Kat Timpf, a Fox News personality, disclosed that she was expecting their first child with her husband, Cameron Friscia.
Timpf talked about her process of processing the news that changed her life on Fox News.
She emphasized the significant influence it has had on her and her spouse, characterizing the experience as a startling and slow realization.
Speaking candidly about the shocking news of her pregnancy, Kat Timpf said she was taken aback when she received a positive test result on May 30.
At 35, she accepted that her pregnancy was classified as “geriatric” by the medical community, and she said she had never really anticipated being in this predicament.
Timpf wrote, “I had mentally prepared for every other possibility, so I never expected to find myself in this situation.” At first, she thought she wouldn’t become pregnant, definitely not naturally. She feared that because of her advanced age, she would probably miscarry, so even after it happened, she expected the worst.
She also mentioned a noteworthy occasion that occurred on June 27, the evening of Joe Biden and Donald Trump’s presidential debate. She and her husband first heard their baby’s heartbeat on that day.
She recalled the moment, saying, “We heard the heartbeat for the first time, and then we heard it again.”
Even with this significant achievement, Timpf acknowledged that there was never a sudden, intense rush of excitement when hearing the news. She clarified that there was never this exhilarating emotional rush of “OMG, WE’RE GOING TO BE PARENTS!!!!?”
She acknowledged, “well, I was just too damn tired, and that was another thing working against the possibility of me experiencing all-encompassing astonishment.”
She also talked candidly about a deeper sadness that dominated the occasion.
Timpf expressed her sadness at not being able to tell her mother, who died on November 5, 2014, about this life-altering event.
“I have a sense of solidarity and togetherness with all the women who have experienced this. However, if I’m being completely honest, I’m also sad that there is one woman in particular—my mother—with whom I will never be able to share this connection.
“Having to try and figure out how to be a mother when I can hardly remember what it’s like to have one has felt cruel, at times disorienting, and a bit unfair,” she thought.
Timpf is approaching a very special occasion: November 5, 2024, the tenth anniversary of her mother’s death, will also be her sixth month of pregnancy. “What a world I get to share with my child. “My mom missed a decade,” she said.