You need tools to get through this. Here are practical strategies that help.
Self-Care Essentials
Physical Self-Care
Your body is going through a lot:
Prioritize sleep:
- 7-9 hours nightly
- Consistent schedule
- Create restful environment
- Nap if needed (especially on progesterone)
Nourish yourself:
- Regular balanced meals
- Don’t skip meals
- Protein at each meal
- Prenatal vitamins daily
- Hydration (8-10 glasses water)
- Limit caffeine and alcohol
Gentle movement:
- Walking daily
- Gentle yoga
- Swimming
- Stretching
- Whatever feels good
- Listen to your body
Avoid:
- Intense exercise during stimulation
- High-impact after retrieval
- Pushing through fatigue
Emotional Self-Care
Create space for your feelings:
Allow yourself to feel:
- Don’t suppress emotions
- Cry when you need to
- Feel angry without guilt
- Acknowledge disappointment
- All feelings are valid
Journal:
- Write thoughts and feelings
- Unfiltered and private
- Track cycles and emotions
- Release what’s bottled up
Creative expression:
- Art, music, crafts
- Express what words can’t
- No judgment of outcome
- Process through creation
Therapy:
- Infertility specialist ideal
- Safe space to be honest
- Learn coping tools
- Process trauma
Mental Self-Care
Protect your mind:
Limit fertility content:
- Set time limits for researching
- Step away from Google
- Stop reading horror stories
- Focus on reputable sources only
Social media boundaries:
- Unfollow triggering accounts
- Mute pregnancy announcements
- Curate your feed
- Take breaks completely
Mindfulness and meditation:
- Brings you to present moment
- Reduces anxiety
- Even 5 minutes helps
- Apps available (Calm, Headspace)
Positive distractions:
- Good books, shows, podcasts
- Whatever takes you away temporarily
- Don’t underestimate value of distraction
Communication Strategies
With Your Partner
Keep connection strong:
Regular check-ins:
- “How are you feeling about everything?”
- “What do you need from me?”
- “Are we on the same page?”
- Scheduled talks (not just when crisis)
Express needs clearly:
- “I need you to just listen, not fix”
- “I need space right now”
- “I need a hug”
- Don’t expect mind-reading
Acknowledge different coping styles:
- One talks, one processes internally
- One researches, one avoids info
- One stays hopeful, one protects by pessimism
- Neither is wrong, just different
Protect intimacy:
- Sex on schedule is unsexy
- Find non-scheduled connection
- Physical affection beyond sex
- Date nights unrelated to treatment
Be patient:
- You’re both grieving differently
- Stress affects everyone
- Forgive quicker
- Choose your battles
With Family and Friends
Set clear boundaries:
Decide what to share:
- Not obligated to share details
- Share with trusted people only
- Different levels for different people
- Okay to keep private
Educate selected people:
- Explain what helps vs hurts
- Give specific examples
- Be direct
- Revisit if needed
Helpful responses when asked:
- “We’re working on it” (vague)
- “It’s been challenging, prefer not to discuss” (boundary)
- “We’ll let you know when there’s news” (closes topic)
- “That question/comment hurts, please don’t ask” (direct)
Unhelpful comments (they will happen):
- “Just relax”
- “Have you tried…?”
- “At least you can…”
- “God’s timing”
- “I got pregnant so easily”
Possible responses:
- Walk away
- “That’s not helpful”
- “Please don’t say that”
- Change subject
- End conversation
- (Or educate if you have energy)
Choose your people:
- Lean on those who show up well
- Limit time with those who don’t
- It’s okay to distance yourself temporarily
With Medical Team
You’re a partner in your care:
Ask questions:
- No question is stupid
- If you don’t understand, ask again
- Take notes
- Bring partner or friend to appointments
Advocate for yourself:
- Speak up about concerns
- Request second opinions
- Push for answers
- Change doctors if needed
Clear communication:
- Tell them about side effects
- Report problems promptly
- Be honest about adherence
- Express fears and preferences
Managing Specific Triggers
Pregnancy Announcements
Prepare yourself:
Social media:
- Unfollow or mute pregnant friends temporarily
- Hide baby photos from feed
- Curate what you see
- Take social media breaks
In person:
- It’s okay to excuse yourself
- “I’m so happy for you, but this is hard for me”
- Leave early if needed
- Prioritize your feelings
Give yourself time:
- Initial reaction may be visceral
- Allow yourself to feel hurt
- Happiness for them can come later
- Both feelings can coexist
Baby Showers and Kid Events
You don’t have to go:
Declining gracefully:
- “I can’t make it, but so happy for you”
- No explanation required
- Send gift, don’t attend
- Your mental health matters more
If you do attend:
- Set time limit (arrive late, leave early)
- Bring support person
- Plan escape if needed
- Be ready to leave
Talk to host privately:
- “This is difficult for me, please understand”
- True friends will get it
Mother’s Day
One of hardest days:
- Celebrate your mother if possible
- Skip church/brunch if triggering
- Plan distraction (movie, hiking, travel)
- Be gentle with yourself
- Know you’re not alone in finding it hard
Other People’s Kids
Mixed feelings normal:
- Love nieces/nephews but hard to be around
- Kids at grocery store trigger tears
- Playground is painful
- This is normal grief
Limit exposure when raw:
- Say no to kid-centered events
- Shop online
- Protect yourself
- Not forever, just for now
During the Two-Week Wait
Most anxious time:
Stay busy:
- Work, projects, socializing
- Plan activities every day
- Schedule distractions
- Keep mind occupied
Avoid symptom-spotting:
- Progesterone causes “pregnancy” symptoms
- Early pregnancy has no symptoms
- You cannot tell from symptoms
- Ignore your body (for once!)
Don’t test early:
- False negatives devastate unnecessarily
- Wait for blood test
- Will know soon enough
Talk to yourself:
- “I’m doing everything I can”
- “Whatever happens is not my fault”
- “I can handle either outcome”
- “One day at a time”
After Negative Results
Give yourself time to grieve:
Day 1 (getting the call):
- Allow yourself to fall apart
- Cry, scream, rage
- Take day off work if possible
- No expectations of yourself
First week:
- Be gentle
- Do minimum required
- Lean on support
- Don’t make big decisions
Moving forward:
- Debrief with doctor
- What can be learned?
- What would change next time?
- Do you try again or take break?
Taking a break is okay:
- Emotional recovery important
- Financial regrouping
- Relationship strengthening
- Not giving up, just pausing
Deciding to stop treatment:
- Profound decision
- Deserves time and counseling
- Moving to alternative paths valid
- Closure needed
Building Your Support System
Who Should Be in Your Circle?
Inner circle (tell everything):
- People who show up consistently
- Listen without fixing
- Validate your feelings
- Check in on you
- 1-3 people often enough
Wider circle (general updates):
- Care about you
- Don’t need/want all details
- Occasional check-ins
Keep out of circle:
- Give unsolicited advice
- Minimize your feelings
- Make it about them
- Share your private info
- Drama-creators
Different Kinds of Support
Emotional support:
- Listens
- Validates feelings
- Holds space
- Doesn’t try to fix
Practical support:
- Drives you to appointments
- Brings meals
- Helps with tasks
- Takes concrete actions
Informational support:
- Others who’ve been through it
- Shares experiences
- Answers questions
- Recommends resources
Financial support (sometimes):
- Family who helps with costs
- Crowdfunding
- Gifts to treatment fund
Different people provide different support – that’s okay.
Online Communities
Benefits:
- 24/7 availability
- People who truly understand
- Anonymity if desired
- Diverse experiences
- Not geography-limited
Cautions:
- Can be triggering
- Information overload
- Comparison trap
- Negativity spirals
Healthy use:
- Set time limits
- Step away if overwhelming
- Find positive-leaning groups
- Balance with real-life connection
Where to find:
- Reddit (r/infertility, r/IVF)
- Facebook groups
- Fertility forums
- Clinic-specific groups
Support Groups
Facilitated groups:
- Led by therapist/counselor
- Structured meetings
- Safe space
- Learn coping tools
Peer support groups:
- No facilitator
- Share experiences
- Less structured
- Friendship potential
Finding groups:
- Ask clinic
- RESOLVE (US organization)
- Online searches
- Religious organizations
Stress Reduction Techniques
Mindfulness and Meditation
Why it helps:
- Brings focus to present
- Reduces anxiety about future
- Calms nervous system
- Research shows improves pregnancy rates
How to start:
- 5 minutes daily
- Guided meditations (apps)
- Focus on breath
- Acknowledge thoughts without judgment
- Return to breath
Not “clearing your mind” – that’s impossible. Just noticing thoughts and letting them pass.
Yoga
Benefits:
- Physical and mental
- Gentle movement
- Breath work
- Community
- Reduces stress
Fertility yoga:
- Specific poses for reproductive health
- Avoids inversions (controversial)
- Addresses emotional aspects
- Classes specifically for TTC (trying to conceive)
Cautions:
- Avoid hot yoga during treatment
- Tell instructor you’re TTC
- Modify as needed
Acupuncture
Some evidence for benefits:
- Reduces stress
- May improve blood flow to uterus
- Traditional use for fertility
- Relaxing
Often done:
- Throughout cycle
- Day of embryo transfer
- Regular sessions
Find acupuncturist:
- Specializing in fertility
- Licensed
- Ask clinic for recommendations
Massage
Benefits:
- Stress relief
- Physical relaxation
- Self-care
- Pampering yourself
Tell therapist:
- You’re in fertility treatment
- Avoid deep abdominal work
- Especially during stimulation/two-week wait
Maintaining Hope
Hope and realism can coexist.
Stay informed but optimistic:
- Know statistics but don’t let them define you
- Each cycle is new chance
- Many succeed eventually
- You don’t know your ending yet
Focus on what you can control:
- Taking medications correctly
- Attending appointments
- Healthy lifestyle
- Self-care
- Choosing good medical team
Let go of what you can’t:
- Egg/sperm quality (beyond basics)
- Embryo development
- Implantation
- Outcomes
Celebrate small victories:
- Good egg retrieval
- Embryos making it to Day 5
- Getting through cycle
- Still trying
Work-Life Balance
Managing Work
What to tell work:
- Personal decision
- HIPAA protects medical privacy
- Pros and cons of disclosure
- Consider workplace culture
If you disclose:
- To HR for FMLA/accommodations
- To direct supervisor (brief explanation)
- General: “Medical treatments requiring appointments”
Flexible work arrangements:
- Early/late arrival
- Work from home
- Use sick time strategically
- Know your rights (FMLA, ADA)
Setting Boundaries
Say no more:
- Extra projects
- Social obligations
- Volunteer commitments
- Energy drainers
Protect your time and energy:
- Treatment is priority
- Survival mode okay
- Can resume later
- Put yourself first
Remember
You’re doing everything you can.
Coping strategies are tools – use what works, ignore what doesn’t.
Be patient with yourself as you learn what helps.
Bad days don’t erase progress.
Asking for help is strength, not weakness.
You don’t have to be positive all the time.
Just get through today. That’s enough.
You are stronger than you know.

