Ayesha Curry says Steph Curry doesn’t understand her, she never wanted kids, and that she can’t pursue her career 😮👀
Ayesha Curry opened up in a recent interview about how her life changed after marrying NBA star Stephen Curry, revealing she never pictured herself as a mom.
“I didn’t want kids. I didn’t want to get married,” Ayesha said. “I thought I was going to be a career girl. I was never the little girl that dreamt about the wedding dress — then it happened so early in my life.”
She shared that her first pregnancy came soon after their 2011 wedding, leaving her little time to pursue her own goals.
“I spent my whole life working toward something, and then it just disappeared,” she said. “After my daughter turned one, I thought, ‘I have goals for myself. I love being a mom, but I love doing other things too.’”
Ayesha admitted she still wrestles with the pressure of balancing career and motherhood — something she often discusses in therapy.
“If you lose the things that made you feel confident and cool, then what are you doing?” she said.
She also spoke about the unequal scrutiny women face compared to men:
“Men don’t get as much scrutiny. Steph just doesn’t understand how it feels.”
Despite those challenges, Ayesha said her husband tries to be supportive, even if he can’t fully relate.
“He tries to resonate with me, but he just can’t. He’s like, ‘it’s not true, so why does it matter?’ And I’m like, ‘listen to how it makes me feel.’”
This wench has been getting torn apart in manosphere spaces for good reason.
Selfish and ungrateful. The simps who flood into those comment sections to defend her are the most infuriating thing about this whole situation and why undercover whores like her keep getting a pedestal to stand on and have people listen to them.
She literally cannot -- for the life of her -- understand how privileged she is to be where she is. This is especially juxtaposed with the few interviews some YouTube channels showed of her husband talking about her and his marriage, where he does nothing but praise her, shower her with how grateful he is to have her as a wife and mother to his kids, and constantly calls being married a blessing.
He's either delusional or -- as others pointed out -- utilising his professional composure to keep the chaos under wraps. What's so angering about this is that this feeds into what many red pill channels say about women like this: they're always chasing the bad boy, but end up marrying the good guy. But through mistreatment and narcissistic behaviour, they end up turning the good guy into a bad boy by the time they're through with him, creating a broken, bitter husk at the end of the marriage trail.
Make no mistake about it, she'll end up divorcing him like Gisele did with Tom Brady and Caroline Celico did with Kaká -- two men who represented the apex of their professions and surpass the six figures, six feet, six inches paradigm delusional women use for finding a mate.
It will be joyous to see this basketball player's wife single, striving for relevancy and struggling like so many others who just do not understand how good they have it until it's all taken away from them (or rather, they throw it away in search of some mythical life that's supposed to be greener pastures on the other side of an already spacious and fertile land they're living on).