Partner Guides
She shouldn't have to explain everything. These guides cover what's happening in her body, what actually helps, and what to avoid — across every hormonal life stage.
Her Cycle
What's actually happening during her menstrual cycle — and how you can be the partner she needs in each phase.
Her Period Is Late — What You Should Know
A late period has many possible causes beyond pregnancy — stress, weight changes, thyroid issues, and more. Your job isn't to diagnose her. It's to stay calm, avoid pressuring her, and be ready to support whatever she needs next.
Blood Clots During Her Period — What Partners Should Know
Small blood clots during her period are completely normal, especially on heavy days. Your role is to know enough to not overreact — and to recognize when larger or more frequent clots might mean she should see a doctor.
The 4 Phases of Her Cycle — A Partner's Guide
Her cycle has four distinct phases — menstruation, follicular, ovulation, and luteal — each with different hormonal profiles that affect her mood, energy, and needs. Understanding these patterns helps you be supportive at the right times in the right ways.
PMS vs PMDD — How Partners Can Tell the Difference
PMS involves manageable physical and emotional symptoms before her period. PMDD is a severe, clinically recognized condition that causes intense mood episodes, anxiety, or depression in the luteal phase. Knowing the difference changes how you respond — and could change her life.
Pregnancy
A trimester-by-trimester guide for partners — what she's going through, what helps, and what to avoid.
She's Spotting in Early Pregnancy — How to Help Without Panicking
Spotting in the first trimester happens in 15-25% of pregnancies and is usually harmless — often caused by implantation bleeding or cervical sensitivity. Your job isn't to diagnose it, but to stay calm, help her track symptoms, and know the emergency signs: heavy bleeding, severe one-sided pain, or dizziness. Those mean ER, not wait-and-see.
Third Trimester Surprises — What Partners Aren't Told
The final stretch of pregnancy is physically brutal in ways nobody warns partners about. Lightning crotch, rib pain, constant peeing, pregnancy brain, and breathlessness are all normal — but deeply uncomfortable. You can't fix any of it, but understanding what's happening and showing up with patience makes an enormous difference.
Braxton Hicks vs Real Labor — A Partner's Decision Guide
Braxton Hicks are practice contractions — irregular, painless to mildly uncomfortable, and they stop with rest or hydration. Real labor contractions are regular, get closer together, intensify over time, and don't stop no matter what she does. If contractions are consistent at 5 minutes apart for 1 hour, it's time to call the provider or head in.
Pregnancy Food Rules — What Partners Actually Need to Know
The real dangers are listeria (deli meats, soft cheeses, raw sprouts), mercury (certain fish), raw or undercooked meat/eggs, and alcohol. Most other food "rules" are exaggerated or outdated. Your job isn't to police her plate — it's to make safe food accessible and let her make informed choices.
Perimenopause
The transition most partners don't understand — what's happening to her hormones and how to actually help.
Your Partner Might Be in Perimenopause — Here's What to Know
Perimenopause is a 4-to-10-year hormonal transition that can start in the late 30s. If your partner is experiencing new anxiety, sleep problems, mood shifts, or rage that neither of you can explain, fluctuating hormones are a likely cause — and your understanding makes a real difference.
Perimenopause Brain Fog — What Partners Need to Understand
Perimenopause brain fog is caused by fluctuating estrogen levels that directly affect memory, word retrieval, and focus. It's temporary and not a sign of dementia — but she may be terrified it is. Your patience, reassurance, and practical support matter more than you realize.
Perimenopause Rage — A Partner's Guide to Not Making It Worse
Perimenopause rage is driven by plummeting progesterone and erratic estrogen, which destabilize the brain's emotional regulation systems. The anger is real, it's involuntary, and it's not a character flaw. Your response in those moments — staying calm, not retaliating, not dismissing — is what keeps your relationship safe.
HRT — What Partners Should Know About Hormone Therapy
Modern HRT is safe and effective for most women under 60 or within 10 years of menopause. The outdated fear from the 2002 WHI study has been corrected by decades of follow-up research. Your role is to support her autonomy in this decision — not to push your opinion on what she does with her body.
Menopause
Life after her last period — heart health, intimacy changes, and why your support matters more than ever.
She's Bleeding After Menopause — What to Do Right Now
Any bleeding after menopause requires medical evaluation — full stop. Most causes are benign, but it can signal endometrial cancer. Be the partner who insists on the appointment.
Menopause Body Changes — A Partner's Guide to Not Making It Worse
Estrogen loss redistributes fat to the midsection. It's hormonal, not a willpower issue. Your words about her body carry enormous weight right now — choose them carefully.
Intimacy After Menopause — What Partners Need to Know
Vaginal dryness, pain during sex, and low libido are medical conditions caused by estrogen loss — not rejection. Solutions exist, but they start with open conversation and zero pressure.
Her Heart Risk Just Doubled — What Every Partner Should Know
Estrogen was protecting her heart. Now it's gone. Heart disease kills more women than all cancers combined, and women's heart attack symptoms are often missed. Know the signs.
Postpartum
The fourth trimester is the hardest — recovery, mental health, and how to be the partner she needs right now.
Baby Blues vs PPD — A Partner's Guide to Knowing the Difference
Baby blues peak around day 5 and resolve by week 2. If she's still struggling after 2 weeks — or getting worse — it may be PPD. Early intervention changes everything, and you may be the first to notice.
Postpartum Hair Loss — What Partners Should Know
Hair loss starting 2-4 months postpartum is normal and temporary. It's caused by the estrogen drop after birth. It can be emotionally devastating on top of everything else. Be gentle.
Postpartum Rage — How Partners Can Help (Without Making It Worse)
Postpartum rage — explosive anger, irritability, simmering fury — is often PPD or PPA wearing a different mask. She needs help, not an argument. De-escalate, don't defend.
The 6-Week Checkup — How Partners Can Advocate for Better Care
The 6-week checkup is often inadequate — 15 minutes to evaluate physical recovery, mental health, breastfeeding, pelvic floor, and contraception. Help her prepare and advocate for thorough care.