If you’re trying to conceive and feeling stressed, overwhelmed, or “stuck in fight-or-flight,” you’re not imagining it. One hormone in particular—cortisol—plays a major role in how your body prioritizes (or deprioritizes) reproduction.
Understanding what elevates cortisol and how it affects fertility can help you make small changes that support your body during this time.
Cortisol is often called the “stress hormone.” It’s released by your adrenal glands when your brain perceives danger or pressure.
In short:
Your body can’t tell the difference between:
To your nervous system, stress is stress.
Certain sounds signal “danger” to the brain and raise cortisol:
Why it matters:
Your nervous system stays on high alert, preventing relaxation and hormonal balance.
Your brain is highly visual—and easily overstimulated by:
Why it matters:
Visual overload keeps your brain in “processing mode,” signaling that it’s not safe to rest or reproduce.
Your body is constantly scanning your environment for safety.
Cortisol rises with:
Your body interprets unsafe environments as “not a good time to make a baby.”
This is the biggest one for people TTC:
Even “positive” stress (trying hard, doing everything right) can elevate cortisol.
Your body reads these as scarcity signals.

Your body operates on priority systems.
When cortisol is high, your brain believes:
“We are not safe. Survival comes first.”
Reproduction becomes non-essential.
Here’s how that plays out hormonally:
High cortisol can:
This can lead to:
Eggs mature over months, not days.
Chronic cortisol:
Your body is less likely to invest resources into high-quality eggs when it perceives danger.
Cortisol affects:
Stress hormones can make the uterus less welcoming—again, as a protective mechanism.
This is important to hear gently:
Your body is not failing you. It may be trying to protect you.
From an evolutionary perspective, high stress meant famine, danger, or instability—not an ideal time for pregnancy.
For someone TTC, the goal isn’t “calm down”—that often backfires.
Instead, focus on signals of safety:
Your nervous system needs repetition, not intensity.
Fertility thrives when the body feels:
Lowering cortisol isn’t about doing more—it’s often about allowing your body to stop bracing.

Supporting Fertility by Signaling Safety to the Body
When cortisol (the stress hormone) is chronically elevated, the body shifts into survival mode—and reproduction takes a back seat. This checklist focuses on small, realistic actions that tell your nervous system: “I am safe.”
Why it helps:
Predictability and stillness lower cortisol by calming the brain’s threat centers.
Why it helps:
Cortisol should be low at night. Poor sleep keeps cortisol elevated and disrupts ovulation, progesterone, and implantation.
Why it helps:
Blood sugar dips spike cortisol. Stable glucose = calmer adrenal response.
Why it helps:
Over-exercise raises cortisol. Gentle movement improves circulation without triggering stress hormones.
Why it helps:
Your nervous system responds constantly to sights, sounds, and smells—often subconsciously.
Why it helps:
Emotional suppression keeps cortisol elevated. Compassion lowers it.
IVF relies on precise hormonal signaling. Elevated cortisol can interfere at multiple stages:
High cortisol:
Eggs develop over 90+ days, so chronic stress months before IVF matters.
Cortisol affects:
Even excellent embryos need a receptive uterus.
Elevated cortisol can:
IVF success depends on the body feeling safe enough to sustain pregnancy.

Acupuncture directly influences the autonomic nervous system.
Research shows acupuncture can:
Acupuncture helps your body receive rather than brace.
Fertility isn’t just about hormones—it’s about context.
Lifestyle medicine supports fertility by:
When lifestyle, nervous system regulation, and medical care align, the body is more likely to say:
“Yes—now is a good time.”
Trying to conceive—especially with fertility treatment—can itself raise cortisol.
Lowering cortisol is not about “relaxing harder.”
It’s about removing the signals that say danger and increasing the signals that say safety, nourishment, and support.
Your body isn’t broken.
It may just be waiting to feel safe.
Find out more in New York City at www.berkleycenter.com
Mike Berkley, LAc, FABORM, is a licensed and board-certified acupuncturist and a board-certified herbalist. He is a fertility specialist at The Berkley Center for Reproductive Wellness in the Midtown East neighborhood of Manhattan, New York.
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