Im-turning-40-and-people-keep-asking-why-I-dont.jpeg

I’m turning 40, and people keep asking why I don’t have children. I have a lot of reasons.

I always felt like I disappointed my mother. Her lifelong wish was to become a grandmother, but having children was never high on my priority list.

When she died unexpectedly, I was 35 and struggling financially and mentally.

Her death threw my life into even more chaos — and not being a mother helped me survive it.

As I approach 40, I get asked, “Why don’t you just have a baby?” more and more often.

Although well-meaning, the question reduces a complex, private decision to small talk — as though my ambitions, finances, mental health, and grief matter less than my reproductive function.

What I witnessed growing up shaped my decision not to have children

Growing up, I watched my mother work six days a week running her esthetician business while doing all of the cooking, cleaning, and childcare at home. She was so busy being a working wife and mother to two kids that she put off many of her dreams until retirement.

She loved her work and continued tinting eyelashes and applying gel nails for her clients until the pandemic forced her to retire at 68. The prospect of enjoying her retirement kept her going through the UK’s lockdowns — but she died just a few months after restrictions were lifted.

Watching her sacrifice so much time — only to run out of it — shaped how I think about my own life.

Career and financial instability made survival my priority

At 32, I left a stable career in humanitarian aid to pursue my creative ambitions. It didn’t go well at first, but by my mid-30s, I felt like I was finally getting somewhere with my fledgling freelance writing business.

My partner was also out of work at the time, which only intensified the pressure. When we went shopping at our local market, we bought discounted bags of vegetables, and I crossed my fingers that my card payment would go through.

Every day, I struggled with the shame and sometimes-crippling anxiety and depression brought on by prolonged financial hardship.

At a time when many of our friends were having babies, we were simply trying to stay afloat. And since my partner (who’s 17 years my senior) has never wanted children, they weren’t in our plans.

Grief put my life on hold for five years

Then, in October 2021, my world fell apart. My mother and I were close, and I was unprepared for the heartbreak of losing her so suddenly — especially as the pandemic had kept us apart for so long.

Grief consumed me, making it difficult to work, and I mostly lived off the little savings I had scraped together.

Within a year, I landed a remote role at a marketing agency that gave me the stability I needed to start rebuilding my life. When I was made redundant at the end of 2024, not having a child to support gave me time to think about what to do next without additional pressure.

Now, nearly five years after my mother died, I finally have the strength to pursue the dreams I started chasing years ago.

I’m building a life that feels right for me

Last year, my nephew was born — the grandchild my mother never got to meet.

I can’t deny that watching my brother become a father made me wonder what parenthood might be like. But while I adore my nephew, loving him doesn’t make me yearn for the upheaval motherhood would bring. And without my mom to share in that chapter of life, I simply don’t feel the pull.

As I enter my 40s, I don’t feel like I’m “missing out”. Being child-free helped me survive the darkest time of my life — and gave me the chance to rebuild on my own terms.




Source link

10-celebrities-who-left-the-US-or-are-considering-moving.jpeg

10 celebrities who left the US or are considering moving for political reasons

Updated

  • Since the 2016 US presidential election, celebrities have been saying they’d move out of the country.
  • More stars made similar comments after Donald Trump won the 2024 election.
  • James Cameron recently confirmed he’s continued to live in New Zealand for political reasons.

The lifestyles of the rich and famous often include mansions in California, penthouses in the big city, and maybe a small pied-à-terre in a foreign country. But as politics becomes an increasingly divisive topic in the United States, some more celebrities are moving out of the country — or saying that they will.

Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi moved to England from California in response to the 2024 election results. Rosie O’Donnell — thanks to her Irish grandparents — is in the process of becoming an Irish citizen, citing the current US political climate as her reason for moving in a TikTok video. Other celebrities like Laverne Cox and Cher have vowed to leave the States but haven’t yet.

This isn’t exactly a new trend. During the 2016 US presidential election between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, many stars vocally opposed Trump and threatened to leave America if he won. Now, with Trump’s second term underway, celebrities are again considering relocating — not that the Trump administration is too upset.

“Good riddance!” White House assistant press secretary Taylor Rogers told BI when asked for the administration’s response.

Celebrities aren’t the only ones exploring a new place to live. Search interest for “move abroad” shows that peak interest occurred in November 2024. Though interest has since cooled off, it’s still higher than in previous years.

Bureaucracy.es, an immigration services site that helps Americans moving to Spain with the visa application process, told CNN in December 2024 that it’s seen over 300% more clients book consultations since the November election.

Here are 10 celebrities who have moved abroad, or say they will for political reasons.

Olivia Singh contributed to previous versions of this post.

Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi

Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi in June 2023.

Dave Benett/Getty Images for RH

In late November 2024, TheWrap reported that comedian Ellen DeGeneres and her wife, Portia de Rossi, left their Montecito home for the Cotswolds, England. The publication said their move to the countryside was triggered by Trump’s election and a source said they’re “never coming back.”

An August 2025 Us cover story notes that DeGeneres told English broadcaster and host Richard Bacon during a July 20 event that she and DeGeneres were in the Cotswolds when the election results came in. “We were like, ‘We’re staying here. We’re not going back,'” DeGeneres told Bacon on their reaction to Trump’s victory.

According to the Us story, DeGeneres and de Rossi have since moved from the original home they purchased in the Cotswolds and now live in a 10,000-square-foot country home called Hiaven. The pair tend to their chickens, sheep, and horses and walk to the local pub for lunch.

Rosie O’Donnell


Rosie O'Donnell in October 2024.

Rosie O’Donnell in October.

Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images

In a video recently posted on TikTok, Rosie O’Donnell confirmed that she moved from the US to Ireland with her youngest daughter, Dakota. The actor relocated on January 15, days before Trump’s inauguration.

“Although I was never someone who thought I would move to another country, that’s what I decided would be the best for myself and my 12-year-old child,” O’Donnell said in the video.

The talk show host, who has Irish grandparents, said her experience so far has been “pretty wonderful” and she’s in the process of getting Irish citizenship.

O’Donnell said that she misses her four other kids and her friends, but will remain in Ireland for the time being.

“I miss many things about life there at home, and I’m trying to find a home here in this beautiful country,” she said. “And when it is safe for all citizens to have equal rights there, in America, that’s when we will consider coming back.”

Sophie Turner


Sophie Turner in Paris in March 2025.

Sophie Turner in March.

Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

UK-born actor Sophie Turner moved to America after marrying singer Joe Jonas. The couple first lived together in Los Angeles and later in Miami with their two daughters Willa and Delphine. Turner and Jonas sold their Miami home in August 2023 and news of their plans to divorce broke weeks later.

In an interview with Harper’s Bazaar published in October 2024, Turner said that she was homesick while living in the US and struggled with the country’s politics. Turner has since moved to West London.

“The gun violence, Roe v Wade being overturned… Everything just kind of piled on,” Turner said.

After the 2022 Uvalde shooting, in which 19 elementary school children and two teachers were killed, Turner said she “knew it was time” to leave.

Barbra Streisand


Barbra Streisand in June 2024.

Barbra Streisand in June.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Genesis Prize Foundation

It was no secret that Barbra Streisand wanted Hillary Clinton to beat Trump in the 2016 election.

“He has no facts,” Streisand told Australian “60 Minutes” host Michael Usher in a 2016 interview prior to the election. “I don’t know, I can’t believe it. I’m either coming to your country, if you’ll let me in, or Canada.”

Streisand didn’t move out of the US, but she did criticize Trump in her 2018 studio album “Walls.”

In a 2023 interview with Stephen Colbert, Streisand said that she liked Joe Biden and thought he did a “good job.” When asked about the possibility of a second Trump administration, Streisand again said she’d move.

“I can’t live in this country if he became president,” she said, adding that she’d probably move to England.

Per an Instagram post shared in early January amid the Los Angeles wildfires, it appears that Streisand still lives in Northern California. Reps for Streisand did not reply to a request for comment.

Cher


Cher in February 2025.

Cher in February.

Taylor Hill/FilmMagic

In November 2016, Page Six reported that Cher threatened to move if Trump was elected.

“I’m gonna have to leave the planet,” she reportedly said at a fundraiser for Clinton.

She had a similar stance before Trump officially ran for reelection.

“I almost got an ulcer the last time,” she told The Guardian in October 2023. “If he gets in, who knows? This time I will leave [the country].”

However, as of publication, it doesn’t appear that Cher has relocated. Reps for Cher did not reply to a request for comment.

Laverne Cox


Laverne Cox in March 2025.

Laverne Cox in March.

Karwai Tang/WireImage

Days after the 2024 presidential election, “Orange Is the New Black” star Laverne Cox appeared on the podcast “Just for Variety” and spoke about the impact the results would have on the transgender community.

Cox said that she and some friends were considering moving, but no plans have been solidified yet.

“We’re doing research on different cities in Europe and in the Caribbean,” Cox said.

“I don’t want to be in too much fear, but I’m scared,” the actor added. “As a public figure, with all my privilege, I’m scared, and I’m particularly scared because I’m a public figure. I feel like I could be targeted.”

Lena Dunham


Lena Dunham in September 2024.

Lena Dunham in September.

John Phillips/Getty Images

At the 2016 Matrix Awards, “Girls” actor Lena Dunham said that she was serious about moving if Trump won the election.

“I know a lot of people have been threatening to do this, but I really will,” Dunham said. “I know a lovely place in Vancouver and I can get my work done from there.”

But after the election results, Dunham changed her mind.

“I can survive staying in this country, MY country, to fight and live and use my embarrassment of blessings to do what’s right,” she wrote in part in a note shared on Instagram.

“It’s easy to joke about moving to Canada,” she added. “It’s harder to see, and to love, the people who fill your mailbox with hate. It’s harder to see what needs to be done and do it. It’s harder to live, fully and painfully aware of the injustice surrounding us, to cherish and fear your country all at once. But I’m willing to try. Will you try with me?”

Dunham did eventually leave her home in New York and moved to London. However, in an interview with the New Yorker published in July 2024, the actor said the move was prompted by work opportunities.

8. Robin Wright


Robin Wright

Robin Wright

Antony Jones/ Getty Images

Robin Wright, known for her roles in “Forrest Gump” and “House of Cards,” relocated to England for work and decided to make the move permanent.

Wright spends most of her time in the Chiltern Hills, a rural part of England about 44 miles outside London, and enjoys the peace and quiet it offers compared to her former home of Los Angeles.

“They’re living,” Wright told UK publication The Sunday Times in August. “They’re not in the car in traffic, panicked on a phone call, eating a sandwich. That’s most of America. Everything’s rush, competition and speed.”

Wright mentioned during an appearance on The View that the UK’s tax breaks make it advantageous for production, which is why she relocated there in the first place, but she’s enjoyed her break from the US.

“I’m troubled, like many of us are, about this state of our country,” Wright said. “It’s not the reason, I just — I’m so tranquil over there.”

Richard Gere


Richard Gere and Alejandra Silva.

Richard Gere and Alejandra Silva.

JORGE GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images

“Pretty Woman” star Richard Gere and his wife Alejandra Silva sold their house in Connecticut for $10.75 million in November 2024 and moved to Spain.

Gere said the plan was to be closer to Silva’s family in Spain, but on his way out of the country, he had some choice words about the US.

“We’re in a very dark place in America where we have a bully and a thug who’s the president of the United States,” Gere said during a speech at Spain’s Goya Awards in February.

Silva told The Daily Mail that the move was not permanent, and that they plan on going back and forth between Spain and the US.

“We’re always coming back,” she said. We’ll come back here in the summer because we have the kids at camp. We just have to balance our lives there and here.”

James Cameron


James Camerson in a black jacket

James Cameron.

Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

The billionaire filmmaker has been visiting New Zealand since the 1990s, but he set roots there once the pandemic hit in 2020.

Since then, Cameron has had another reason for staying.

“I’m not there for the scenery, I’m there for the sanity,” he said in a January 2026 episode of “In Depth with Graham Bensinger.”

Along with supporting how New Zealanders handled the pandemic, Cameron has also voiced his opposition to Donald Trump. That led to Camera not just living there, but also making all his “Avatar” movies in the country. He became a citizen of New Zealand in 2025.

“I think it’s horrifying,” he told the New Zealand outlet Stuff in 2025 about Trump’s reelection. “I see it as a turn away from everything decent. America doesn’t stand for anything if it doesn’t stand for what it has historically stood for. It becomes a hollow idea, and I think they’re hollowing it out as fast as they can for their own benefit.”




Source link

3-reasons-buying-Manus-could-give-Meta-a-much-needed-AI.jpeg

3 reasons buying Manus could give Meta a much-needed AI boost

AI dealmaking isn’t slowing down — and it’s Meta’s turn again.

The social media giant is buying Manus, a Singapore-based artificial intelligence startup, the companies announced on Monday.

Manus went viral in March when it previewed an AI agent that could autonomously perform tasks like screening résumés and stock analysis. Manus was created in China but relocated to Singapore in mid-2025. Meta paid more than $2 billion for Manus, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The deal is the latest in a flurry of red-hot AI investment and acquisitions this year, which includes Meta’s $14 billion investment in Scale AI in June. From providing an instant AI revenue source to giving it a leg up in AI agents, here’s why buying Manus could give Meta a much-needed boost in the AI race.

1. It’s an instant revenue generator

Manus said in December that it had processed more than 147 trillion tokens of text and said its users were in the “millions.” It also claimed to have crossed $100 million in annual recurring revenue, achieving both milestones eight months after launch.

Those numbers tell us Meta is getting a startup with a built-in audience of paying users. Meta’s business model to date has largely revolved around building free products and making money from collecting user data and targeted advertising. Manus offers a free tier for basic tasks, but charges users up to $200 a month for its pro tier.

“The purchase gives Meta a functioning business with paying customers, meaningful revenue and infrastructure already proven at scale,” said Murthy Grandhi, company profiles analyst at research firm GlobalData, in a note.

In its announcement, Meta said it plans to continue selling the Manus service separately while also integrating Manus’s technology into its existing platforms, which include Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Meta did not elaborate on which ones or how it might do so. Meta has poured billions into building up its internal AI teams and developing what is termed “superintelligence,” with so far little in terms of returns. Manus could be a way for Meta to start making money directly from AI while it continues to build out its internal efforts.

2. Manus is a big bet on agents

Meta has struggled to wow consumers and developers as much as OpenAI and Google when it comes to raw model power. However, as these models become increasingly commoditized, there is a growing need to show AI can actually be useful. One such way is AI agents, a type of software that can proactively make decisions and take actions, such as creating a marketing campaign or monitoring and fixing bugs in apps.

Buying Manus could prove a smart bet on the idea that the real value will lie in the programs that sit on top of the models. Manus primarily uses other companies’ AI models, like Anthropic’s Claude, as building blocks and layers its own software on top.

“People keep assuming a small update from OpenAI or Google will wipe out a lot of AI startups,” wrote Yuchen Jin, CEO of the AI startup Hyperbolic, in an X post about Meta’s Manus deal. “But in reality, the AI application layer should be where most of the opportunity is.”

A Meta spokesperson did not immediately respond to a question about which models Manus would support following the acquisition.

3. Meta can use its distribution advantage

One of Meta’s strengths is that its platforms are used by billions of people, which, like Google, gives it a distribution advantage. Its challenge is to find ways to keep them coming back.

Unlike Google with Gemini 3, Meta has yet to have a buzzy AI breakthrough moment with its own in-house models. Combining Manus’s “general-purpose agents” with Meta’s distribution channels gives the social media company another shot at that, particularly as CEO Mark Zuckerberg has acknowledged that Facebook has shifted from being a place for friends to view each other’s content to a “broad discovery and entertainment space.”

“Manus offers a ready-made, high-margin software layer that can be sold directly and integrated across Meta’s consumer and enterprise products,” said GlobalData’s Grandhi.




Source link