Suddenly Thirty
This week, Emily and Lilli are diving into modern motherhood, media narratives, and the conversations that quietly set the standard — and honestly, it’s layered. They unpack the discourse around Margot Robbie and the idea that keeping motherhood private somehow reads as avoiding it. When did being a mother become something that needs to be publicly performed to be valid? And why does opting out of that feel so loaded? Then, a very different headline: Emma Grede and her “three-hour mum” comment. Is it a refreshingly honest take on ambition and trade-offs, or a version of motherhood that only works with a certain level of privilege? They get into why this one hit such a nerve. They also touch on the push for free period care — what’s actually happening in Australia, who it’s impacting, and why this conversation is less about “free products” and more about access, dignity, and the cost of living. Plus, a quick review of Strangers — nuanced, quietly unsettling, and the kind of book that lingers longer than you expect. And finally, they zoom out: motherhood as identity vs motherhood as one part of a much larger life. Why the balance still feels impossible to get right — and why women, somehow, are expected to do it perfectly anyway. Things the girls mention: * Bits Period [https://bitsperiod.com/]: making period care free * Strangers: A Memoir of Marriage by Belle Burden Follow us on Instagram @suddenlythirtypodcast [https://www.instagram.com/suddenlythirtypodcast] to stay up to date with what we’ve been up to, behind the scenes and future episodes. Subscribe to the Suddenly Thirty Substack [https://suddenlythirty.substack.com/] where we collate all the things we’ve been into this week and share them with you. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.
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