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🌊 Biorhythm Calculator

Calculate your physical, emotional, and intellectual biorhythms to find your optimal condition

ℹ️ What is a biorhythm?

  • Physical (23 days): stamina, endurance, immunity
  • Emotional (28 days): mood, feelings, creativity
  • Intellectual (33 days): focus, judgment, memory
  • Positive (+): rising phase - increased vitality
  • Negative (-): falling phase - rest needed
  • Near 0: critical day - caution needed
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Más información

01

📊 What is a Biorhythm?

Biorhythm is the theory that a person's physical, emotional, and intellectual states change in regular cycles. Independently proposed in the late 19th century by Wilhelm Fliess and Hermann Swoboda, three cycles repeat from your birth date. The physical rhythm runs on a 23-day cycle and reflects stamina, energy, immunity, and athletic ability. The emotional rhythm runs on a 28-day cycle and reflects mood, emotional state, creativity, and relationships. The intellectual rhythm runs on a 33-day cycle and reflects focus, memory, judgment, and learning. Each rhythm follows a sine wave from +100% (peak) to -100% (trough), with 0% as the baseline. Entering your birth date and a target date shows the state of all three rhythms, helping you plan important events and anticipate changes in condition.

02

💡 The 23-Day Physical Rhythm

The physical rhythm repeats on a 23-day cycle and is said to relate to the male hormone cycle. It reflects muscle strength, endurance, stamina, immune function, athletic ability, and metabolism. At its peak (+100%), physical strength and energy are at their highest, making it the best time for intense exercise or physically demanding work; immunity is also stronger, so resistance to illness is high. At its trough (-100%), you tire easily, injury risk rises, and recovery takes longer. On critical days (crossing 0%), the body is unstable and you should be careful of accidents and injuries. Athletes time important competitions to their physical peaks and reduce training intensity, focusing on recovery, during low periods. In daily life, avoid overloading your schedule and get plenty of rest when the physical rhythm is low.

03

🎯 The 28-Day Emotional Rhythm

The emotional rhythm repeats on a 28-day cycle, the same length as the female menstrual cycle. It reflects mood, emotional state, sensitivity, creativity, relationships, and stress coping. At its peak you stay positive and optimistic, ideal for social activities and collaboration; creative inspiration flows and problem-solving improves. Empathy and communication also rise, which helps with resolving conflict and negotiating. At its trough you are prone to depression or irritability and emotional swings can be severe; it is wise to postpone important decisions, take time alone, and stabilize your emotions. On critical days emotional control is harder and impulsive behavior is more likely, so caution is needed. Understanding your biorhythm lets you view emotional changes objectively and treat the negativity of low periods as temporary, reducing stress.

04

⚡ The 33-Day Intellectual Rhythm

The intellectual rhythm repeats on a 33-day cycle, the longest of the three. It reflects focus, memory, analysis, judgment, learning, and logical thinking. At its peak it is the best time to solve complex problems, acquire new knowledge, or make important decisions; scheduling exams, presentations, and key meetings here yields the best results. Memory improves so memorization and comprehension are faster, and creative problem-solving rises. At its trough focus drops, mistakes increase, and grasping new concepts is harder; concentrate on simple repetitive or familiar tasks rather than complex work. On critical days misjudgments and errors are more likely, so it is wise to avoid important contracts or financial decisions. Students can time important exams to their intellectual peaks and shift to review-focused study during low periods.

05

📈 Scientific Validity of Biorhythms

Although the theory emerged in the late 19th century, modern science is skeptical of its validity. Numerous studies (1970s-1980s) found no significant correlation between biorhythms and actual performance, accident rates, or illness. The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the American Psychological Association (APA) classify biorhythm theory as pseudoscience. However, some biological cycles are scientifically established. The circadian rhythm (about 24 hours) governs sleep-wake, body temperature, and hormone secretion and was the subject of the 2017 Nobel Prize in Medicine. The female menstrual cycle of 28 days matches the emotional cycle but begins from menarche, not birth date. Ultradian rhythms (90-120 minutes) explain shifts in focus during sleep and wakefulness. The theory itself lacks scientific basis, but it can be used as a tool to track changes in condition and raise self-awareness.

06

🔍 Practical Use and Limits of Biorhythms

It is wiser to use biorhythms as a reference than to believe in them blindly. Checking your biorhythm when planning important events (exams, interviews, presentations) and aligning them with peaks can give psychological confidence. Recording your daily condition and comparing it with your biorhythm can reveal personal patterns; use what matches, and consider other factors (sleep, stress, nutrition) when it does not. Pay special attention on critical days (when all three rhythms cross 0%) but avoid excessive anxiety. Athletes and high-performance workers can reference biorhythms in training and rest plans, but should pair them with scientific data (heart rate, sleep analysis, performance). Do not make important decisions on biorhythms alone; actual health, adequate sleep, balanced nutrition, and regular exercise matter more. Use biorhythms as a self-awareness and self-management tool, but never forget that personal effort and preparation have the greatest impact on results.