Lala Kent revealed that she wants to go under the knife again.
Kent, 34, spoke about her postnatal body and her mentality on Tuesday, March 25, her podcast episode “Give Lala” after one listener asked her if she ever struggled with her identity because of her mother.
Vanderpump rules Alum, who is the mother of two daughters, the Ocean, 4 and Sosa, 5 months, explained that her identity feels “wrapped in my children”.
“Season 10 (i Vanderpump rules) It was the main example for me … I really wanted to understand who I was, ”started Kent while sitting next to Cohost and brother Easton Burningham. “I came back by whitening blonde. I – Excuse me Easton – I made my breasts, I got my ears stuck. Keep in mind, I will have to go inside and take my breasts reprinted because I seem to have not even had a boob job after a second child.”
Kent was born Sosa through intrauterine insemination (IUI) and a sperm donor on September 3, 2024, more than three years after greeting the ocean with the ex-fiancée Randall Emmett In March 2021 (Pairier split that October.) She underwent breast growth surgery in June 2022, debuting in the results via Instagram during the weekend of Independence Day that year.
The star of reality was in the same transparent way during her podcast, admitting that she often wonder with herself, “When is my lala turn?” After Burningham assured his sister that her own identity would return “undoubtedly”, Kent said she encourages other mothers to stay related to what they were before her motherhood.
“Get that moment to be like,“ what do I like to do? “She explained. There will be a moment that comes and you will be, like, ‘my identity is gone because my identity lies within my children. Who am I?”
Kent went on, “I don’t even know when my lala will come back. And he thought, the long load, is very, very terrible.”
The sisters’ podcast often details Kent’s thoughts on motherhood, revealing during the March 14 episode that she hopes to share an “open dialogue” with her children about drinking, sharing details of her dexterity journey with them.
“What it has in (with generation Z nowadays) is not drinking, which I love love. I hope it remains when my children (grow up),” Kent said. “My biggest fear is for me to sit there and I am watching these kids in high and high school high school and I’m like,” that’s a lot of time they start experimenting, going to their friend’s home (and) maybe smoking a common. “”
She went on, “I think about it, how, when my kids get to that moment in time, I have to be very open with them (and say), ‘If you drink, there is no version of you driving, getting into the car with someone. Call me, I will ask zero questions – just get the phone and I will not be there;
The episode also saw Kent confirm that she has reached more than six years of versatility, embracing a lifestyle without alcohol before her relocation to parenting.