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December 24, 2025
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The holiday season is often described as a time of joy, family, and celebration — but if you’re struggling with fertility challenges or in the thick of trying to conceive (TTC), this time of year can feel overwhelming, emotionally triggering, and deeply isolating.
While loved ones gather with babies, pregnancy announcements seem to pop up everywhere, and conversations about “when you’re having kids” become more frequent, many women silently carry the weight of grief, worry, and uncertainty.
As a women’s mental health provider, I see this every year. And I want you to know: nothing is wrong with you for feeling conflicted, sad, angry, or exhausted by it.
Your emotions make sense.
Below is a compassionate guide to help you move through the holiday season with more support, less pressure, and feeling more grounded.

The holiday season amplifies fertility stress for several reasons:
“What are you waiting for?”
“Are you trying yet?”
“You’ll understand when you have kids…”
Even well-intentioned comments can feel like a punch to the gut.
The holidays highlight the gap between where you are and where you hoped you’d be — especially if you envisioned sharing the season with a baby or pregnancy by now.
If your social media feed feels like a wall of bumps and newborns, you’re not imagining it. This time of year brings a spike in announcements, which can feel painful even if you’re truly happy for others.
Ongoing testing, medications, two-week waits, and cycle tracking can make the season feel even more emotionally charged.
Women often feel obligated to show up and smile, even when they’re carrying heavy emotional loads. Nothing about this makes you dramatic or ungrateful — it makes you human.

Here are evidence-based and emotionally supportive strategies I share with clients navigating TTC during the holidays.
You’re allowed to protect your emotional well-being.
Here are scripts you can use:
If someone asks about kids:
“Thanks for asking. It’s something we’re keeping private right now.”
If you don’t want to attend a triggering event:
“I appreciate the invite, but I’m taking some space for myself this year.”
Your mental health matters more than anyone’s expectations.
Mute accounts that are painful right now.
Take 24–48 hour breaks when announcements feel overwhelming.
You can be happy for someone and protect your peace.
Both things can be true.
Fertility challenges are a loss, even when others can’t see it.
You might be grieving:
You’re allowed to feel sad without needing to justify it.
Infertility takes away a sense of agency. Small grounding rituals can help, such as:
These “micro-boundaries” create breathing room.
You don’t need to go through this alone.
This can look like:
Fertility stress becomes more bearable when you’re not carrying it alone.
Think about:
Preparing ahead is protective.
Your worth is not defined by a pregnancy test.
While TTC, supportive habits matter:
These strengthen your mind and body during a deeply vulnerable season.

Fertility struggles during the holidays are uniquely painful because the world expects celebration while you’re holding heartbreak.
If this season feels heavier than you expected, please know:
You don’t need to navigate the waiting, the uncertainty, or the grief by yourself.
Fertility struggles are never “just emotional.”
Hormones, stress, sleep, anxiety, and grief all intersect, and you deserve care that understands the full picture.

If you’re seeking thoughtful, integrative support during your TTC journey, you’re invited to book a complimentary 15-minute phone consultation. Together, we’ll explore your symptoms, your goals, and what a hormone-informed mental health plan could look like for you.

Serving women across the lifespan in Pennsylvania, New Jersey & Delaware — from college and career to motherhood and beyond.




