- Curate a comfort playlist for this phase of your cycle
- Organize, declutter, or deep-clean. The "nesting" instinct many feel can be channeled productively
- Meal prep for the next few days so you have nourishing food ready when your period starts
Light a candle (or turn on a warm lamp). Wrap yourself in something cozy. Write down three things that went well this cycle and one thing you would like to adjust next cycle. Close with three slow breaths. You are exactly where you need to be.
Bath and Body Care During Your Period
Contrary to outdated myths, bathing during your period is not only safe -- it is one of the best things you can do for comfort. Warm water relaxes muscles, reduces cramp pain, and improves mood.
Period Bath Tips
- 💧 Temperature matters: Warm (not scalding) water is ideal. Aim for 37-39 degrees C / 98-102 degrees F. Too hot can cause dizziness, especially during menstruation when blood volume shifts.
- 🧰 Epsom salts: Add 1-2 cups of magnesium sulfate (Epsom salt) to your bath. Magnesium absorption through the skin may help relax uterine muscles and ease cramps.
- 🧷 pH-friendly products: Your vaginal pH may shift slightly during menstruation. Use gentle, fragrance-free products near the vulvar area. Save the fancy bath bombs for external-only use.
- 🕐 Duration: 15-30 minutes is the sweet spot. Long enough to relax, short enough to avoid excessive skin softening or temperature-related discomfort.
- 🍂 Shower alternative: If baths are not your thing, a warm shower with a focus on letting water hit your lower back can also provide muscle relaxation and cramp relief.
Skincare Through Your Cycle
Hormonal fluctuations affect your skin throughout your cycle. Adjusting your routine can help:
- 🌹 Menstrual phase: Skin tends to be drier. Focus on hydration and gentle cleansing. Skip harsh exfoliants.
- 🌱 Follicular phase: Skin is often at its best. A great time for new products or treatments as your skin is more resilient.
- ☀️ Ovulation: You may have a natural glow from higher estrogen. Minimal makeup days can feel great.
- 🍁 Luteal phase: Rising progesterone can trigger oil production and breakouts. Gentle salicylic acid or niacinamide can help. Be extra diligent about cleansing.
Aromatherapy: What the Evidence Says
Essential oils have been used for menstrual comfort across cultures for centuries. Modern research is beginning to validate some of these traditional uses, though evidence quality varies.
Moderate Evidence| Essential Oil | Evidence Level | Primary Benefit | How to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lavender | Moderate | Multiple RCTs show reduced menstrual pain severity when inhaled or applied topically (diluted) | Add 3-5 drops to a diffuser, or dilute in carrier oil for abdominal massage |
| Clary Sage | Moderate | May reduce cortisol levels and act as a mild antispasmodic. A 2012 study found it reduced menstrual pain in a topical application | Dilute in carrier oil (like jojoba) and massage onto lower abdomen |
| Rose | Emerging | Preliminary research suggests it may reduce anxiety and menstrual pain when inhaled | Inhale from the bottle, add to a warm bath, or use in a diffuser |
| Peppermint | Emerging | May help with nausea and headaches associated with menstruation | Inhale directly, apply diluted to temples for headaches, add to foot soak |
| Cinnamon | Emerging | One RCT found cinnamon essential oil reduced menstrual pain and bleeding severity | Use in a diffuser or add a drop to warm tea (food-grade oil only) |
| Marjoram | Emerging | May have analgesic and sedative properties that help with menstrual discomfort | Dilute and apply to lower abdomen, or add to warm compress |
- • Never apply essential oils directly to skin -- always dilute in a carrier oil (2-3% concentration)
- • Do a patch test before first use of any new oil
- • Pregnant or trying to conceive? Consult your healthcare provider before using essential oils
- • Some oils can cause photosensitivity -- avoid sun exposure on treated areas
- • Keep oils away from pets, especially cats, who metabolize them differently
- • Essential oils are not regulated as medicine -- quality varies widely between brands
Building Your Period Comfort Kit
Having a dedicated period comfort kit means you never have to scramble when your period arrives. Keep it stocked and accessible -- in a cute bag, a designated drawer, or a basket by your bed.
Journaling Prompts for Each Phase
Journaling is a powerful self-care tool that costs nothing and takes as little as five minutes. These prompts are designed to match the emotional and cognitive qualities of each cycle phase.
🌹 Menstrual Phase Prompts
🌱 Follicular Phase Prompts
☀️ Ovulation Phase Prompts
🍁 Luteal Phase Prompts
Mental Health Self-Care: When to Ask for Help
Mood changes throughout your cycle are normal. But sometimes what feels like "just PMS" is something that deserves professional support. Self-care includes knowing when self-care alone is not enough.
Normal Cycle-Related Mood Changes
These are typical and usually manageable with self-care:
- Feeling more introverted or sensitive in the luteal phase
- Increased irritability 1-3 days before your period that resolves once bleeding starts
- Lower motivation during menstruation that bounces back in the follicular phase
- Feeling more emotional or tearful premenstrually
- Mild anxiety that comes and goes with your cycle
When to Reach Out for Professional Support
Consider talking to a healthcare provider if:
- Symptoms are severe: You cannot function at work, school, or in relationships for multiple days per cycle
- Symptoms are getting worse: Each cycle feels harder than the last, or symptoms are lasting longer
- You have thoughts of self-harm or hopelessness during any phase of your cycle
- Others have noticed: People close to you are expressing concern about your mood changes
- You are using substances to cope: Alcohol, drugs, or other substances to manage premenstrual symptoms
- It might be PMDD: Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder affects 3-8% of menstruating people and involves severe depression, anxiety, or rage that appears in the luteal phase and resolves with menstruation. PMDD is a real medical condition with effective treatments. See our PMS & PMDD Toolkit
If you are in crisis, please reach out:
- 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (US)
- Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741 (US, UK, Canada)
- International Association for Suicide Prevention: Find your country's crisis center
Creating Your Personal Cycle Self-Care Plan
The best self-care plan is one you will actually follow. Here is how to build yours step by step.
This guide draws on published research including: Jo & Lee (2018) on aromatherapy for menstrual pain; Akin et al. (2001) on continuous low-level topical heat for dysmenorrhea; Direkvand-Moghadam et al. (2014) on the epidemiology of PMS; and Sundstrom-Poromaa & Gingnell (2014) on menstrual cycle influence on cognitive function. Evidence ratings reflect the current state of published literature and may change as new research emerges.