Country music artist Kelsea Ballerini released a new single on November 7 titled “I Sit in Parks,” a two-minute track centered on the tension between career ambitions and motherhood.
The song has drawn significant attention across social media and commentary platforms for its focus on regret tied to choosing professional goals over becoming a parent.
The chorus includes the lines: “Did I miss it? By now is it / A lucid dream? Is it my fault / For chasin’ things a body clock / Doesn’t wait for? I did the d**n tour / It’s what I wanted, what I got / I spun around and then I stopped / And wondered if I missed the mark.”
Ballerini, 32, is divorced and does not have children.
In the song, she reflects on the decision to prioritize her music career, conveying the pain and regret associated with that choice.
The release prompted a wide range of reactions, including criticism from feminist commentators and support from pro-natalist voices who viewed the song as a notable cultural moment in mainstream music.
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Among those responding was BlazeTV host Allie Beth Stuckey, who addressed the song on her program, “Relatable.”
“I can see how this vulnerability is speaking to what a lot of people feel. This is certainly not Christian, but it’s kind of reflecting this trend that we’re seeing among a lot of young people … wanting to go back to tradition, wanting to go back to church, wanting to go back to marriage, wanting to actually have children,” she said.
Stuckey discussed how the song aligns with concerns she has raised about the pressures placed on young women to avoid motherhood.
She argued that the idea that “motherhood isn’t for everyone” leads women toward choices they later find unfulfilling.
According to Stuckey, this message overlooks what she described as an ingrained maternal instinct.
“This motherhood instinct that we all have when we’re little girls — it doesn’t go away,” Stuckey said.
“We take care of our pets; we take care of our dolls; we take care of our flowers because that is the instinct that God has given us in general as women.”
Stuckey noted that even women who say they do not want children often direct nurturing tendencies toward pets, plants, work, or other areas.
She said this does not replace the fulfillment traditionally associated with motherhood.
She also stated that while marriage and having children are not part of everyone’s life, the drive to nurture remains and can be expressed through ministry, mentorship, or mission work.
She argued that channeling this instinct toward people is necessary to feel fulfilled if traditional motherhood is not part of a woman’s path.
Ballerini’s single, Stuckey said, illustrates what can result when motherhood is delayed or set aside entirely.
The song’s depiction of loneliness and reflection, she argued, resonates with listeners confronting similar questions about family, career, and long-term fulfillment.
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