---
title: "10 Hormone Health Green Flags: Signs Your Athlete Physiology Is Actually Performing Well"
entity: "blog"
canonical_url: "https://www.andreaproulxnd.com/blog/10-hormone-health-green-flags-signs-your-athlete-physiology-is-actually-performing-well"
markdown_url: "https://www.andreaproulxnd.com/llms/blog/10-hormone-health-green-flags-signs-your-athlete-physiology-is-actually-performing-well"
lastmod: "2026-04-03T04:08:11.000Z"
---

Most people are trained to notice symptoms when something is wrong.

Fatigue, brain fog. PMS. Bloating and digestive issues. Hormone chaos.

But if you train seriously, monitor performance metrics, and pay attention to physiology, there’s another skill worth developing recognizing when your system is working well.

Hormone health is not about perfection.

It’s about consistent physiological signals that your brain, ovaries, metabolism, gut, and nervous system are communicating effectively.

For active women and athletes, these “green flags” often show up first in energy, training performance, recovery, and mood stability.

So let’s take a moment to highlight 10 signs that your hormonal physiology is likely functioning within a healthy range. What does that actually look like and feel like?

And celebrate when things are going well – and be proactive enough to get the help we need from a qualified healthcare professional when it’s not.

### 1. Steady Energy Throughout the Day

You feel alert and capable from morning to evening.

Not wired.

Not crashing at 3 pm.

Not relying on coffee to get you through your morning.

This usually reflects balanced cortisol rhythms and stable blood glucose regulation.

Healthy patterns often include:

- Energy that gradually rises in the morning
- Mental clarity through work and training sessions
- No urgent need for caffeine or sugar to stay functional
- Consistent productivity and focus

When cortisol and blood sugar are regulated, your body can mobilize fuel without over-activating the stress response. This also can look like a more lean midsection and not that muffin-top (cortisol causes more fat accumulation around the midsection).

### 2. Predictable Menstrual Cycles

Regular cycles are one of the clearest markers of hormone health.

A typical healthy cycle falls between 26–35 days and occurs consistently month to month.

This indicates strong communication between the hypothalamus, pituitary gland, and ovaries.

Healthy cycle patterns include:

• Similar cycle length each month

• Clear menstrual flow without extreme pain

• Ovulation occurring regularly

• PMS symptoms that are manageable

For athletes, irregular cycles can signal energy imbalance, excessive stress load, or disrupted hormonal signaling.

For perimenopausal women, your hormones and cycles may get irregular. While energy, body temperature, mood and brain function are affected by these changes, the effects should not reduce your quality of life.

### 3. Ovulation Feels Normal

Ovulation is a metabolic and neurological event.

When estrogen peaks mid-cycle, many women notice subtle physiological shifts:

• Clear cervical fluid

• Slight increase in energy

• Increased confidence and social drive

• Improved strength or power in training

If you have never taken notice of confidence of strength at various times in your cycle – get started! Here’s a simple but effective old-school tracker to get your thinking beyond symptoms. You can also make the next pro-move and learn from my course “ [Keeping Your Rhythm” course here.](/keeping-your-rhythm-course/keeping-your-rhythm-course)

What shouldn’t happen:

• Severe pain

• Debilitating anxiety spikes

• Symptoms that force you to stop daily activities

Normal ovulation suggests your body is producing and responding to estrogen appropriately, a key driver of performance and tissue health.

### 4. You Sleep Well Most Nights

Quality sleep reflects strong circadian rhythm alignment.

When cortisol and melatonin are functioning properly, sleep typically looks like:

- Falling asleep without prolonged struggle
- Staying asleep through most of the night
- Waking feeling reasonably refreshed

Athletes often underestimate how closely sleep reflects hormonal status.

Disrupted sleep patterns frequently signal issues with:

- Cortisol regulation
- Blood sugar stability
- Nervous system overload

Good sleep means your body can repair tissue, consolidate learning, and restore neurological capacity.

### 5. Daily, Easy Poops

Digestive function plays a major role in hormone balance.

One simple marker: regular bowel movements.

Healthy patterns typically include:

• One or more easy bowel movements daily. If you eat everyday, you should poop everyday – I don’t care what anyone says.

• No significant bloating

• No urgency or discomfort

The gut helps metabolize and eliminate excess estrogen through the liver–gut axis.

When digestion is working well, the body can efficiently clear hormonal by-products and inflammatory compounds.

### 6. Appetite Feels Regulated

A healthy metabolism includes clear hunger and satisfaction signals.

You feel:

• Hungry before meals

• Satisfied after eating

• No constant grazing or late-night cravings

This reflects coordination between metabolic hormones such as:

- insulin
- leptin
- ghrelin
- cortisol

For active individuals, this pattern indicates your body feels energetically supported rather than chronically deprived.

### 7. Emotional Resilience

Mental resilience is partly neurological, but hormones play a major role.

Balanced progesterone and stable blood sugars support:

• Calm mood

• Stress tolerance

• Faster emotional recovery after challenges

This doesn’t mean feeling calm all the time.

It means your system returns to baseline after stress instead of staying stuck in fight-or-flight mode.

### 8. Skin Follows a Predictable Pattern

Hormones influence oil production, inflammation, and immune responses in the skin.

Healthy patterns often include:

• Mostly clear skin

• Mild blemishes that follow your cycle

• Occasional premenstrual acne

What’s different from hormone imbalance is predictability.

Chaotic or persistent breakouts can reflect shifts in androgen activity, insulin signaling, or gut health.

### 9. Libido Is Present

Sex drive is a physiological signal of overall health.

It doesn’t need to be high.

But it should be present and responsive.

Libido reflects integration between:

- sex hormones (estrogen, testosterone)
- nervous system safety
- energy availability

When the body is chronically stressed, under too much mental-load or under-fueled, libido is often one of the first systems to down-regulate.

### 10. PMS Isn’t Taking You Out

Some hormonal shifts before menstruation are normal.

You might notice:

• slight appetite changes

• mild mood shifts

• increased fatigue

What is not normal:

• debilitating pain

• severe mood instability

• symptoms that stop you from functioning

Extreme PMS often reflects hormone imbalance, inflammation, or metabolic stress. Check out “ [Crying Over Split Pasta](/blog/crying-over-spilt-pasta)” a video I did about how gluten sensitivity causes pain – including the inflammatory pain of PMS.

### Why Hormone Health “Green Flags” Matter

In clinical practice, most women only seek help when something feels wrong.

But high-performing bodies also give signals when things are working well.

For active women, healthy hormone physiology supports:

• stable energy for training

• faster recovery between sessions

• stronger neurological focus

• consistent body composition regulation

• long-term resilience

Recognizing these green flags helps you protect the systems that support performance.

Because optimal health is not just about fixing problems.

It’s about noticing when your physiology is doing its job — and keeping it that way.
