
Los Angeles, March 4 Actress Sienna Miller shared that she is "looking forward to taking some time off" this year as she prepares for the birth of her third child.
The 44-year-old actress is currently expecting her second child with boyfriend Oli Green, joining the couple's daughter, who was born in late 2023, as well as 13-year-old Marlowe, who Sienna shares with her ex-boyfriend Tom Sturridge, according to femalefirst.co.uk.
She told Grazia magazine: "I’m looking forward to taking some time off, spending more time with my kids, and accepting the unpredictable nature of life."
Miller added: "That’s something that I’m much more curious about as I get older – I have a much clearer understanding of how quickly life goes by."
"I’ve always tried to fill my life with as much diversity as possible, and it's never been boring, so I'm excited to embrace whatever journey comes my way – the ups, the downs, and everything in between."
During the interview, the actress also opened up about her pregnancy, admitting that she has been eating a lot of peanut butter and jam on toast, adding: "That's not my craving, though – I'm currently hooked on vinegary foods."
However, she's less enthusiastic about experiencing post-partum hair loss again, saying: "It's these little bits (of hair). They're just starting to grow back properly, and now it's all going to fall out again."
Miller announced her pregnancy by showing off her growing baby bump on the red carpet at the 2025 Fashion Awards at the Royal Albert Hall in London in December, according to femalefirst.co.uk.
The news came after the actress previously revealed that she had frozen her eggs in order to secure her fertility because she felt pressured to have more children while she still could.
Speaking to ELLE UK magazine in 2022, Sienna explained: "Biology is incredibly cruel on women in their 30s – that's the headline, or it certainly was for me."
"Then I turned 40 and I froze some eggs. Having been really focused on the need to have another baby, I'm just like, if it happens, it happens. That kind of existential threat has dissipated."