Start Here

You do not need to track everything to track usefully.

The goal is not to create a perfect spreadsheet. The goal is to notice patterns that help you explain pain, bleeding, bowel symptoms, fatigue, and what is making daily life harder.

Pain pattern Bleeding Bowel and bladder symptoms Function and impact

Most Helpful Rule

Track patterns, not every tiny sensation.

A simple weekly picture is often more useful than hour-by-hour monitoring. If tracking is increasing anxiety, scale it back and focus on the biggest themes.

What To Track

Pain

When it happens, where it is, how intense it feels, and whether it is linked to your period, sex, bowel motions, urination, or movement.

What To Track

Bleeding

How heavy it feels, how long it lasts, flooding, clots, and whether heavy days line up with severe fatigue, dizziness, or weakness.

What To Track

Bowel and bladder symptoms

Bloating, constipation, diarrhoea, pain on opening bowels, urgency, pain with urination, and whether symptoms change around your cycle.

What To Track

Daily impact

Work, school, sleep, exercise, intimacy, mental load, cancellations, and what you could not do because of symptoms.

A Simple Weekly Tracking Format

  • Which days were worst this week?
  • What were the top symptoms?
  • Did symptoms line up with bleeding, bowel changes, sex, or activity?
  • What helped, even a little?

What Not To Overdo

  • Do not track every meal, mood, cramp, and body sensation if it is becoming exhausting.
  • Do not assume every symptom is caused by one thing.
  • Do not wait for a “perfect” record before asking for help.
  • Do not hide impact just because the symptom itself is hard to describe.

If You Forget To Track

  • A short summary of the last one to three cycles is still useful.
  • Even a note in your phone can work.
  • One strong example of a bad day can help a clinician understand the burden.
  • You are allowed to bring memory plus pattern, not just data.

Bring To The Appointment

  • A short symptom summary or phone note
  • Medication list, including pain medicines and supplements
  • Any scans, blood results, or prior letters if you have them
  • A note of your main goals: pain control, diagnosis, fertility, bleeding, bowel symptoms, or function

Questions Worth Asking

  • Does this symptom pattern fit possible endometriosis or something that overlaps with it?
  • What else needs to be ruled out?
  • What are my options for symptom relief while the evaluation continues?
  • What would make you refer me, image me, or escalate treatment?

Best Prep Shortcut

Know your top three problems before the appointment starts.