Fani Carbajo Faces Family Struggles, IVF Setbacks, and Legal Uncertainty

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Fani Carbajo Shares Struggles With Family, IVF, and Legal Challenges

Fani Carbajo is navigating a tough period filled with family disagreements and a strong desire to become a mother again. Alongside the ongoing tensions with her child’s father, she is facing the emotional and practical hurdles of expanding her family through medical means while managing the realities of daily life as a parent and public figure.

On the legal front, he discussed the case with Rubén de la Red, saying he is awaiting a resolution: “I’m waiting for the trial to come out, I hope it will be soon.” He explained there are currently no new developments due to delays spanning Covid-related slowdowns and ongoing strikes. “There is nothing right now. Between the Covid delay, the strikes happening right now, there is nothing. I did not receive the request I made to my son’s father, nothing came, we are paralyzed.”

Fani also opened up about his son’s father, saying, “They reconnected because my son Emilio decided on his own that he is now 16, I want to talk to him.” She added, “I couldn’t ban him, I won’t tell him not to talk to him, he’s a bad father, after all they are children and it’s not their fault but I have to fight for what’s mine.”

Her collaborator and former contestant from the show Island of Temptations described a recent meeting with a lawyer, saying, “You didn’t come for 13 years, if I want to go to Cuba with my son, I don’t need to ask for your permission, since you never went, you didn’t go to the doctor or anything.” He clarified that he never blamed the father for the pension arrangements either. This candid account sheds light on the personal and legal tensions that accompany co-parenting under public scrutiny.

Regarding the in vitro fertilization process, Fani shared concerns about the cycle: “I’m very worried about this, I’m in the IVF process, the latest news is not good, only the right ovary worked, the left ovary did not respond. And when they did the extraction, they were only able to do it on the right ovary. only one embryo was fertilized.”

Today remains a difficult moment, as she reflects on the prospects of more eggs and embryos and the potential for successful implantation. She noted, “It’s a complicated moment because I was expecting to have more eggs, more embryos when they implant, more opportunities if they don’t implant well.” The gynecologist advised a second cycle with injections and hormones, and Fani acknowledged the emotional weight of the situation, saying, “I want to be a mother now and all this makes me a little overwhelmed, I understand that age, stress. Our ovarian reserve decreases as we get older, but not being able to fulfill what I want so much causes me great anxiety. I’m not having a good time.”

Despite the strain, she remains open to different paths to motherhood. Although not agreeing with every term, she does not refuse adoption: “All of a sudden they give you a budget and I say I will adopt, I will not buy, I just don’t buy. I understand some things, I don’t understand this policy.” She stressed a willingness to try while keeping options on the table and noted, “Naturally, I will try, but if it doesn’t work, we’ll see.”

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