Latest news with #Crue
Yahoo
3 days ago
- General
- Yahoo
I had my first baby at 48 — haters say I'm selfish but older moms do it better
Don't mess with this mama. A new mom has hit back at claims she's 'selfish' for having her first child at 48 – saying her age and wisdom make her better equipped to raise a baby. Rene Byrd welcomed her baby boy, Crue, late last year after trying to get pregnant for almost a decade. 'In my heart, I always longed to hold a baby that was mine,' she emotionally told Jam Press. 'I'm more financially stable, more patient, and I've lived a full life.' 'I feel more in control, more confident,' the new mom continued. 'I've spent years around friends' kids, reading, learning. I'm in a completely different headspace.' Byrday says she always dreamed of becoming a mom, but life didn't exactly go to plan. She met her now-husband, 42-year-old American attorney Demetrious, by chance in a London bar, when she was in her late thirties. Aware of Byrd's biological clock, the pair started trying for a baby in 2017. At the time, Byrd was 40. 'We tried to conceive naturally, but my age was always a factor,' the singer-songwriter stated. 'The panic starts to set in – you realise time is slipping away.' 'It was getting me down,' she continued. 'I knew my window was closing.' Byrd and her beau eventually decided to to undergo IVF – a rough journey that cost her over $25,000. However, early last year, the Londoner learned she was finally pregnant. Her overwhelming joy was quickly dulled by detractors who told her she was too old to become a parent. 'People have told me it's selfish,' Byrd explained. 'They say it jokingly, but you know they're not joking. It can make you feel guilty, but I just want to be the best mom I can be.' Since welcoming Crue into the world last November, Byrd says she's even lost several friends due to their outrage over her having a baby at an advanced age. 'Some relationships dissolved,' the musician admitted. Despite that heartache, and the long road to motherhood, Byrd says she wouldn't change a thing. 'You do get that twinge of guilt when you think about being older, but it's nobody's business,' she declared. 'You have to live your own life in your own time.'


Newsweek
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Newsweek
Baby Learns to Crawl, What Dog Sibling Does Next Leaves Mom in Hysterics
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Hearts have melted over a dog who has started copying his human baby brother as he learns to crawl. Smokey the Staffordshire bull terrier lives in England with his owner Georgia, 29, and her 1-year-old son, Crue. "They have been best friends since the moment we bought Crue home," Georgia, who gave her first name only, told Newsweek. "Always sitting and watching him when he was a newborn—and now they can play together, it's so sweet." A video of Smokey playing with his baby brother has now gone viral after being shared to his dedicated TikTok account, @smokeythebluestaffy, on March 27. It shows the pair on the floor of a room covered in baby toys, with Crue crawling slowly across the carpet. And while first Smokey lies beside him, keeping a close eye, he then starts crawling along the floor in the same way, using his front legs to pull him across, his tail wagging as he keeps up with his brother. Smokey follows baby boy Crue on the floor, both of them crawling. Smokey follows baby boy Crue on the floor, both of them crawling. TikTok @smokeythebluestaffy Georgia wrote across the video: "POV your little brother is now crawling and appears to be getting more attention than you so suddenly your legs have stopped working." She told Newsweek that Smokey is "obsessed" with the baby, and "is a big baby himself." "So he started crawling like this when he realized the attention Crue was getting," she said. TikTok users loved it, watching the clip more than 92,000 times, as one laughed Smokey appeared "so pleased with himself. Even checks to see if mom's watching!" "The side eye as he crawls off," another pointed out, as another wrote: "So funny, my dog used to limp to get attention, a cuddle and a treat then she was running around like a lunatic again!" One user shared their own story: "I have arthritis and my late staffy would limp up the stairs exactly like I do on my bad days, I'm still not sure if it was sympathy or taking the mick out of me." Smokey crawls across the floor, then looks back to see what the baby is doing. Smokey crawls across the floor, then looks back to see what the baby is doing. TikTok @smokeythebluestaffy Another said Smokey's breed is "so great with kids," as another called Staffordshire bull terriers "the most silly, softest, caring dogs in the world." Georgia told Newsweek that Staffies like Smokey "can have such a horrible reputation, so it's nice to show TikTok their relationship, and what loving dogs they really are." Staffordshire bull terriers are described as being clever, brave, affectionate towards family and good with young children, according to the American Kennel Club (AKC). In 2024, Staffies were named the 63rd most popular dog breed in the U.S. by the AKC, while the French bulldog, Labrador retriever and golden retriever held the three top spots. Do you have funny and adorable videos or pictures of your pet you want to share? Send them to life@ with some details about your best friend and they could appear in our Pet of the Week lineup.