Anonymous wrote:There is literally zero reason to take the day off (or to push the transfer back) if you feel you need to be at work the rest of the day of, OP. You'll be fine, truly, and so will your embryo. Please don't listen to these women saying, "oh, but if it doesn't work, you'll always wonder if it was your fault and regret it the rest of your life!" I know they're well-meaning but that is 100% wrong and even giving voice to it gives it a kind of legitimacy and place in all our minds it does. not. deserve. NOTHING you do is going at this point to affect whether your FET successfully implants or not. Your body is going to handle it all on its own no matter what you're doing. Women have gestated and given birth to full-term babies in concentration camps, for God's sake, and the notion that a middle-class professional office worker is somehow going to wreck implantation by sitting at her desk instead of laying in bed for 24 hours is right up there with anti-vaxxer nonsense. And prepping yourself for potential regret is completely unproductive. One of the things I dislike most about the infertility process is how much grief and shame porn has been built up around it. Yes, it's normal to feel anxious, sad, or grieve for lost possibilities at points in the process, but there's definitely an element of frenzy that we sometimes whip each other up into that is not helpful.
Hang in there. Good luck, and I really hope this is a sticky one for you.
I'm the pp whose RE required 48 hours of bed rest. If I had gone
AGAINST MEDICAL ADVICE and the FET failed, yes I would have wondered if I had
actually followed the instructions of my doctor would the outcome be different. So OP should absolutely listen to her doctor (not mine obviously!) I did my best to adhere to the post FET instructions I was given and the FET worked. I used the space and time to do some mind-body visualizations for implantation. In the end it's about making space in your body and your life for a baby.