It's obviously fine for her to buy a "small farm" and have another kid if she wants; I more so get annoyed at how contradictory, hypocritical, and revisionist all of her big life choices have been in the last few years. "I felt the ancestral call to return to Sweden" vs a few years ago "I'm never going back to live in that dark, depressing country"; "I'm pregnant again and have been for the past few weeks despite getting huffy on my podcast just last week about everyone assuming I'm pregnant" vs a few years ago "I love my life with just Dennis and Lea, I feel like I have my body and my free time back, don't police a woman's choice to be one and done"; "I'm back to eating eggs, dairy, and meat because Lea handed me an egg once so the universe wants me to, plus it's more nourishing for my new baby, plus all vegans are dogmatic and hateful" vs a year fews ago "I'll never eat animal products again because I can't un-know the cruelty involved in making them, plus it's way better for our health, plus Dennis is Satan incarnate for missing fish". Honestly I really think all of that stuff could be excused if she just went, "Hey all, I know I have said in the past that I never wanted to live in Sweden again/have another kid/eat animal products but I've changed my mind." She doesn't even have to explain herself, I just wish she would acknowledge that there was a sudden change in messaging! But she continues to insist "No I felt this way the whole time, the universe has been guiding me towards it lately through #ancestral #signs but I've felt this way forever and you misunderstood me previously, it's sexist to point out when I'm wrong because I'm a woman so #blocked."
Admittedly, I am super annoyed at how quickly she's glommed onto the glamorization of rural/ancestral/simple living trend. It's just such an obvious ploy for social media traffic and, through that, money. Plus, as has been often discussed here, all of the influencers who partake in this trend are actually super wealthy and are able to benefit from the "aesthetic" of it (being down to earth and "relatable," for one) without ever having to actually deal with some of the harsher realities of rural, low income, agrarian living.