5 Tips to Manage Your Period Pain

Cycle

If we’ve been conditioned for years and years to hate our periods, to hide, suppress, and even reject them, it's no surprise that many of us struggle with them so much. If you're at a point where you're experiencing pain every month and nothing seems to work, we might suggest trying something different. 

woman lying down with hands on her stomach in pain.

We’re not saying that a supplement or a cup of tea is going to magically take away your period pain, but rather we are inviting you to shift your mindset and behavior around your cycle and period by starting to listen and trust what your unique body is trying to tell you, what it needs to heal.

Here are some of the practices that we’ve learned and adopted ourselves to better manage our discomfort and pain.

1. Tune into your cycle.

Practice Menstrual Cycle Awareness by starting to track your entire cycle, not just your period days. You can use a period tracking app or a pen and paper. Start to become more aware of how you feel at different phases of your cycle, note the feelings down, and try to notice patterns. By tracking all the days of your cycle, not just menstruation, you will start to see how intricate this inbuilt system is and how cyclical we are. 

2. Slow down before your period.

We are living in unprecedented times where we are always going somewhere or doing something. Menstruation is demanding that we slow down and reconnect with ourselves. We know responsibilities, schedules, and duties can make that difficult, but if you are more aware of when your period is coming, you can start to adjust your schedule to slow down around that time. It's the time to say "yes" to ourselves and "no" to the outside world.

Menstruation's role is to undo you, so you can experience some true respite. Then it puts you back together again, freshly minted to go out and conquer the world once more.

The Red School

3. Be mindful of what you eat and how you move.

While you're bleeding, try to take it easy with your workouts. Your body is doing so much work right now, so allow it to rest. Go for walks and opt for other forms of gentle movement, like stretching or gentle yoga. Nourish your body with foods that are warm and rich in iron and vitamin B to support blood loss and low energy. Loading up on good fats can also help stabilize your mood. Some suggestions are soups, stews, salmon, red meat, dark leafy greens, beets, brown rice, dark berries, flaxseeds, and pumpkin seeds.

4. Do something that makes you feel good.

This is meant to be a time for you – a time to rest, nest, and recuperate. Although we resist that, because we want to go about our day as if nothing were happening (perhaps to prove that we are no different than men and periods don’t hold us back), we are only denying our own needs by doing so. 

We are not suggesting you change your whole life and routine according to your period, but try to carve out some time for you, to do what might ease your discomfort and allow your body to get into a resting state.

5. Listen to your body

If you’re too distracted with the outside world and not paying attention to yourself and your needs, your body is going to try to get your attention, and sometimes in the form of pain. One of the best ways to mitigate pain is to actually listen to what it’s trying to tell you. Next time you start to feel period pain or discomfort and you feel the same old emotional response (frustration, annoyance, anxiety), take this as an invitation to stop and reflect. What if P.A.I.N. was your body’s way of saying "Pay Attention Inside Now"?

Remember

Menstruation is a shedding of the past and a start of something new. Once we start to shift our perception of menstruation, our attitudes and behavior can also change. 

Disclaimer

The range of period pain and discomfort during and before a period varies very much from woman to woman. As we've said before, debilitating or severe period pain is not normal, and we recommend you see a healthcare professional who can help you get to the root cause of that pain. If they dismiss your pain as “normal,” try to find someone else who listens to you and is willing to help.

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illustration of three different women.