Jennifer Aniston on speculation about not having kids
Jennifer Aniston said that she wanted to have children and that women who have a family and career are her inspiration.
Hollywood favorite and star of the "Friends" series Jennifer Aniston, after an emotionally turbulent period due to parting with her colleague Brad Pitt, often faced accusations that her career was more important than her family and that she never wanted to have children.
In a recent interview, Jennifer Aniston said that she wanted to have children and that women who have a family and career are her inspiration, and that she sees no reason why anyone should limit themselves or decide on only one field of life, when they can to have it all. "I always wanted to have children and I would never give up my family because of my career. I want to have everything," said Aniston.
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During her marriage to Brad Pitt, the actress was ready for her family and a new life story, especially after ten years of successful engagement in the "Friends" series. Instead of a family, the divorce took place in 2005 after five years of marriage. Shortly after the divorce, Brad Pitt appeared in public with his new girlfriend, Angelina Jolie. Only a year later, he announced that they were expecting their first child. The actor's move led the media to suspect that Pitt wanted a family, but that Aniston did not want the same, and that this was most likely the reason for the divorce. However, the accusations greatly upset Jennifer.
"She can't keep a man", "She doesn't want a child because she is selfish and dedicated to her career", "How can I say - you have no idea what is happening to me privately, medically, why I can't or if I can have children. Nothing. I can sit and laugh at the headlines because they are becoming more and more absurd," said Aniston.
After many years of pressure to talk about family and children, the actress wrote a letter in which she stated that women are complete with or without children in their lives. "We are complete with or without a partner, with or without a child. We decide for ourselves what is best when it comes to our bodies. That decision is ours and ours alone. Let's make that decision for ourselves and be an example for the young women in this world. Let's make that decision consciously, out of the tabloid noise. We don't have to be married or a mother to be complete. We can determine our own "happy ending to life." I'm tired of being part of this narrative. Maybe one day I will become a mother, if I ever become one, I will be the first to inform you. But I am not looking for motherhood because in a way I feel incomplete because all of us are so convinced by modern pop culture," she wrote.
Post by: Rinna James