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Anne Hathaway Pregnant at 43: A Beautiful Blessing — And a Necessary Reality Check for Young Women

Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File

Today, Anne Hathaway announced she is pregnant again at the age of 43. 

First of all, every baby is a blessing and Congratulations to Anne and her family. Because of her advanced age, of course, it has spawned conversation about women, pregnancy and biological clocks. 

The astrology girlies seem to think it had something to do with her moon and stars and stuff.

The lover girls are excited for our favorite Queen from our childhoods.

She is lovely and also very rich. Because of that, she has impeccable health care, a team of staff, skin care and beauty professionals at her fingertips at all times. That's a lovely thing. She also likely will have nannies and night nurses.

The average 43-year-old woman giving birth today lacks the extraordinary resources that many high-profile celebrities enjoy—top-tier fertility clinics, surrogacy options, round-the-clock medical care, financial security, and extensive support networks.

Glamorized stories of famous women having healthy babies in their 40s or even 50s create a misleading impression. Young women who assume they can safely delay childbearing for decades while focusing on career and other priorities should understand the reality: natural fertility drops sharply after the mid-30s (down to roughly 5% chance per cycle by age 40), and risks rise significantly for the typical woman. 

Another profound consideration is the shortened time you’ll have with your child. Many people underestimate how much this matters until it’s too late.

I lost my father when he was 47. Even though I was an adult, it still felt far too soon — a painful reminder that no amount of preparation fully cushions that loss.

Current U.S. life expectancy is approximately 79 years overall (around 81 for women). If you have a child at 43, you’ll be about 79 when that child turns 36. That means your son or daughter gets relatively few years of adulthood with you, fewer shared holidays, milestones, advice, and everyday moments that build a deep, lasting bond. 


The window to become a grandparent shrinks too. Many people hope to watch their own grandchildren grow up, but with later parenthood, that opportunity often arrives when you’re in your late 70s or 80s, or may not come at all.


This isn’t about fear-mongering. It’s about recognizing a quiet, lasting sadness that many late-in-life parents and their children quietly carry: less overlapping time in the prime of life, when energy, health, and presence are highest. 


Children of older parents often shoulder caregiving responsibilities earlier than their peers, and they frequently express a unique ache over having less time with Mom or Dad in their own adult years.

Biology and time are unforgiving.

While some families beat the odds beautifully, the average case is worth weighing honestly when deciding how long to delay.

Young women should know this fundamental truth: it is almost always easier, safer, and smoother to begin your parenting journey in your twenties or early thirties.

Life is unpredictable, and having children in your forties is absolutely possible ... many women do it successfully. But it often comes with more medical hurdles, higher costs, and greater uncertainty than society typically highlights. 

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