Starting 2026 Navigating Fertility Challenges
The start of a new year often comes with a lot of noise and positivity - fresh starts, big goals, “best year yet” energy. For some people, that feels motivating. But if you’re living with infertility or recovering from loss, the new year can feel heavy, complicated, or simply out of sync with what everyone else seems to be celebrating.
You might feel a quiet hope that something could shift this year. And at the same time, you might feel the weight of everything you’ve already been through. The waiting. The uncertainty. The grief that doesn’t reset just because the year has changed.
Both can be true.
When Hope Feels Complicated
Hope isn’t straightforward when you’ve been through repeated disappointment. You might want to feel optimistic, but also feel wary of being hurt again. That doesn’t mean you’re negative or not “trying hard enough.” It means you’re human, and you’re responding to real experiences.
And it’s important to say this clearly...
The outcome of your fertility journey is not determined by how hopeful, positive, or upbeat you are.
No amount of positive mindset can override biology, medical factors, or sheer chance - no matter what people might suggest.
You are allowed to show up exactly as you are. Tired, cautious, hopeful, unsure.
Doing your best is enough.
The Pressure of a Fresh Start for the New Year
New year messaging can create a sense that you should be setting goals, reinventing yourself, or pushing forward with renewed energy. But if you’re already carrying the emotional and physical load of fertility challenges, you don’t need another layer of pressure. Please know:
- You don’t have to make resolutions.
- You don’t have to feel excited about the year ahead.
- You don’t have to pretend you’re starting from scratch when you’re not.
- You’re allowed to begin the year gently, without forcing anything.
How Therapy Can Support You at This Time of Year
Therapy can offer a calm, supportive space to help you make sense of how you are feeling, alongside everything you’re dealing with. It can meet you right where you are, and help you:
- Understand the emotional impact of ongoing uncertainty
- Explore the pressure you may feel to “stay positive”
- Process grief or disappointment that others may not see
- Set boundaries around conversations or expectations that feel too much
- Reconnect with parts of yourself that have been overshadowed by the intensity of trying to conceive
- Feel validated for doing the best you can
And importantly, therapy can help you step away from the pressure of resolutions, goals, or “new year, new you” thinking - especially when those ideas feel exhausting or irrelevant to what you’re actually dealing with.
Instead of focusing on what you’re supposed to achieve this year, therapy can help you pause and ask:
- What do I need right now?
- What would support me today, this week, or in this moment?
- What can help me get through what I’m feeling, rather than pushing past it?
That kind of grounding is far more meaningful than any list of objectives. It’s about supporting yourself in a way that’s realistic, compassionate, and aligned with what you’re living through.
A Softer Way to Begin the Year
If you’re entering this year feeling vulnerable and overwhelmed, perhaps it could help to approach it with less pressure, and a little more compassion for yourself. That could look like:
- Moving at your own pace
- Letting yourself rest
- Allowing hope to show up as little more than a whisper (if at all)
- Acknowledging the strength it takes to keep going
- Giving yourself permission not to “start fresh” at all
- Finding small moments of enjoyment when everything feels heavy - whether that’s taking yourself for a weekly solo coffee, taking a walk in the winter air, or reconnecting with something that once brought you pleasure but hasn’t had space in your life recently
There is no right way to begin a new year when you’re navigating fertility challenges. There is only your way - shaped by your story, your needs, and your capacity right now.
And that is enough.
