An LA millionaire has defended her decision to remain childfree revealing it has benefited her mental health and says - "I can nap when I want." Amie Tollesfrud, 36, says she never felt maternal growing up - she wasn’t interested in holding babies or volunteering to babysit. When she met her now-husband, Erik Tollesfrud, 42, in her 20s, she told him, "If you want kids, find someone who does - I’m probably not the person for you.
" Although the pair revisit their childfree decision every few years, Amie remains resolute. She says they have reaped the "benefits" of not having children - they can sleep, travel, and spend time together freely, without having to deal with "loud noises or a messy house". The online business course tutor came under fire when she posted a TikTok on March 19 using a sound that said 'Imagine coming home from a stressful day at work and there's someone in your house asking what are we we eating for dinner,' from women who called her "selfish.
" But she insists she doesn't "really care what anybody else does" and focuses on building her own "legacy.".
Millionaire defends decision to remain childfree - and says "I can nap when I want"
An LA millionaire has defended her decision to remain childfree revealing it has benefited her mental health and says - "I can nap when I want." Amie Tollesfrud, 36, says she never felt maternal growing up - she wasn’t interested in holding babies or volunteering to babysit. When she met her now-husband, Erik Tollesfrud, 42, in her 20s, she told him, "If you want kids, find someone who does - I’m probably not the person for you." Although the pair revisit their childfree decision every few years, Amie remains resolute. She says they have reaped the "benefits" of not having children - they can sleep, travel, and spend time together freely, without having to deal with "loud noises or a messy house". The online business course tutor came under fire when she posted a TikTok on March 19 using a sound that said 'Imagine coming home from a stressful day at work and there's someone in your house asking what are we we eating for dinner,' from women who called her "selfish." But she insists she doesn't "really care what anybody else does" and focuses on building her own "legacy."