Women's Health, Your Way

Ask & Search With Clara

Welcome to a new standard for women's health answers.

BODYTALK / Lucy Hale is Normalizing *Not* Following the Traditional ...

Lucy Hale is Normalizing *Not* Following the Traditional Timeline for Marriage and Motherhood

Lucy Hale is Normalizing *Not* Following the Traditional Timeline for Marriage and Motherhood

One of the defining elements of millennial womanhood is the range of options that lie before us. We’ve normalized the fluidity of timelines and have generally just rewritten the rules of #adulting for fellow women…yet there are still so many narratives and ideas about the “right” time to make major life moves. And Lucy Hale is here to speak on it. 

Hale has accomplished so much: She’s had a big acting career (most famously, she played Aria on Pretty Little Liars, an absolute millennial pop culture juggernaut), and she’s been really vocal about her own sobriety journey.

But even she isn’t immune to the messages about what a woman in her 30s “should” do. Hale spoke about this on a recent episode of the Know Thyself podcast. 

"I'm 36. I'm not married and I don't have kids….and I just feel like there's a lot of women who probably need to hear that it's okay to not have that,” she said. She also noted that people have ~reactions~ to Hale not being married or a mom at this phase in her life.

Here’s the thing: I got married in my 28s and was a mom by 30. There’s nothing wrong with being married or having kids in your 20s, but there’s also nothing wrong with…not doing it that way. Delaying marriage and parenthood or opting out of them entirely are completely valid options. And data indicates they’re becoming more and more common. 

Online, there are so many narratives about “bitter single 30 year old women”. We’re in a moment of traditionalism, and I fear some of the progress we’ve made around letting women figure out their own paths will be threatened. But like…screw that. We’re all on different timelines and that’s fine. More than fine, actually — it's freeing.

There's no right or wrong way to do this, and we've got to stop holding women to these outdated timelines.

More from BODYTALK

At 38, I'm mostly past the point of my life where I'm obsessively following trends. I don't really care what people are saying about bare nails, for example (this take... Read more
On June 22, 2026, the world lost Jill Smokler, founder of Scary Mommy, to brain cancer.Maybe you've heard her name, maybe you haven't, but if you are a modern-day mother,... Read more
Okay, so...writing this makes me uncomfortable. And it absolutely shouldn't because there's nothing shameful about a woman's body. However, this is the reality of the world we live in: We're... Read more
If you're on the motherhood side of TikTok, you've probably seen the ~drama~ that's been popping off on the app. If not, here's what's going down: A woman (I won't... Read more
Every millennial woman I know is obsessed with Off Campus, and many have cited the overwhelming sense of nostalgia they feel when watching the show. Once I started watching, though?... Read more
Up until just a few years ago, a daily alcoholic drink seemed like a totally normal habit. A glass of wine with dinner, a beer after work, a cocktail as... Read more
K-Beauty and french pharmacy lovers, rejoice: The FDA just approved bemotrizinol, an active ingredient that has been used in sunscreens produced in Europe and Asia, to be used in over-the-counter... Read more
Unless you've been living under a rock (or, like, are just not a reality TV person), you know that Bravo's hit show Summer House has been at the center of... Read more
Does anyone else feel like it's suddenly become impossible to log on to social media without encountering some sort of blatant fatphobia? This type of content is all over my... Read more
Recently, an acquaintance asked me a question that stopped me in my tracks.I mentioned that I used to live in a high-rise building in a large city, and she asked... Read more