Jennifer Lawrence's fears over missing out on motherhood
Jennifer Lawrence's greatest fear is that she will not be able to experience motherhood.
The Hunger Games star, 26, is an avid reader and one short story by Slaughterhouse-Five author Kurt Vonnegut has left her fearing that overpopulation may result in governments seeking to prevent people having children.
The dystopian tale, titled Welcome to the Monkey House sees a world
government administer a drug that numbs sexual desire in order to
stem population growth that has caused the Earth's human
inhabitants to number 17 billion.
When asked by Vanity Fair magazine what her biggest irrational fear
was, Jennifer, who recently begun dating filmmaker Darren
Aronofsky, 47, said, "I don't know if you've ever read the Kurt
Vonnegut short story where everyone has to take these pills that
make your private parts feel like wet sponges and... no one can
procreate, and so by the time I'm older, and I'm like, 'I think I
want to be a mother,' they're like, 'You can't. Your private part
feels like a sponge.'"
Jennifer also said she feared the Zika virus, which swept through
South America last year (15) and causes birth defects in children
born to infected women, was comparable and was going to stop people
procreating.
"My biggest irrational - hopefully - fear is that the Zika virus is
going to be the solution to overpopulation," she said.
Zika, which is spread by mosquitoes, has since spread to the south
of the U.S.
As well as opening up about her fears for the future, Jennifer
explained to Vanity Fair that she was extremely protective of her
privacy and did not enjoy unwittingly being accosted by fans.
"I get very protective of my space. It took me a long time to be
able to do that," she explained. "But if I'm eating dinner and
somebody comes up and a flash goes off from someone's iPhone
camera, I am really rude to that person. Then other people at the
restaurant will see and be like, 'Oh, damn, I don't want to do
that.' Privacy is a full-time job and I work very hard at it."