Cosmopolitan US May2020

(Elle) #1

I didn’t want to have kids


until Baby Yoda


happened


Stare into his giant


eyes and you, too,


will want yo ur I U D


removed.


long line of opti-


mally cute baby


characters: People
of the inter-

net have


compared
him to

predeces-


sor Baby
Groot,

and we’ve


already seen the
first blatant copy-

cat-but-make-it-an-


advertisement with
Planters’ Baby Nut.

Sure, it’s an opportu-


nistic attempt to jump


on the bébé band-
wagon and sell some

peanuts, but even


still I cannot stop
cooing over him and

his too-big top hat.


And just like that, I’m
calling up my gyno

to ask how long an


IUD removal takes.
Who knows how

many other women


have seen Baby
Yoda playing with

a metal ball and


lost their resolve


to remain childless
for the good of the

planet? Look, I’m not


saying Baby Yoda is
an ecoterrorist, here

to cause a popula-


tion explosion and
fast-track climate

change. But I’m


also...not not saying
that. *sips tea*

he first time


Baby Yoda


waved his


tiny magic


hands onscreen, a


friend immediately


asked which camp I


was in: “I would kill


for Baby Yoda” or


“I would die for Baby


Yoda.” My answer:


“I want to give birth


to Baby Yoda.”


I stand by that


statement. Which


is wild, because I


famously do not want


to have kids. It’s just


not for me. Besides


the obvious reasons


($$$$, poop, respon-


sibility), I constantly


think about an article


I once read that said


not having a child is


the most effective way


to cut your carbon


footprint. Basically, it’s


how I preemptively jus-


tify the many private


planes I’d charter if I


spontaneously became


a billionaire. It’s my


only defense if I ever


meet Greta Thunberg.


Except now, there


was this lil green


nugget of a character
on Disney+’s The

Mandalorian. And


all I could think about
was why no one was

reading to him. How


was he going to learn
new words?? Droids

were shooting at


each other and my
focus was one hun-

dred percent on the


importance, develop-
mentally, of The Child

understanding the
concept of hiding.

Literal science has


shown that humans
are drawn to things

with big eyes and


round heads. I mean,
obviously everyone

loves Baby Yoda.


He’s like Yoda but
with even bigger eyes

and an even rounder


head (and without
the weirdly annoying

sentence construc-


tion). I just can’t stop


imagining where in


my studio apartment I


would put his floating
crib/stroller. I picture

holding him for fun


and also because
touch is important to

infant development.


I ponder raising him
vegetarian and then

worry whether there


are nutrients a Yoda
baby needs that he can

only get from meat.


Of course, Baby


Yoda is just one in a


I just can’t stop


imagining


where I would


put his floating


crib/stroller.



In

th

is

e
ss

ay

,I
will...”

(N

o,

seriously.Th
is
is
a
n
e
ss
a
a y
bo

ut
BabyYoda
.)

By BLYTHE ROBERSON


10 Cosmopolitan May 2020


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celeb

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