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The hills alum Whitney Harbor and her husband, Tim Rosenmanare hopeful about their fertility journey in 2026.
“The surrogacy journey is on a positive trajectory,” Port, 40, began on the Friday, Jan. 2, episode of her self-titled “With Whit.” podcast. “We have just signed our contract and are now waiting for the next steps for a transfer, but it is difficult to explain unless you are there.”
She continued, “It’s hopeful and it’s exciting, but it’s also tiring and exhausting, like you have all the hope in the world and you want to spread all this positive energy, but you’ve also had so many failures that it’s hard for you to imagine anything going well.”
Port and Rosenman, 45, welcomed son Sonny in 2017 before the reality star suffered multiple miscarriages while trying to expand her family. While the reality TV star was struggling with secondary infertility, she and her husband decided in 2023 to use the help of a gestational carrier.
Port and Rosenman have since matched with several surrogates, many of whom also had miscarriages after implantation of the couple’s embryos.
“Some days I feel fragile, other days I’m scared,” Port admitted in Friday’s episode about what’s next. “Most of the time I’m like, ‘Let’s do this,’ and most of the time I feel it all in the same hour.
Now that Port and Rosenman signed a contract with their new surrogate, she revealed that “the legal part” of the process is complete.
“Now it becomes a little more of a scientific, nerve-wracking part,” Port explained. “We’ll schedule a transfer in a month or two and keep our fingers crossed. We have three embryos left, and they’re all boys. I’m kind of thinking right now, ‘If these three don’t work out, we’re probably not going to keep trying.'”
She added, “I also don’t want to get too far ahead of myself, or even visualize or think about how it won’t work, like, that doesn’t help the situation at all. I’m a big believer in manifesting and visualizing something and throwing positive energy into it.”
Despite Port’s high hopes, the “logical part” of herself wants to be prepared for all eventualities and all potential consequences.
“For example: ‘You need to have a plan and an idea in mind of when you will be ready for the end of this journey,'” Port said. “[I think there will be] some sort of concrete thing that will happen that will put an end to all of this because I think so far we’ve just been going, going, going and just seeing how far we can go [and] how far we can push these emotions.
If all three transfers fail, Port remains hesitant to start from scratch.
“I just don’t know if I could cross another egg retrieval situation” she admitted. “My eggs, year after year, after being fried and fried and fried to go through this process, I get 21 eggs and then I can get a maybe healthy embryo. Part of me wants this chapter to be set [to the side] when we go through all the different scenarios.