Emily Ratajkowski planning to freeze eggs and thinks she’ll still be single mum in late-30s

Emily Ratajkowski. Picture: Reuters/Stephane Mahe

Emily Ratajkowski. Picture: Reuters/Stephane Mahe

Published Mar 29, 2023

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The 31-year-old model and ‘Gone Girl’ actress says a lot of men she dates are useless at integrating into her life as a mother to son Sylvester, two, and fears she may not find a partner she wants to raise another child alongside.

She made the admission during an online question and answer session with fans, recorded on March 23 and released this week, when one of her followers asked her: “Is it cool to raise a baby without the father?”

Ratajkowski replied: “I thought about this a lot – a lot of my friends have gotten their eggs frozen just to buy themselves some more time, do the careers they want, meet the potential partner they want, but also, I know a lot of people had IVF because they weren't able to get pregnant naturally.

“And, I'm 31, and it was really crazy – my last visit with a gyaeno, and she was like, ‘Okay, well, in about two or three years, we'll be talking about your eggs, you know, being frozen.’

“And it really shocked me – not that I don't think that's reasonable, I was just like, ‘Holy s***, I have to be thinking about that?’

“My mum naturally got pregnant with me at 38, so it never crossed my mind that part of it.

“I think I definitely would like to have more children – I really love being a mom. I’m not sure I’m going to find somebody that I want to raise a child with.”

Ratajkowski has dated a string of men, including comic Pete Davidson, 29, since she divorced her ex-husband Sebastian Bear-McClard, 42, last year, and snaps emerged at the weekend of her kissing 29-year-old former One Direction singer Harry Styles, on the streets of Japan.

But she added about struggling to find a long-term partner: “I will say there are men who are more respectful of my family, which is me and Sly, and our relationship, and more cognisant of it than others. And that makes a huge difference for me.

“Like, if you are appreciative of my life as a mother and my time with Sly and how he is Number 1, like, you win so many points.”

She added about her future plans to give her son, who she calls ‘Sly’, a sibling whether she finds another man or not: “I personally wouldn't be afraid of getting pregnant and giving birth as a single woman.

“That doesn’t mean I’m saying that’s the best way to do it or the only way to do it, but I very much see that for my future – deciding to do IVF in my late-30s to give Sly a sibling.

“I think marriage is really hard, partnership is really hard, and when you bring kids into the mix, it’s 1,000 times more difficult. So, in some ways, it (being a single mum) can streamline it a bit.

“But it also means there is no time off. There’s no shifts – there’s no, ‘Give mummy and daddy a break,’ so it’s a lot of work.

“But it definitely can be done, and I think it can definitely be a beautiful thing.”