
She is beautiful, she is single and she is also a highly-successful professional. However, in spite of all these positive attributes, Renee Zellweger is not the perfect woman. Anyone who is planning to settle down with her and start a family needs to forego the charm of parenthood, because Renee is not at all comfortable with the idea of motherhood. In her own words, “motherhood is slavery.”
If you have any doubts about her “unique” take on motherhood, listen to what this 40-year-old actress has to say about her experience after spending an evening at her brother’s home with his two children.
My brother has two children now, so I’ve been playing aunt Renee. They’re two and four. It’s chaos. Moms out there, kudos to you. The cool thing about being an aunt is like, I can leave. No offence to my big brother Drew, but that is slavery. I dare you to take a shower. You can’t do anything unless they let you. It’s a dictatorship. They’re little dictators in their crib.
Sigh! Renee is so uncool. A woman who compares motherhood to slavery does not even deserve to be a woman. Anyway, let’s pray that someday she realizes the truth that mothers are not slaves.
Source: contactmusic.com









Comments
Sorry, I respectfully disagree with your summation of Renee Zellweger as less-than-perfect, uncool, and not deserving of being a woman. There is more to being a woman than being a uterus. The choice of children is a personal and private one, based on personal decisions of strengths and weaknesses and needs versus wants. Not all people on this planet have a need or desire to procreate. They can enjoy other people’s children without the need to make some of their own. The women who do not choose to bear children are not any less perfect than those who do. There is no such thing as a perfect woman anyway, and there’s quite a few imperfect mothers out there. It’s her simple opinion: it’s not a lifestyle she wishes to pursue. It does not appeal to her. And quite frankly, motherhood IS slavery. It fails to be about the mother, it becomes about the child. The issue is the sense of worth and pride that one gets from raising a child and making those sacrifices of time, energy, sleep, money, and emotion. For her, it’s not worth it. It appears you have a strong bias toward motherhood anyway since you also wrote a blog praising Celine Dion’s second pregnancy, so I’m probably wasting my breath.