Tracy Ellis Ross With nine NAACP Image Awards, one Golden Globe and six Emmy nominations, he’s a Hollywood prodigious talent with a fan base to prove it. But when she’s not on our screens, Tracee is producing executives, producing documentaries, and launching podcasts. And with the launch of her hair care brand, Pattern, her presence in the beauty market has grown.
At 50, she is already a legend with a life that does not yet include marriage and motherhood. In 2021, she revealed her interest in her “white picket fence, the dream of her husband and children,” Marie Claire magazine she refuses “Sit and wait” to make those dreams come true.
Less than two years later, Ellis revealed that she was peri-menopausal. Tracee shared words from his January journal entry on the podcast we can do hard things, Released on January 10th.
A diary entry reads:
“I can feel my body’s ability to have a child drain from me. I have.
The entry continues as follows:
“Because my body becomes a foreign place for me that doesn’t really feel safe or like home … the patriarchal external dualism that has haunted me and plagued me for most of my life. I don’t know how to manage, control, or fight the tales of adult life. Is it my fertility that is leaving me? Is it my femininity? Or is it really neither?”
Tracee Ellis Ross has a deep understanding of how she manages her mind
Before Ross got to that point in the interview, she gave an overview of her life. I explained the technique in detail. The story, including what is missing “Caring… Kindness… Kindness.”
“If you can’t take in the information…like there are times when it’s not time to look back. And you can wait until you can actually look back constructively. I am learning how to be cautious about
In an interview, Tracy talked about the privilege of choosing friendships and family. She also explained how women broke preset standards to find value “Chosen.”
“I have been single for a long time. And I don’t think I realized the gift until I started getting older.”
While Tracy says she understands what being approaching menopause means to her, she disagrees that being fertile is just pregnancy and childbirth.
Shortly before reading the diary excerpt, Tracy said:
“I’m a great mother, very maternal. In a world where I have nothing to say, it’s been hard to make a case for it…”
Listen to the full podcast here: