Young women are treating their lives like a brand, and motherhood is bad for business. That's the argument from author Freya India on the Modern Wisdom podcast. For a generation that has marketed itself on Instagram since age ten, the messy, unpredictable nature of raising a child looks less like a life milestone and more like a reputation-management failure.
This isn't a crisis of ambition but of extreme risk aversion. When your identity is a curated product, motherhood introduces unacceptable volatility. India points to an online culture that encourages women to stay single and “self-actualize,” fixing every perceived flaw before even considering a partner. It creates a state of perpetual solo preparation.
This mindset is fueled by what India calls the “Femosphere.” While public concern focuses on Andrew Tate radicalizing men, research she cites shows young women have lurched dramatically to the pessimistic Left. Popular shows broadcast a cynical, transactional view of relationships that mirrors the worst of the Manosphere, framing them as zero-sum power games. The result is a sex recession - Gen Z is having less sex than prior generations, opting out of the perceived risk.
As traditional social anchors like family and community erode, the mental health industry has filled the void. On Modern Wisdom, India argues that ordinary distress is now reframed as a permanent clinical disorder. Social media algorithms reward this performance of trauma, turning a temporary feeling into a fossilized identity that can last for years.
A starkly different response is emerging from an unlikely place: the Broadway stage. The play Every Brilliant Thing, discussed on The Daily, offers a direct counter-programming to this culture of curated isolation. It dismantles the armor of modern life by forcing radical vulnerability between the actor and the audience.
Star Daniel Radcliffe begins the show by walking the aisles, asking strangers for their socks and turning them into characters. The goal is to shatter the pristine image of celebrity and create a temporary, intimate community. It has become a global mental health intervention, performed everywhere from Kenyan tents to the deck of the USS George H.W. Bush in response to crew suicides.
The play's power is its simplicity. It revolves around a growing list of small joys - ice cream, water fights, the smell of a baby's head - as pragmatic reasons to live. While one cultural current pathologizes life's difficulties into brand liabilities, the play reframes the act of noticing simple pleasures as a survival mechanism. Meaning isn't something to be optimized; it's something to be witnessed.

