How Do I Know If I’m Ovulating? A Guide for Period & Fertility Recovery
If you're trying to get your period back, get pregnant, or simply feel more in sync with your cycle—you need to understand ovulation.
Ovulation isn’t just about baby-making. It’s a vital sign of hormone health. It impacts your energy, metabolism, mood, sleep, sex drive, and long-term fertility. And learning how to track it can be one of the most empowering steps in your recovery journey.
In this post, we’ll walk you through what ovulation is, how to know if it’s happening, what signs to look for, and how to track it naturally.
What Is Ovulation, Really?
Ovulation is the release of a mature egg from the ovary. It happens once per cycle and it is the main event of your menstrual cycle—not your period.
Without ovulation, you can’t produce enough progesterone. And without progesterone, you can’t get pregnant, maintain a pregnancy, or feel hormonally balanced.
Ovulation is also what separates a true cycle from just a withdrawal bleed or an anovulatory period (yup, it happens!).
The Four Phases of Your Menstrual Cycle
Understanding these helps you identify when ovulation should happen:
Menstrual Phase (Days 1-5): Bleeding begins. Estrogen and progesterone are at their lowest.
Follicular Phase (Days 6-13): Estrogen begins to rise. FSH matures one dominant follicle in the ovary.
Ovulation (Day 14, give or take): LH surges and the egg is released. This is the fertile window.
Luteal Phase (Days 15-28): Progesterone dominates, preparing the uterus for implantation.
Why Ovulation Matters for Fertility
Ovulation is non-negotiable if you want to conceive. You can have bleeds, you can have "normal" labs, and still not be ovulating.
If you’re trying to get pregnant—especially after HA or irregular cycles—you need to know for sure whether and when ovulation is happening.
How to Predict and Confirm Ovulation Naturally
1. Track Cervical Mucus (CM)
Your CM changes throughout your cycle and can predict ovulation:
Dry/sticky = not fertile
Creamy/lotiony = getting closer
Watery/stretchy = approaching ovulation
Egg white (EWCM) = PEAK fertility! Time to try to conceive!
If you’re recovering from HA and have zero mucus, that’s also data. It means your hormones may still be low—especially estrogen, and that you need to continue in the temporary timeframe of period recovery.
2. Track Basal Body Temperature (BBT)
Your BBT can confirm ovulation has occurred:
Take your temp first thing every morning before getting out of bed
Look for a 0.5°F or higher rise after ovulation that stays elevated for 3+ days
BBT stays low in the follicular phase and rises post-ovulation due to progesterone. If you never see that sustained rise, you likely didn’t ovulate.
What If You’re Not Ovulating Yet?
If you’re not seeing EWCM or a BBT shift, that doesn’t mean you’re broken. It means your body still needs more nourishment, more rest, and more time (or a more specific, customized protocol for faster results).
Ovulation is a signal of safety. When you’re under-fueled, over-exercising, or overly stressed, your body shuts it down to protect you.
What We Track Inside Period Recovery Coaching
Inside Premier Period Recovery for Fertility, we guide our clients to:
Track CM & BBT together
Analyze patterns weekly (with our help)
Use ovulation tracking as a roadmap to recovery and conception
This data removes the guesswork. It shows us if your hormones are waking back up, if your nutrition plan is working, and when it’s go-time for pregnancy attempts.
The Bottom Line
Ovulation is a celebration! It means your body feels safe. It means your hormones are doing their job. And it means you’re on the path to pregnancy, naturally.
Whether you’re just starting recovery, or you’re already cycling and want to optimize fertility—learning to track ovulation is your next best step.
Want help doing it? Apply now for Premier Period Recovery for Fertility, or check out our free training, Restore Your Fertility in 90 Days or Less, linked here.
Let’s make ovulation your new favorite time of the month (it sure is mine- and my hubby’s, too!)