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Period getting you down? Try cycle syncing, a menstrual health game changer

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Period getting you down? Try cycle syncing, a menstrual health game changer
The wellness world is buzzing about a game changer for menstrual health: cycle syncing. This innovative trend helps people who menstruate tailor their lives to the natural hormonal shifts throughout their cycle. By syncing daily activities, nutrition and self-care with these hormonal fluctuations, individuals can better manage physical and emotional changes, boosting overall well-being.
Cycle syncing promises to improve quality of life for people who menstruate. Photo: Getty Images
Hormonal changes throughout the menstrual cycle touch every part of life, from sleep quality and sex drive to energy levels and overall mood. Cycle syncing is all about aligning daily routines with the body’s hormonal rhythms.

The typical 28-day menstrual cycle is divided into four phases: menstrual, follicular, ovulatory and luteal. Each phase – or season – brings unique hormonal changes that have an impact on energy levels, mood and cognitive function.

The menstrual cycle

Cycle syncing can help reduce menstruation-related symptoms. Photo: Shutterstock
Cycle syncing can help reduce menstruation-related symptoms. Photo: Shutterstock
Ovulation occurs midway through the cycle, with a surge in luteinising hormone (LH), an egg being released, and peaking oestrogen and testosterone levels, which enhance energy and libido. The luteal phase follows, with increased progesterone preparing for potential pregnancy. If no fertilisation occurs, hormone levels drop, leading to menstruation and the start of a new cycle, often with mood swings and physical symptoms.

Winter: the menstrual phase

The menstrual phase is a prime time for gentle exercise such as yoga. Photo: Getty Images
The menstrual phase is a prime time for gentle exercise such as yoga. Photo: Getty Images

This is when you get your period. Energy levels are often at their lowest during this phase, making it a prime time for gentle exercise such as walking, stretching, yoga or Pilates.

“In the menstrual cycle, you’re bleeding, so your body has high inflammation that’s part of the bleeding process,” said US-based obstetrician, gynaecologist and reproductive endocrinologist Dr Natalie Crawford. For that reason, the focus should be on trying to decrease inflammation. “Do focus on iron – spinach and other leafy greens are a great source of that,” she says, adding that anti-inflammatory foods like berries and fatty fish also help to reduce discomfort.

Fitness

Winter Work Outs: Beware Of Vigorous Exercise That Can Harm Your Knees And Back

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Winter Work Outs: Beware Of Vigorous Exercise That Can Harm Your Knees And Back

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Winter is the peak season for preventable injuries, especially among people who go from zero to beast mode without warming up properly.

It is important to focus on the basics while working, especially in winter months

It is important to focus on the basics while working, especially in winter months

Winter and year-end have that weird motivational magic: the cold hits, the guilt kicks in, and suddenly everyone wants to “fix their fitness” overnight. Gyms fill up, running tracks get busy, and people jump straight from hibernation mode to high-intensity everything. And honestly? That’s where most winter workout injuries begin.

If you’ve ever felt your knees crack louder than your New Year’s resolutions or your lower back screaming after a surprise sprint session, you’re not alone. Orthopaedic doctors say winter is the peak season for preventable injuries, especially among people who go from zero to beast mode without warming up properly.

Dr Ashis Acharya, Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi, puts it straight: “Cold muscles are tight muscles. Tight muscles get injured faster. Most knee and lower-back injuries in winter happen because people start vigorously without allowing the body to transition from cold to active.”

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Why Winter Makes You More Vulnerable

Think of your muscles like cold rubber bands. They’re less flexible, stiffer, and more likely to snap under sudden stress. When the temperature dips, your body goes into “leave me alone” mode.

Your muscles don’t get the same easy blood flow, so they take longer to warm up. Your joints feel a little creaky, like they’ve been sitting in one position too long. And your tendons? They tighten up like stubborn rubber bands, which means your knees and lower back have to work way harder than they should.

The Usual Culprits: Mistakes Everyone Makes

‘I’ll warm up as I go’: That’s like starting your car in freezing weather and immediately hitting 100 km/h. Your knees, especially the patellofemoral joint, take the first hit.

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Jumping from desk job to deadlifts: If you sit 8–10 hours a day, your hip flexors tighten, and your glutes go on vacation. Winter amplifies this. So, when you suddenly lift heavy, your lower back ends up doing the job your hips should be doing.

Running with cold shoes, cold muscles, cold everything: Runners are notorious for this. Cold mornings + no mobility work = knee pain that sticks around longer than your enthusiasm.

Overconfidence because ‘Winter feels good for workouts’: Sure, cold air feels refreshing. But inside, your joints are screaming, “please stop”.

What Actually Helps

  • Warm up for 10–15 minutes. Light mobility, marching, ankle circles, hip openers, simple but magic.
  • Start slower. Build intensity gradually over 2–3 weeks.
  • Layer up. Warm muscles = safer movements.
  • Strengthen the basics. Glutes, hamstrings, quads, core. These stabilise your knees and back.
  • Stretch after workouts. Winter tightness lingers, so cool-downs actually matter.

As Dr Acharya sums up, Consistency beats intensity. Winter workouts are great, but only if your body is ready for them.” You can absolutely crush your winter goals. Just don’t treat your body like it’s auditioning for an action film on day one. Warm up, ease in, stay smart, and your knees and back will thank you all season long.

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I tried the Wattbike Proton smart bike for a month and it’s the best exercise bike I’ve ever used

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I tried the Wattbike Proton smart bike for a month and it’s the best exercise bike I’ve ever used

I’ve tried a lot of stationary exercise bikes in my time as a fitness writer, but I can safely say the Wattbike Proton is my favorite.

And now you can get your hands on the Wattbike Proton with $450 off in the Black Friday sale—down to $1,845 from $2,295 (excluding shipping). This price includes a free subscription to Hub+, the premium version of the accompanying app, worth $80.

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Is morning or evening exercise better for weight loss? Researchers find out

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Is morning or evening exercise better for weight loss? Researchers find out

Any exercise is better than no exercise when it comes to losing weight, and ultimately, you should go when you know you can stay consistent because it fits in your schedule. For some people, that’s first thing in the morning, and for others, that’s in the evening after work. Others like to mix it up depending on what’s on the agenda.

In a thought-provoking study, researchers found that moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, such as running, cycling, sports, and brisk walking, is protective against obesity. However, what’s less clear is the optimal time to get those muscles moving and break a sweat. Does it really matter that much? Are we overthinking it? Researchers dived deeper to understand more.

The study

In a study published in the journal Obesity, researchers placed 5285 participants into three different groups based on when they did most of their exercise:

  • Morning workout group
  • Midday workout group
  • Evening workout group

The researchers tested the patterns and associations between the timing of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity and obesity. They compared how exercising at different times related to both waist size and body weight.

The results

The results revealed the following:

  • Morning exercise seemed to be the most effective for weight control.
  • Those who were the most active in the morning had a lower body mass index and smaller waistlines overall, even when they did the same amount of exercise as those who mostly exercised midday or in the evening.
  • Exercising at any time of the day was beneficial for obesity, but morning exercisers had the strongest link to lower obesity.

Meeting the exercise guidelines

Among the individuals who met the weekly exercise guidelines of at least 150 minutes every week, their average body mass index was:

  • Morning — 25.9
  • Midday — 27.6
  • Evening — 27.2

For those who met the exercise guidelines, their waist size was:

  • Morning — 91.5 cm
  • Midday — 95.8 cm
  • Evening — 95.0 cm

Overall, morning exercisers were leaner.

The takeaway

Exercise helps prevent obesity and promotes weight loss, no matter what time you get your muscles moving. This study shows that morning exercise may be superior and offer an extra advantage for weight loss compared with midday or evening exercise. In this study, morning exercisers had lower BMIs and smaller waists. There’s more to the weight-loss picture than exercise alone; other factors like nutrition, hormones, toxicity, sleep, certain medications, and stress also play a role.

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