Virginia Trioli. In the world of Australian journalism, she’s it. Virginia is a Walkley Award Winner, author, broadcaster, the host of ABC News Breakfast and recently, she also became a mum.
She writes beautifully – and has written for Mamamia many times in the past – and we recently caught up with her to talk about motherhood, feminism and her secret to achieving work/life balance.
MM: You had your first child earlier this year, how is being a mother? Is it what you expected? Has it changed you?
VT: I’ve never been happier. I’m sorry, I hunted around for ages trying to find a phrase that wasn’t a cliche, and I can’t find one — because all the cliches are true. My heart is full, my baby is wonderful, our family is lucky and blessed. I was so fortunate I could take a year off, because there is no pressure on me to do anything else but care for this little boy. I think I am a much more flexible person now, because the phrase “just go with it” was clearly made for life with a baby. I can see more clearly now how being a step-mum has prepared me for this task — the patience and empathy required — and I am more grateful than ever for the relationships I have with Russell’s wonderful children.
MM: What do you think of the whole ‘mummy wars’ terminology? Is it something you engage in professionally or personally? Do you think the media fosters the ‘mummy wars’?
VT: I genuinely don’t know what that term means, nor where it came from. If women exchange different points of view over parenting and work/home challenges, and — heaven forfend — they even disagree with each other, why is that a war? I think the term attempts to reduce a discussion between women to a purple jelly-wrestling match, and I simply refuse to engage with that, which I think is the best way to kill off the term.