I Ate Boiled Eggs Every Day for Fertility And Honestly, It Wasn’t What I Expected
You think you’re doing everything right… but you’re still tired.
I did not begin consuming boiled eggs out of the belief that this will “help with fertility.” I began because one day I got so tired that I found myself sitting on the kitchen floor while the water was boiling.
No, not from exhaustion. No, not being sick. Just tired. That kind of tiredness, where your body feels overwhelmed just to keep going.
And here was the worst part: I was trying. I was following ovulation tests and “healthy dieting” guidelines and researching late into the night. I was being responsible. But still, my body felt like it was letting me down.
When I Knew Something Was Wrong
It wasn’t my doctor that informed me. Instead, it was just some random day when I analyzed my diet for that particular day: Coffee, Bread slices, Rice leftovers, Some fried food which I did not even pick.
Not organized. Not providing adequate nutrition. Just… sustenance.
And there I understood the truth in an utterly unattractive way: I wasn’t really feeding myself; I was just preventing myself from starving. This was embarrassing. Because I always felt I was “eating enough.”
But “enough” does not always mean “adequate.”
Reasons for Choosing Boiled Eggs for My Experiment
I did not need a complicated strategy. I did not need to weigh my food or keep track of calories. I did not want to have to think too much or be under pressure.
The simplest thing possible: Boiled eggs.
Cheap, effective, no brain work involved.
It was my mindset: “Eat two boiled eggs daily in the morning. That’s all.”
Day 1 Was Already a Challenge (No One Ever Mentioned This)
Everyone says creating a habit is simple. It’s anything but.
The first day, I nearly skipped it. I overslept. I was already annoyed. Waiting for eggs to boil seemed like too much trouble. I was close to reverting to my coffee-only morning routine. But I didn’t.
And you know what? That made more of an impact than the eggs ever did.
Week 1: Nothing Different… except One Weird Difference
Let’s get honest here:
- I didn’t feel healthier.
- I didn’t feel more fertile.
- I didn’t feel “better.”
What happened? Something small and surprising: Food lost its power to control my mind.
A normal day would be: Hungry, Aggravated, Scouring for snacks
Week 1? No way. Not too full. Not starving. Just stable.
What I have since discovered, and found to make actual sense is: Protein aids in slowing the body’s processing of sugar.
Instead of: A rush of energy. An abrupt fall. Constant cravings.
This means: Stability of energy. Less panic hunger.
And, as an extra bonus, maybe even hormonal balance. Again, this isn’t instant. It’s not dramatic. But it happens.
Week 2: “Wait a minute…didn’t I crash today?”
It wasn’t about the glow up at all. That’s because it was quite different from that.
I remember one day when I noticed: I didn’t have my mid-afternoon crash. Nothing made me want to go get some sugar.
No headaches were developing. That’s when I decided to start paying attention. Because there’s nothing more convincing than change that happens on its own, without any convincing at all.
Observations about My Body That Were Unexpected
The biggest surprise was: I began to notice my period cycle. Not from a medical perspective, just an awareness.
I could sense when things were changing. My body no longer seemed ambiguous. I wasn’t having to guess as much.
In the beginning, all things were muddled. After a few weeks, things started to make sense.
But nothing else changed significantly either. That is why it stuck with me.
But This Is When I Nearly Screwed Everything Up
In Week 3, I did what I do best: I made too much of it.
I reasoned that: “If 2 eggs are good… then 4 must be better.” Nope.
I grew bored of them. I was nauseous. I stopped having breakfast altogether.
And that was when it hit me: It’s not about maximizing—it’s about sustaining. So I stuck to my 2 eggs. Easy.
The Real Deal
Once I got into researching—rather than just listening to the TikToks—I came across this fact:
- Protein is needed for hormones.
- It is crucial for ovulation and egg production.
- It assists in controlling insulin (which controls reproductive hormones).
Now, here’s where most people miss the point: Relying solely on animal proteins might not be the best idea. Studies indicate that reducing animal proteins while increasing plant-based proteins can reduce the risk of developing ovulatory problems.
This is when my view of eggs shifted. Not necessarily as “the fix”—but as part of something greater.
And So I Adapted (Without Overthinking It)
I did not stop eating eggs. But I no longer relied on them.
Instead, I introduced:
- Monggo (something I used to overlook)
- Tofu
- Vegetables—whether they were available or not at home
No frills. Just some balance.
Week 4: The Most Important Part (Even Though It Isn’t Very Dramatic)
I did not become pregnant. And I have to make that explicit. Because I know what it is like to read accounts where this part is overlooked.
But there was one thing that did change: I no longer felt like my body was fighting me. I finally felt like I was helping my body along. And you cannot put that into words unless you have experienced it yourself.
My Pre vs Post
Pre:
- Coffee instead of breakfast.
- Crashes that seemed ordinary.
- Persistent low-grade exhaustion.
- Feeling lost about what my body was up to.
Post:
- Routine, predictable mornings.
- Less frequent crashes.
- Greater insight into my cycle.
- Less exasperation with my body.
It’s not ideal. It’s not life-changing. But it’s real.
This Is What I Learned (Wish I Had Known Before)
It seems like fertility is all about doing more. Tracking more. Researching more. Being more “perfect” in your habits.
But this lesson showed me that sometimes it is about addressing the gaps—rather than piling on more. And my gap was in protein intake.
Is Protein Really That Necessary? Yes—but not in some new-age fashion.
Not in that sense where eating something makes you pregnant. But in some fundamental sense.
Just like sleep. Just like water. Without it, the body suffers. With it, the body gains some balance.
What Would I Tell You (If You Were Me)
Not necessarily as an instruction but rather as a fellow traveler: Breakfast is important, if at all possible, don’t skip it. Make sure there’s some protein, if it feels practical. Be varied about what you consume. Be patient, results aren’t going to happen instantly
And probably the most important bit is: Listen to your body more than anyone else.
The Part That Still Gets Me
There was a morning—in about that month’s last week—when I made my eggs, sat down, and felt no rush. No pressure. No overanalysis. Simply… calm.
And then, I figured out: This was something novel. Not the eggs. The sensation.
Conclusion: Consuming boiled eggs each day wasn’t what made me conceive again.
What it helped me to achieve, however, is unexpected: Consistency. Awareness. Patience toward my own body. And often, this is where the magic lies. If you are trying, adapting, second-guessing all your decisions like I once did…
Then don’t be afraid. You may only be missing one small thing. Which one surprised you?

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