Anonymous wrote:The article is clearly meant to be insulting but that doesn’t mean it was well done. It’s just sort of nothing for me. It didn’t land.
I fully agree that she is icky. No one is mad or jealous about the details of her life. Most people find creating a public, personal brand that’s so sanitized and sanctimonious to be kind of gross. It feels pompous and hubristic. But I actually think maybe what’s happening is those of us outside of Christian culture just aren’t used to it, whereas people inside Christian-land don’t find it jarring or unusual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weren't they member of the hillsong church where the pastor was a huge cheater? Also, the church is notoriously anti LGBTQ.
Wow what a dig! One of their pastors (was he ever at the church they attended?) was scummy and was removed from the church. You totally took her down with that one!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How tedious.
Are we being punked? This reads like it was written by a ChatGPT and this is a bizarre picture:
Anonymous wrote:I also did not understand the point of the article. Is she selling us her happiness? Why do we care? Is it a humblebrag? Is the NYT mocking her? Or is it a piece they had to do as a favor for her well connected family and spouse?
Don’t get me wrong- have nothing against them. Just don’t understand why a relative nobody is in the NYT gloating about her life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of seething on here. Broke, childless and miserable triggered by a happy, rich and pretty Christian mother who has it all.
God, this is the same poster over and over again who is just irate that people aren’t jealous of the Christian housewife. Talk about triggers and projection!
Anonymous wrote:She reminds me of Ivanka trump. Thin veneer. Little substance.
Anonymous wrote:It really drives the bitter malcontent wannabe girl bosses here nuts when an idle woman is pretty, skinny, rich, married, with kids — and devout. Clutch the pearls - she CAN’T be perfect. Or maybe she is and it makes you jealous as hell.
Anonymous wrote:But it makes her a perfect wife. I was shocked by the thread on the relationship forum, but this is what men want. A happy, encouraging wife without any problems who earns some money in a flexible manner that doesn't require DH to compromise his own career.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chris Pratt is a tool and Katherine has a half-brother from her dad’s affair that she ignores. No one believes her life is perfect.
I think the subtext is the article is that she’s deluding herself.
How often does her husband see his special needs child with Anna Farris?
I think the subtext of your post is you’re jealous and projecting your own unhappiness and disbelief that someone can actually be genuinely super happy being pretty, thin, devout and filthy rich.
I suppose you can be happy and also delusional by ignoring the reality of your life. It’s dangerous though, and hurts a lot of people, when this is portrayed as a perfect life.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of seething on here. Broke, childless and miserable triggered by a happy, rich and pretty Christian mother who has it all.
Anonymous wrote:Must be nice to live a perfect life. She writes that her childhood was perfect. Her marriage is perfect. No complaints. Had a baby around the same time as her and my life is anything but perfect!
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/06/style/katherine-schwarzenegger-pratt.html?action=click&pgtype=Article&state=default&module=styln-styles-general&variant=show®ion=BELOW_MAIN_CONTENT&block=storyline_flex_guide_recirc
No? I said I was shocked that's what modern men expect.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it makes her a perfect wife. I was shocked by the thread on the relationship forum, but this is what men want. A happy, encouraging wife without any problems who earns some money in a flexible manner that doesn't require DH to compromise his own career.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chris Pratt is a tool and Katherine has a half-brother from her dad’s affair that she ignores. No one believes her life is perfect.
I think the subtext is the article is that she’s deluding herself.
How often does her husband see his special needs child with Anna Farris?
I think the subtext of your post is you’re jealous and projecting your own unhappiness and disbelief that someone can actually be genuinely super happy being pretty, thin, devout and filthy rich.
I suppose you can be happy and also delusional by ignoring the reality of your life. It’s dangerous though, and hurts a lot of people, when this is portrayed as a perfect life.
Life has problems, that is what life is.
You want to go back to 1950 with so called white picket fences and women having dinner on the table by five, which no problems like Leave it to Beaver or Father knows Best YUCK!