
Aspire guide
Female Athletes
Female Athletes manual
Menstrual Cycle Phase Fueling
Adjust nutrition across follicular and luteal phases for optimal performance.
Why this matters
Read time
3 min
Audience
Athlete + Coach
Use it for
Female Athletes
Start here
Cycle-aware fueling works best when it stays practical: track, notice, adjust, and escalate if the period goes missing or symptoms stop matching normal variation.
Coach prompt
Track the month, not just the workout.
Quick reference
Topic snapshot

Key action
Menstrual Cycle Phase Fueling
Read time
3 min
Audience
Athlete + Coach
Start here
Cycle-aware fueling works best when it stays practical: track, notice, adjust, and escalate if the period goes missing or symptoms stop matching normal variation.
Best next move
Use it this week
Track the month, not just the workout.
Quick reference map
Use the topic like a clear checklist
In the library
Format
Read the topic here, then download the PDF only when you need an offline copy.
Best use
Open the sections you need, then share the same topic link with coaches, parents, or athletes.
Quick start
Start here
Adjust nutrition across follicular and luteal phases for optimal performance.

Anchor idea
Fueling by cycle phase is about adjustment, not reinvention
- Most athletes do best when they keep core fueling habits stable and layer small changes on top.
- Tracking helps you notice whether symptoms, hunger, or session feel reliably change across the month.
Menstruation
During the period, think comfort, iron, and hydration
- Blood loss can increase attention to iron-rich meals and vitamin C pairing.
- Warm, easy-to-digest meals and fluids may work better when cramps or nausea are present.
Follicular and ovulation
Many athletes feel sharper when carb use and session quality feel easier
- This is often a good window for hard training when the athlete subjectively feels strong.
- Standard pre, during, and post-workout fueling usually works well here.
Watch for
What to watch before it becomes a crisis
Performance drop-offs, stress injuries, menstrual disruption, and persistent fatigue rarely show up as isolated issues.
- Under-fueling is often quieter than coaches expect.
- The best first move is usually a food-plus-screening conversation, not a supplement guess.
- Parents and coaches should hear the same short message.

What Usually Changes
- Appetite
- Hydration needs
- Craving patterns
Unlock the rest of the manual
Full access opens every section and the ebook PDF.
What to do next
Use it this week
Track the month, not just the workout.
Source topics
menstrual cycle • phases • hormones • period • female
