“The View”'s Alyssa Farah Griffin Reveals She's Going Through IVF with Husband Justin: 'It Wasn't Happening Naturally'

Farah Griffin tied the knot with her husband in 2021

Dave Kotinsky/Getty Alyssa Farah Griffin and husband Justin

Dave Kotinsky/Getty

Alyssa Farah Griffin and husband Justin

Alyssa Farah Griffin is sharing an update on her family.

On The View: Behind the Table podcast, the co-host, 35, shared that she and husband Justin Griffin are going through in vitro fertilization (IVF) after the couple tried for over a year to conceive naturally.

"I'm going through IVF right now," Farah Griffin says on the podcast. "So my husband and I have been trying to get pregnant for about a year and a half, and it wasn't happening naturally."

"So we made the decision to move forward with IVF," she continues. "This is now my second cycle. So tomorrow, I will be in the doctor's office dealing with that."

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Related: Alyssa Farah Griffin Says Her Husband Used Whoopi Goldberg’s Pregnancy Question as ‘an Excuse to Make a Baby’

Farah Griffin goes on to say that she wanted to share about her journey because she didn't realize how hard the process would actually be.

"I'm only 35. And to me, I was like, I've got plenty of time," she says. "This won't be that difficult. I'm healthy. I work out. I eat right. And my body was just not cooperating with it."

The View co-host remembers giving herself injections at midnight at CNN on Election Night and feeling okay throughout the first cycle, but notes that she thinks she may have been getting "kinda cocky."

"Because the second cycle, I've been a wreck. I've not felt myself. I've been tired. I've been emotional. And you just feel uncomfortable in your body," Farah Griffin reveals.

"And I just wanted to mention it because I feel like...from someone who was surprised by how hard it was, it's because all the stories of this that we hear is usually women on the other side who's like, 'Here's my baby,' and 'Oh real quick, it was kinda hard to get here,'" she continues.

"And I wanted to just share with women who are struggling that there is hope, and you just have to kind of be present in the process as you're in it. There is a light at the end of the tunnel. I don't know when that will be for us, but it's incredible what science can do."