Gianella Marquina descarta maternidad: "No siento la necesidad de serlo"

I don't see it as a priority in my life, I don't feel the need
Marquina responds to followers questioning her decision to forgo motherhood in the near future.

En una época en que las expectativas sobre la maternidad siguen moldeando la vida de las mujeres jóvenes, Gianella Marquina, hija de la figura pública peruana Melissa Klug, eligió responder con claridad a una pregunta que muchos consideran inevitable: la maternidad no es una prioridad para ella, al menos no ahora. A sus veinticuatro años, con una carrera de derecho por concluir y una historia familiar compleja a sus espaldas, Marquina ofrece un recordatorio de que cada persona construye su propio calendario vital. Su declaración no es un rechazo definitivo, sino una afirmación de autonomía en medio de un entorno familiar donde varias generaciones transitan la maternidad al mismo tiempo.

  • Las preguntas repetidas de seguidores sobre su vida reproductiva llevaron a Marquina a pronunciarse públicamente, cansada de la curiosidad ajena que asume la maternidad como destino inevitable.
  • Su entorno familiar intensifica el contraste: su madre espera su sexto hijo y su hermana Samahara acaba de convertirse en madre, lo que convierte su postura en una elección visible dentro de una familia muy observada.
  • Marquina no se disculpó ni titubeó al responder; afirmó con sencillez que no siente ningún impulso interno hacia la maternidad en el corto o mediano plazo.
  • Dejó abierta una ventana hacia el futuro —quizás en una década su perspectiva cambie— pero descartó cualquier embarazo próximo, silenciando también rumores que circulaban entre sus seguidores.
  • Su declaración resuena con mayor profundidad conociendo su historia: a los trece años desarrolló parálisis facial durante la turbulenta separación de sus padres, una señal de cómo las decisiones adultas marcan a los hijos de maneras impredecibles.

Gianella Marquina decidió responder de una vez por todas a la pregunta que sus seguidores le repiten con insistencia. A través de Instagram, la hija de Melissa Klug fue directa: la maternidad no es una prioridad en su vida y no siente ninguna necesidad interna de convertirse en madre, al menos no en el futuro cercano.

A sus veinticuatro años, Marquina está terminando su carrera de derecho y tiene otros proyectos en mente. El hecho de que quienes la rodean estén teniendo hijos —su madre espera su sexto bebé y su hermana Samahara se convirtió recientemente en madre— no ha modificado su propia visión. Cuando una seguidora insistió en el tema, ella no buscó excusas ni pidió disculpas: simplemente dijo que no ve la maternidad como algo que deba hacer ahora.

Aun así, no cerró la puerta por completo. Reconoció que en unos diez años su manera de pensar podría cambiar, pero por el momento lo descarta con firmeza. Sus palabras también sirvieron para acallar rumores de un posible embarazo que circulaban entre sus seguidores.

Esa claridad cobra un matiz especial a la luz de su historia personal. Su hermana Samahara habló públicamente sobre el impacto que tuvo en la familia la separación entre su madre y el futbolista Jefferson Farfán. Gianella, que entonces tenía trece años, desarrolló parálisis facial durante ese período y la familia perdió cerca de seis meses de clases. Aquella experiencia es un recordatorio silencioso de que las grandes decisiones de los adultos dejan huellas en sus hijos de formas que no siempre se pueden anticipar.

Marquina no ha vinculado explícitamente ese pasado con su postura actual. Lo que sí ha dejado claro es que piensa su vida en sus propios términos, sin ajustarse al calendario que otros esperan de ella.

Gianella Marquina has spent enough time answering the same question from strangers on the internet that she decided to settle it once and for all. The daughter of Melissa Klug, a prominent Peruvian public figure, took to Instagram to address the recurring curiosity of followers asking why she has no interest in becoming a mother. Her answer was direct: motherhood simply isn't a priority for her, and she doesn't feel any internal pull toward it.

At twenty-four, Marquina is in the final stretch of her law degree and has other things on her mind. She acknowledged that people around her are having children—her mother is expecting her sixth child, and her sister Samahara recently became a mother herself—but that hasn't shifted her own calculus. When a follower pressed her on the decision, she didn't hedge or apologize. She said she doesn't see motherhood as something she needs to do, at least not now.

That said, she left room for the possibility that time changes people. In roughly a decade, she suggested, her thinking might evolve. But for the foreseeable future, she's ruling it out. The statement also served to quiet speculation about a potential pregnancy, which had apparently circulated among her followers.

The clarity Marquina offered stands in contrast to the turbulence she experienced earlier in her life. Her sister Samahara has spoken publicly about how the separation between their mother and Jefferson Farfán—a well-known soccer player—affected the family deeply. Gianella, then thirteen years old, developed facial paralysis during that period. The family missed roughly six months of school. What should have been a straightforward childhood moment became something harder to navigate, a reminder that major life decisions made by parents ripple through their children's lives in ways that can't always be predicted or controlled.

That history may or may not inform Marquina's current stance on motherhood. She hasn't said so explicitly. What she has made clear is that she's thinking about her own life on her own terms, not on the timeline others might expect. In a family where multiple generations are navigating parenthood simultaneously, she's chosen a different path—at least for now.

I don't see it as a priority in my life, I don't feel the need to be a mother
— Gianella Marquina, responding to followers on Instagram
I don't know if in 10 years my thinking will change, but in the short and medium term I wouldn't want it
— Gianella Marquina
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

When she says motherhood isn't a priority, does that mean she's never thought about it, or that she's thought about it and decided against it?

Model

I think it's the latter. She's clearly been asked enough times that she's had to sit with the question. She's not avoiding it—she's just concluded it's not something she wants right now, maybe not ever. There's a difference between that and indifference.

Inventor

Her sister just became a mother, her mother is about to have a sixth child. Doesn't that create pressure?

Model

You'd think so. But Gianella seems to have decided that proximity to motherhood doesn't obligate her to want it. If anything, watching her family navigate it might have clarified what she doesn't want.

Inventor

She mentioned facial paralysis during her parents' separation. Is that connected to her stance on motherhood?

Model

She hasn't said so directly. But it's hard not to notice the timing. She experienced real trauma when her parents' relationship fell apart. Maybe that's made her more cautious about the weight of decisions that affect other people.

Inventor

The ten-year window she mentioned—is that genuine openness or just a polite way of saying no?

Model

Probably both. People do change. But she's also being realistic: she's twenty-four, focused on finishing law school. Asking her to commit to never having children would be unfair. Asking her to want them now would be equally unfair.

Inventor

What strikes you most about how she answered?

Model

That she didn't apologize for it. She didn't say "maybe someday" in a wistful way. She said it's not a priority and she doesn't feel the need. That's a kind of clarity a lot of people never reach.

Quieres la nota completa? Lee el original en ElPopular.pe ↗
Contáctanos FAQ