What Meghan Trainor’s Surrogacy Choice Says About Maternal Pressure
When Meghan Trainor shared that she used a surrogate for her third baby, after two C-sections and complicated pregnancies, my first reaction wasn’t shock. It was recognition.
Not because I have strong opinions about how celebrities grow their families, but because I understand the calculus that starts happening after your body has been through it. After surgery. After risk conversations. After recovery that’s longer and heavier than the announcement. After you’ve already done the brave thing twice. After infertility and operating rooms and signing forms you barely remember reading, I know how quickly gratitude and fear can live in the same body.
She said her doctors advised her against carrying again. She talked about safety, about wanting to be present for the kids she already has. It felt measured. Practical. And almost immediately, the commentary filled in the rest — privilege, outsourcing, what “real” motherhood requires.
It’s interesting how quickly women’s reproductive decisions become public debate, especially when they step even slightly outside the expected script. We celebrate endurance — fertility treatments, high-risk pregnancies, repeat surgeries — and then get uneasy when someone chooses not to endure one more round.
Surrogacy is layered (money, access, ethics), none of it simple. But so is pregnancy. Repeat C-sections carry increased risks. Maternal health in this country is complicated at best. Wanting safety, predictability, or simply not wanting to hand your body back to the operating room isn’t a scandal; it's a decision.
After you’ve handed your body over enough times, the question shifts. It’s not about proving you can do it again. It’s about deciding you don’t have to.