Miesha Tate dropped a message on Instagram this week that felt more like a permission slip than a fitness tip.
The former UFC bantamweight champion turned wellness coach reframed something many women hear all the time. The irritability, the fatigue, the cravings during Week 4 of the menstrual cycle aren’t personal failures. They’re data.
“The irritability is data. The fatigue is data. Even the cravings are data,” she wrote. “Your body isn’t being dramatic. It’s telling you exactly what it needs.”
The message was aimed at women pushing through the luteal phase at full effort. Tate’s point: the body during Week 4 is “running on 60%.” Asking it to perform at 100% is the problem, not the body itself.
Her advice was refreshingly kind. Scale back the training intensity. Eat the carbs. And in a small, warm touch, she added: forgive yourself. And your husband too.
That last line gave the post a lighthearted feel. The underlying message, though, was serious.
Cycle syncing is the practice of adjusting workouts and nutrition to match the body’s hormonal phases. The luteal phase covers the stretch between ovulation and menstruation – typically the last week or so before a period begins. During that window, progesterone rises and then drops sharply. Energy dips. Recovery takes longer than usual. Most mainstream fitness programs treat every day of the month the same. Tate’s whole point is that they shouldn’t.
Women’s fitness culture tends to reward pushing through discomfort. Tate’s take is that the smarter move is working with the body, not against it. Dropping intensity to 60 percent during Week 4 isn’t falling short. It’s being accurate about what the body can actually do.
She tagged the post with #trainwithyourcycle and #lutealphase, placing it in a growing corner of the wellness world built around hormone-aware training for women.
Tate knows high-level physical performance firsthand. She’s one of the most recognized names in women’s MMA. She held the UFC Women’s Bantamweight Championship, winning it in 2016 by submitting Holly Holm. She stepped back from active competition after that and put her energy into coaching and wellness education, with women’s health at the center.
Posts like this one fit naturally into that work. She’s talked openly about the challenges of maintaining a high-performance body across different life stages. The cycle-syncing conversation is a natural extension of all of it.
There’s a genuine warmth to how she communicates. She’s not scolding anyone. She’s sharing something practical and kind. It sounds like advice from someone who spent years inside a high-performance body and eventually, carefully, learned to listen to it.
Week 4 is hard. That’s kind of the point. Meet it where it is. Eat the carbs. Be kind to yourself.