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Nutrition & Your Menstrual Cycle - A TCM Perpective

  • Feb 27
  • 3 min read

by Aimee Mickelburough


Your menstrual cycle isn’t just about your period; it’s a dynamic rhythm of Yin and Yang, Blood and Qi.


In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), each phase of your cycle carries a different energetic quality.


When we align our food and lifestyle with these natural shifts, we support smoother periods, balanced hormones, improved fertility, and fewer PMS symptoms.


Here’s how to nourish your body with TCM based nutrition through each phase of your menstrual cycle.



MENSTRUATION Blood Phase (Approx. Day 1–5)

(*days are a guide and can vary depending on individual cycles)


As you bleed, you are losing Blood. During this time, your body is more vulnerable to Cold, which in TCM can constrict the uterus and contribute to cramping, clotting, and discomfort.


This is a phase for warmth, rest, and replenishment.


Focus on warm, soft, easy-to-digest meals.


Foods to enjoy:

• Congee (add red dates or goji berries for extra nourishment)

• Slow-cooked meats & bone broth

• Stewed vegetables like pumpkin, carrot, and sweet potato

• Warming spices such as ginger, cinnamon, and turmeric


Foods to avoid:

• Icy drinks or cold foods

• Raw salads• Excess sugar

• Caffeine


And yes, wear your socks!

Also keep your abdomen, lower back, and feet warm to support smooth Blood flow and reduce a clot, painful period. 


tumeric is a warming spice during menstrual cycle



FOLLICULAR PHASE Yin Phase (Approx. Day 6–13)


After your bleed, your body begins rebuilding.

This is a Yin and Blood-nourishing phase. The endometrial lining regenerates, and a dominant follicle matures in preparation for ovulation.


Yin is cooling, moistening, and restorative, and it needs nourishment.

Think mineral-rich, deeply nourishing foods that build Blood.


Foods to enjoy:

• Red meat (in moderation, high quality where possible)

• Beetroot & dark leafy greens

• Goji berries & red dates

• Salmon & sardines (rich in essential fatty acids)


Foods to avoid:

• Icy drinks or cold foods

• Excess sugar and caffeine

• Alcohol


Energy often starts to rise here, build steadily rather than burning yourself out.



sardines are a rich source of fatty acids for your menstrual cycle

OVULATION - Yang Phase (Approx. Day 14–16)


When Yin reaches its peak, it transforms into Yang; this is ovulation.

The egg is released, and smooth Liver Qi and unobstructed Blood flow are essential.

If Liver Qi becomes stagnant, symptoms like irritability, bloating, or breast tenderness may arise.


We gently support warmth and circulation without overheating.


Foods to enjoy:

• Lighter, more frequent meals

• Oats & rice

• Onion & parsnip

• Chicken

• Warming spices like cinnamon, cloves, cumin, cardamom, and ginger


Foods to avoid:

• Icy drinks

• Excess raw foods


This is often your most outward, expressive phase - a time for connection and momentum.


cinnamon is a warming spice for the menstrual cycle

LUTEAL PHASE - Qi Phase (Approx. Day 17–28)


Your Yang energy is now at its peak. Qi and Blood work together to prepare for a possible pregnancy. If conception doesn’t occur, progesterone drops and the cycle begins again.


Smooth Qi flow is crucial. When Qi becomes stagnant, PMS symptoms like mood swings, bloating, breast tenderness, and cramping can appear.

This is a time to regulate and ground, not push harder.


Foods to enjoy:

• Lightly sautéed greens

• Spring onion, fennel, basil

• Garlic & ginger

• A splash of vinegar to move stagnation

• Nuts & seeds


Foods to avoid:

• Icy drinks

• Greasy or fried foods

• Excess caffeine (which may worsen PMS in some people)


Gentle movement, rest, and emotional processing can make a significant difference during this phase.



nuts are a good source of nutrition


Your cycle is not something to “push through.” It’s a monthly conversation between rest and action, building and releasing.


Small shifts, like choosing warm meals during your bleed or reducing caffeine in the luteal phase, can create profound changes over time.


If your cycle feels painful, irregular, heavy, missing, or emotionally overwhelming, that’s not something you just have to live with. In TCM, your period is a vital sign and it tells us a lot about your overall health.



Aimee Mickelburough is available for Acupuncture/TCM appointments at Bodyactive Health every Tuesday & Thursday.


To make an appointment with Aimee, use the link below:

3 Comments


Edward
Edward
Mar 01

Framing the menstrual cycle through energetic dualities emphasizes pattern recognition over isolated symptoms. In interpretations shaped this perspective prioritizes cyclical balance and systemic interdependence, though translating metaphor into measurable intervention requires careful integration with biomedical markers and individualized assessment.

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Angeline AngelineNajera
Angeline AngelineNajera
Mar 01

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Alton
Alton
Mar 01

Framing the menstrual cycle through concepts like Yin, Yang, Blood, and Qi reflects an interpretive model that prioritises systemic balance over isolated symptoms. The Golden Crown of this https://www.gfme.co.nz perspective lies in its holistic lens, though its clinical integration depends on how practitioners reconcile traditional frameworks with contemporary biomedical evidence and individual variability.

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