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Jennifer Aniston bares all to share struggles with infertility

<p>Jennifer Aniston has bared all in her latest cover shoot, while opening up about her desperate struggle to have children. </p> <p>The 53-year-old actress admitted to <a href="https://www.allure.com/story/jennifer-aniston-december-2022-cover-interview" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Allure magazine</a> that she regrets the decision to not freeze her eggs when she was younger, revealing that she "threw everything" at her infertility battle, including going through IVF in a desperate attempt to conceive. </p> <p>"I was trying to get pregnant. It was a challenging road for me, the baby-making road," she said of her IVF journey, which the magazine notes was "several years ago". </p> <p>"All the years and years and years of speculation... It was really hard. I was going through IVF, drinking Chinese teas, you name it. I was throwing everything at it."</p> <p>She also slammed speculation that any of her former husbands, including Brad Pitt and Justin Theroux, initiated a divorce because she "wouldn't give him a kid", noting that the constant rumours about her relationship made her infertility battle all the more difficult. </p> <p>The actress added that she wishes someone had told her to freeze her eggs when she was younger, adding that she has now come to terms with the fact that she will never conceive children. </p> <p>"I would’ve given anything if someone had said to me, 'Freeze your eggs. Do yourself a favour.' You just don’t think it. So here I am today. The ship has sailed," she said. </p> <p>Aniston admitted that she was too focused on her career at the height of her fame from starring on the sitcom <em>Friends</em> to think about the possibility of having a family. </p> <p>"I just cared about my career. And God forbid a woman is successful and doesn’t have a child," she said.</p> <p>"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. I don’t have anything to hide at this point."</p> <p>Jennifer went on to say that she has come to terms with the fact she won't have children, saying she found some "relief" in the fact that the possibility of kids is no longer lingering over her as never-ending "maybe".</p> <p>She has found self-confidence in her age, saying she no longer cares what anyone thinks about her.</p> <p>"I would say my late 30s, 40s, I’d gone through really hard s***, and if it wasn’t for going through that, I would’ve never become who I was meant to be," she explained.  </p> <p><em>Image credits: Instagram - Allure</em></p>

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Jenny Morrison opens up about “devastating” 14 years of struggle

<p>Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s wife, Jenny Morrison, has opened about their personal 14-year plight that took a toll on their marriage. </p> <p>The Australian politician and his wife share two children together, Abbey and Lily, but for a long time were unable to have children of their own. </p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7832145/scott-jenny-2.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/b90010149ad940f093c9e75655634234" /></p> <p>While at a panel with <em>Nine News</em> presenter Peter Overton and actor Mary Coustas, Australia’s first lady candidly spoke about the toll years of IVF had on herself and her husband’s relationship. </p> <p>Jenny and Scott were married in 1990 after meeting a few years earlier through church when they were both 12-years-old. </p> <p>Two years into marriage, they decided to have a family but soon found out this might be a challenging task, she said at the Australian Jewish Fertility Network event on Wednesday morning. </p> <p>“Just before that I had stopped contraception and I thought I was being really clever and not falling pregnant but when we actually started [trying for a baby] it wasn't happening,” Mrs Morrison said.</p> <p>“I saw a doctor and they found I had extensive endometriosis. That was devastating.”</p> <p>One in three women who have endometriosis struggle with fertility and find it hard to get pregnant, so like many couples who face these issues, they decided to get IVF. </p> <p>The process was gruelling and after ten years, there were still no results. Mrs Morrison admitted the memories from that period in her life were “awful”.</p> <p>“It is difficult because so many of our friends and family are having babies. There are babies everywhere,” she said.</p> <p>“It was really really hard every single time you did an IVF and it didn't work.”</p> <p>Mrs Morrison admitted her husband handled the situation better than others, but threw himself into his work as a distraction and said she could see how he was “still sad inside”. </p> <p>“It framed an awful lot of my life. I found the hormones really affected me and made me feel very sick,” Mrs Morrison revealed.</p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7832144/scott-jenny-1.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/2d558ec3de1746199850c3f0217527e4" /></p> <p>“Sometimes you can get quite depressed and people around you are well meaning but they don’t know what to say. Unless you have been in it yourself you just cannot understand what they are going through.”</p> <p>Even though their marriage took a hit, Mrs Morrison says her husband was “gorgeous” and told her she was more than enough for him, despite both wanting children. </p> <p>“Scott and I are a very close couple. We grew up together and we rely on each other,” she said.</p> <p>“There were some times that were really hard and you lash out and get angry. But we got by and we made it to the other side.”</p> <p>After ten years, she was advised to get a second opinion, where she learnt she had severe endometriosis. </p> <p>“I went back to that doctor and was told to give up. He said you are not going to have children and you should start thinking about adopting or whatever you want to do,” she said.</p> <p>Another two years passed until Mrs Morrison underwent microsurgery to treat her endometriosis. </p> <p>About three weeks after the five-hour surgery, the Australian first lady fell pregnant with her first child, Abbey. </p> <p>She checked a pregnancy test after feeling “agitated”, she was shocked. </p> <p>“I could not believe it when I saw those double lines. I was in absolute shock. I walked out to Scott and said ‘I don’t think we are going to Rwanda in January’,” Ms Morrison said.</p> <p>She showed him the test and Mr Morrison asked: “What does it mean?”</p> <p>“I said I think I’m pregnant,” Mrs Morrison said.</p> <p>The couple went on to have two healthy girls - a journey Mrs Morrison says was worth it in the end. </p> <p>Scott and Jenny have been open about their fertility struggles in the past, </p> <p>It is the first time Jenny has candidly spoken about their “devastating” struggle in depth. </p>

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