When Sarah Kleiner sat across from Dr. Tom Seager to share her fertility journey, she didn't hold back. Two failed IVF rounds. Zero viable embryos. Thousands of dollars spent. And then—against all odds—a natural conception at 41 that the medical establishment said was nearly impossible.
The key? Understanding how cold exposure, circadian biology, and metabolic health work together to support fertility. And knowing when to stop cold plunging might be just as important as doing it.
The Cold Exposure Paradox for Fertility
Cold water immersion has become the darling of the wellness world. From Joe Rogan to Andrew Huberman, everyone's talking about ice baths. But for women trying to conceive, there's a critical nuance that's often missing from the conversation.
Sarah learned this the hard way. As someone with a Northern European haplotype, she was told cold exposure was essential for her metabolic health. And it was—but with one crucial caveat.
"I really cold plunged up until I got that positive ovulation sign and then I said, 'Okay, that's it.' I won't cold plunge protocols again until cycle day one. And that's the month I ended up getting pregnant."
— Sarah KleinerHere's the science: cold exposure elevates white blood cells and boosts immune function. Normally, that's exactly what you want. But during the critical 3-4 day window around ovulation, an elevated immune response can cause your body to see an embryo as a foreign threat rather than the beginning of new life.
The Practical Protocol
Cold Exposure Timing for Fertility
- Cycle Day 1 through ovulation: Cold plunge freely
- Ovulation window (3-4 days): Pause cold exposure completely
- If not pregnant: Resume at cycle day 1
- If pregnant: Consider avoiding cold exposure in first trimester (though some women continue throughout pregnancy successfully)
Beyond Cold: The Mitochondrial Connection
Sarah's fertility breakthrough didn't happen from cold exposure alone. It came after a conversation with Dr. Jack Cruz that completely rewired her understanding of health.
"You need to understand leptin, circadian biology, quantum biology, and how your mitochondria work. These are going to be the keys for you in getting and staying pregnant."
— Dr. Jack CruzMitochondria—the energy powerhouses in every cell—are particularly abundant in eggs. In fact, an egg contains more mitochondria than any other cell in the human body. When mitochondrial function declines, egg quality suffers. And in the United States, that decline is happening faster than most people realize.
At 41, Sarah was labeled a "geriatric pregnancy" by doctors. But here's what they didn't tell her: 47 is the age of her oldest client to conceive naturally with proper metabolic support. Age is far less deterministic than the medical establishment suggests.
The Diet Piece: Why Carnivore Backfired
Before discovering quantum biology, Sarah spent two years on a strict carnivore diet. Initially, it was transformative—she'd lost 100 pounds multiple times in her life, and carnivore seemed like the answer.
But then the cracks appeared. Her hormones flatlined. Blood sugar ran in the 90s to low 100s. Ketones stayed frustratingly low. And when she tried to push into deeper ketosis by increasing fat and reducing protein, she gained weight.
"Carnivore is not by default ketosis or ketogenic," Sarah explains. "And ketosis is not by default a weight loss strategy for everyone. It's not as black and white as some people would have you believe."
The breakthrough came when she shifted to a seasonal eating approach—aligning her diet with her light and thermal environment. No Argentine blueberries in January. But absolutely yes to Georgia peaches in summer.
"I'm leaner now at 46, almost 47, than I was when I was constantly trying to adhere to carnivore, to keto. The weight came off without me even dieting once leptin sensitivity improved."
— Sarah KleinerThe Bio-Individual Bottom Line
Perhaps the most important lesson from Sarah's journey is this: what works beautifully for one person can be disastrous for another. The wellness influencer doing ice baths every morning might have a completely different haplotype, metabolic profile, and hormonal landscape than you.
Dr. Stacy Sims made waves suggesting that ice baths and ketosis aren't great for women. And for some women, she's right. But for others—like Sarah—strategic cold exposure was exactly what her Northern European genetics needed.
The key is understanding your own terrain:
Questions to Ask Yourself
- What's my genetic haplotype? (Northern vs. equatorial ancestry)
- How does my body respond to cold exposure? (Energized or depleted?)
- What happens to my cycle when I change my diet significantly?
- Am I eating seasonally and locally, or fighting my environment?
- Is my current approach causing metabolic downregulation?
Sarah now helps women navigate these questions through her programs and membership community. Her message is clear: 41 isn't old. 41 isn't geriatric. And 41 certainly doesn't mean you're automatically a candidate for IVF.
Sometimes the path to fertility isn't through expensive medical interventions—it's through understanding your mitochondria, timing your cold exposure, and eating in harmony with your environment.