Can I exercise during the two-week wait?
Light activity (walking, gentle yoga, swimming) is fine and is psychologically protective. Avoid intense exercise or heavy lifting.

Treatment Guides
The 'two-week wait' (TWW) is the 12–14 days between embryo transfer and your pregnancy blood test — while a miracle may be unfolding inside, all you can do is wait.
When your embryo is transferred, it's a ball of 100–200 cells. It does not immediately implant.
Days 1–3 post-transfer: the embryo 'hatches' from its protective shell and begins expanding
Days 4–6: the embryo makes first contact with the uterine lining (endometrium)
Days 5–8: implantation occurs; the embryo burrows into the lining
Days 8–10: the newly implanted embryo begins producing HCG (pregnancy hormone)
Days 12–14: HCG levels rise enough to be detected in blood.
Symptoms are unreliable during the TWW. Many patients feel nothing; others report cramping, spotting, breast tenderness, nausea, or tiredness. These can indicate pregnancy—or indicate nothing. Lack of symptoms doesn't mean failure; presence of symptoms doesn't confirm success. Symptom-spotting is a waste of mental energy.
You continue progesterone (injection, pessary, or gel) for 12-14 days after transfer. Progesterone thickens the uterine lining and suppresses the immune response (preventing rejection of the embryo, which is genetically 'foreign'). If pregnancy occurs, progesterone continues until the placenta takes over (~11 weeks). If pregnancy doesn't occur, progesterone is stopped and the period begins 3–7 days later.
The TWW is uniquely psychologically taxing because you're in profound uncertainty while trying to act normal. Anxiety, intrusive thoughts, mood swings, and catastrophising are all normal. Some strategies that help:
Structure your days with planned activities (not bed rest; activity is psychologically protective)
Limit searching for 'symptoms' or 'success rates'—it amplifies anxiety without changing outcomes
Confide in one trusted support person, not a dozen well-meaning relatives
Journaling to process uncertainty and fear
Gentle movement: walking, yoga, swimming (not intense exercise)
Sleep and nutrition: these genuinely matter for psychological resilience
Day 12-14 post-transfer: blood HCG test is reliably positive (if pregnancy is present).. Dr. Tank will schedule your test; waiting until the scheduled test reduces anxiety and false negatives.
Q: Can I exercise during the two-week wait?
A: Light activity (walking, gentle yoga, swimming) is fine and is psychologically protective. Avoid intense exercise or heavy lifting.
Q: Should I stay in bed after transfer?
A: Bed rest is not beneficial and may worsen anxiety. Light activity is fine. Avoid only heavy exertion and strenuous sports.
Light activity (walking, gentle yoga, swimming) is fine and is psychologically protective. Avoid intense exercise or heavy lifting.
Bed rest is not beneficial and may worsen anxiety. Light activity is fine. Avoid only heavy exertion and strenuous sports.