Jennifer Aniston Has Spoken Candidly About Coming to Terms With Not Having Children
Trigger warning - this article discusses infertility
Jennifer Aniston has been open about her decades-long struggle with fertility, speaking publicly about her 20-year journey in recent years to help others going through similar situations.
"There’s a point where it’s, like, out of my control," the Friends actress recalled this week during an episode of Dax Shepard's podcast, Armchair Expert. "There’s literally nothing I can do about it. It just wasn’t in the plan, whatever the plan was.
"People say, 'But you can adopt,’" she added of her options, before admitting: "[but] I don’t want to adopt. I want my own DNA in a little person. That’s the only way, selfish or not, whatever that is, I’ve wanted it.
"It’s very emotional, especially when they say 'that’s it,'" she later reflected. "Because there is a weird moment when that happens.”
Now 56, Aniston reveals that she has come to terms with not having children, telling host Dax Shepard: "I actually feel a little relief now because there is no more, ‘Can I? Maybe. Maybe. Maybe.' I don’t have to think about that anymore."
Aniston has previously spoken out about the "false narrative" around her relationship with motherhood, setting the record straight about her fertility struggles in 2022.
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"[There was a] narrative that I was just selfish. I just cared about my career," Aniston stated in an interview that year with Allure. "And God forbid a woman is successful and doesn’t have a child. And the reason my husband left me, why we broke up and ended our marriage, was because I wouldn’t give him a kid. It was absolute lies."
"They didn’t know my story, or what I’d been going through over the past 20 years to try to pursue a family, because I don’t go out there and tell them my medical woes," she added in a recent interview for Harper's Bazaar. "That’s not anybody’s business. But there comes a point when you can’t not hear it – the narrative about how I won’t have a baby, won’t have a family, because I’m selfish, a workaholic. It does affect me – I’m just a human being. We’re all human beings."
If you have been affected by anything discussed in this article, The Fertility Foundationcan provide support to those seeking advice.

Jenny Proudfoot is an award-winning journalist, specialising in lifestyle, culture, entertainment, international development and politics. After working at Marie Claire UK for seven years - rising from intern to Features Editor - she is now a freelance contributor to the News and Features section.
In 2021, Jenny was named as a winner on the PPA's '30 under 30' list, and was also listed as a rising star in journalism.