Country singer Kelsea Ballerini has released 'I Sit In Parks,' a track expressing regret over prioritizing career success over family life. The song has resonated deeply with many women, prompting discussions on social media about the pressures of modern feminism. Fans interpret the lyrics as a personal reflection, though Ballerini has not confirmed it as autobiographical.
Kelsea Ballerini's new song 'I Sit In Parks' captures a sense of longing for motherhood amid the pursuit of professional achievements. The lyrics paint vivid scenes of family outings, contrasting them with the singer's own solitude. 'I sit in parks, it breaks my heart, ’cause I see / Just how far I am from the things that I want / Dad brought the picnic, Mom brought the sunscreen / Two kids are laughing and crying on red swings,' Ballerini sings.
The song continues: 'We look about the same age / But we don’t have the same Saturdays,' and questions, 'Did I miss it?/ By now, is it/ A lucid dream? Is it my fault/ For chasing things a body clock/ Doesn’t wait for? I did the damn tour/ It’s what I wanted, what I got/ I spun around and then I stopped/ And wonder if I missed the mark.' Later verses evoke imagined domestic scenes: 'So, I sit in parks, sunglasses dark, and I/ Hit the vape, hallucinate a nursery with Noah’s Ark/ They lay on a blanket, and God d*** it, he loves her/ I wonder if she wants my freedom, like I wanna be a mother/ But Rolling Stones says I’m on the right road/ So I refill my Lexapro, thinking…'
Social media responses highlight the song's emotional impact. One commenter noted, 'Wow. The picture painted by Kelsea Ballerini in this song is tragic. How many hearts has feminism broken with its lies?' Another said, 'This is grim... I feel so sad for the girls who got duped into putting off the most important things in life.' A 45-year-old mother shared, 'My gosh, this is one of the saddest things I’ve ever read. I’m 45 with a 15-month-old, so this almost became my reality. An entire generation of women has been sold a bill of goods under false pretenses.' On YouTube, a single woman in her thirties wrote, 'As a single girl in her thirties, I’ve never related to a song more,' while another at 39 added, 'I wasn’t prepared for this. As a single girl at 39 this song hits so deep.'
Ballerini's personal history adds context. She married Morgan Evans young and divorced in August 2022 after five years, partly due to differing views on starting a family. In a 2023 'Call Her Daddy' podcast appearance, she explained, 'That was something that we had talked about early on, and that was something that I was changing on... Cause he was ready. He was like, ‘I don’t want to be an old dad,’ is what he kept saying. And I was like, ‘I’m not there yet, and I can’t do that to save this and give you something that I’m not ready for.’' She had planned to freeze her eggs before age 30 and described telling Evans as 'not a good day,' highlighting a 'fundamental difference.'
The song's release coincides with renewed attention to Stevie Nicks' 1970s interview, where she discussed her abortion as necessary to sustain Fleetwood Mac's career, calling the pregnancy a 'nightmare scenario' that would have 'destroyed' the band. While some defend career-focused choices, Ballerini's track has amplified voices feeling misled by messages prioritizing achievement over family.