What does infertility have to do with nervous system safety?
TLDR: Infertility often stems not from physical defects alone, but from a nervous system locked in a fear-based contraction. When a woman's body learned early that she wasn't safe—through sexual abuse, neglect, or survival trauma—her physiology literally shut down reproductive function. The path to conception requires dismantling the false beliefs that keep the body in a state of war: "I am not safe," "I am not important," "My needs don't matter," "This won't happen anyway." Peter Crone's work with women trying to conceive reveals that shifting these foundational assumptions can trigger measurable physiological change in weeks.
How do early trauma patterns lock fertility in the body?
The conversation opens with a woman seeking help with infertility. She has no cycle, does not ovulate, does not menstruate—a condition that began in childhood. At ages 11 or 12, after watching a television program about women with eating disorders, she made what she describes as a decision: to develop an eating disorder herself. She lost 25 pounds over a single summer. The motive was not vanity. It was recognition. "I felt neglected, and I was like, 'Oh, if I could get special attention from my mom, I would just die for that.' And it worked. When I got very very sick and got hospitalized, I got my mom's attention."
This pattern of using sickness as a bid for attention is crucial. The body learned early that pain and dysfunction were reliable pathways to being seen. The nervous system encoded this lesson: contraction = love. But there is more.
During the conversation, the woman discloses that she experienced sexual abuse for many years leading up to the eating disorder, beginning at ages 3 or 4. It was framed as "a game" by an older brother and father of a schoolmate, occurring after school. She did not realize until age 18 that what had happened to her was abuse.
Crone responds with visible compassion but then pivots to a therapeutic question: "Is it true as an absolute truth that you're not safe anymore?" The answer is no. Yet her nervous system—still operating as if that abuse could resume—has locked her body in a protective posture. The reproductive system shuts down when the brain predicts danger. This is not a failure of the woman's will or desire. This is physiology.
What happens when you release the "not safe" belief?
Crone guides her through a subtle but powerful shift. He asks her to notice the phrase "I'm not not safe"—a double negative that points toward safety without requiring her to claim false certainty. She repeats it: "I'm not not safe." He asks her to say it again, with more conviction. "I'm not not safe."
The shift is immediate. "If that's gone, you can't in this world as you function, as you walk around, you can no longer feel not safe anymore, what could become available for you?" She answers: "More relaxed, for sure."
Crone observes: "That right there I want you to consider as your physiology is going to shift automatically to that. We don't have to do anything. Your cycle is so much closer now to starting." The work is not willpower or positive thinking. It is the removal of a false premise that the nervous system no longer needs to defend against.
How does fear and worry reinforce infertility?
A second layer emerges. The woman admits to worry—constant daily worry that conception won't happen. Crone connects this to anatomy. "When you're in state of war or fear, what's your anatomy like?" She answers: "Tense and contracted."
He then shows her the loop: "So, now you've got all of these ways that you've created yourself as somebody who's not designed to have a cycle being reinforced by the fact that your brain is predicting that it's not going to happen anyway." She nods. "I'm doomed."
This is the compounding effect of trauma-based identity. The body has adapted to believe: "I am someone without a cycle. I am someone who cannot conceive." Then, daily worry reinforces that prediction. The nervous system receives a constant signal that says: this future is not safe, is not coming, cannot be trusted. And the body contracts further in response.
What's the difference between running from the past versus building the future?
Crone introduces a distinction that reframes the entire approach: "Most of you are trying to get away from a history that you don't like, versus working to a future that you consciously create. An entirely different way to live your life."
To illustrate, he shares the example of another couple he worked with. Their therapist and experts had told them to use visualization: "Imagine that you already have the baby and what that feels like." Crone rejected this approach. "I'm like, that's a crock of [ __ ] because you already feel like you're not going to have a baby and now you're being told imagine you are. Can you see it just doesn't work?"
Instead, he took them in the opposite direction. "First of all, you've got to take it to worst case scenarios. What if you can't have a baby? What if you never have? Could you be okay?" Only after the woman arrived at genuine acceptance—"Yeah, we really want it and it'll be beautiful, but I'll be okay"—did the nervous system release its grip. She imagined her body "as like one of those wine barrels" and felt "all the metal rings just burst." They conceived within the next week.
Can shifting beliefs about safety actually change fertility outcomes?
Crone shares a second case study with dramatic specificity. A couple—the wife trained in Ayurveda, the husband a Colombian raised in New Jersey—came to work with him. The husband had grown up as "the weird kid" with a different accent and skin color, constantly bullied, living in a threat-response state. Even his wife sometimes felt scared because of his hair-trigger temper.
Through Crone's work, the husband shifted his foundational beliefs. "He wasn't always in danger, and he wasn't going to be beaten up, and he could just calm his system." The couple conceived that night.
These are not isolated anecdotes. They are data points in a pattern: when the nervous system shifts from contraction to trust, fertility returns. One client gave birth at 52 after years of trying. Another conceived within a week of releasing her worst-case fear. Another conceived the night her husband resolved his threat-response state.
What are the core false beliefs keeping the body locked?
Crone synthesizes the woman's situation into a clear architecture of belief:
- "Is it true that you're not safe?" No.
- "Is it true that you're not important?" No.
- "Is it true that your needs don't matter?" No.
- "Is it true that you're not going to have a baby as a guarantee?" No, I don't know. No.
He emphasizes: "Right there, if that's all we got to tonight, your chances of having a baby are just exponentially through the roof, compared to how you arrived."
The power lies not in magical thinking but in the physiology of belief. A nervous system convinced it is not safe produces cortisol and adrenaline, which suppress reproductive hormone production. A body convinced it is unimportant does not build the biological infrastructure for pregnancy. A woman convinced her needs don't matter literally does not allocate resources to nurture life.
The woman feels this shift in real time. "I feel warmth in my belly." Crone responds: "That's literally energy that is like, 'Okay, you're ready to play. You want to do this?' Cuz you've been acting like a scared 11-year-old, and we have all the compassion in the world for her, but now it's time to be" an adult capable of holding space for new life.
Where to go from here
This conversation does not offer a medical cure for infertility. Rather, it maps the invisible architecture that often lies beneath it: the nervous system's interpretation of the world based on early trauma. For anyone struggling with conception, the question is not always "What am I doing wrong?" but "What is my body protecting me from?" The answer often reveals false beliefs held at the level of identity—beliefs so old and so woven into the fabric of who we think we are that we no longer see them as beliefs at all.
The pathway forward requires honesty about what you're running from and clarity about what you're running toward. It requires releasing the worst-case scenario not through denial, but through genuine acceptance of it. And it requires recognizing that a nervous system tasked with surviving childhood abuse cannot, at the same time, summon the resources for conception. Only when safety is established—felt, not merely understood—can the body release its ancient defensive posture and allow life to return.



