Cycle settings matter
Age, cycle length, period length, and pre-period timing make the prediction feel more personal.
Time to hit
Timing your move
Cycle, ovulation, and fertile days
She says the pre-period days began two days ago? Add it to the profile and check when the next ovulation window is likely to land.
Even one clue can point to a useful window. Each new event makes the prediction sharper and more personal. No specialist knowledge needed, and the demo shows how it works right away.
History, profiles, and predictions stay inside the account.
Age, cycle length, period length, and pre-period timing make the prediction feel more personal.
The prediction uses cycle events and settings, not one generic average date.
Cycle history, profiles, and predictions stay inside the account.
A quick guide to cycle phases: what can shift in mood and energy, and how to show up without making it weird.
A cycle usually looks like this: period → follicular phase → ovulation / fertile window → luteal phase → pre-period days → period again. This is not a script. It is a quick map; her actual mood and response matter more than the phase.
What it can feel like: energy may be lower, comfort matters more, and loud chaos can feel like a lot.
What usually helps: calm, warmth, water, food, a blanket, a ride home, and no pressure.
Don't mess it up: do not brush off pain, mood, or tiredness.
What it can feel like: energy often comes back, plans feel easier, and social mode can return.
What usually helps: a date, a walk, a small trip, something active, or any good shared plan.
Don't mess it up: confidence works; acting like a caricature does not.
What it can feel like: some women feel more confident, more tuned in to attention, and more open to closeness.
What usually helps: compliments, eye contact, clear initiative, respectful touch, and actual flirting.
Don't mess it up: read the response and the consent instead of trying to force a moment.
What it can feel like: energy can dip, small things may irritate faster, and patience can run shorter.
What usually helps: skip pointless arguments, do not add tension, and help with small things.
Don't mess it up: being steady usually lands better than trying to impress.
What it can feel like: mood, sleep, appetite, or patience can shift before the period starts.
What usually helps: ask directly: hug, space, snacks, quiet, or practical help.
Don't mess it up: "I'm here" usually works better than "come on, it's nothing."
The main skill is simple: notice, ask, and remember what actually works for her. That beats any theory.
Send ideas, bugs, rough edges, missing flows, or anything that felt off. Leave an email if you want a reply.