Mandy Moore opened up about feeling like her family of five is complete with husband Taylor Goldsmith. "I'm at the OBGYN getting a check up ... I am endlessly grateful for my beautiful family AND there's a certain sadness knowing I'm done having babies and won't be pregnant again," Moore, 41, wrote via her Instagram Story on Monday, January 5. "Any other moms feel this way?" Moore and Goldsmith, 40, have been married since 2018. The couple welcomed their first child, son Gus, in February 2021, followed by son Ozzie in October 2022. Two years later, Moore became a girl mom with daughter Louise's arrival in September 2024. Nearly one year after giving birth to her daughter, Moore reflected on her "geriatric pregnancy" during an episode of Kylie Kelce's "Not Gonna Lie" podcast. Ashley Tisdale Addresses Rumors Mandy Moore, Hilary Duff Are 'Toxic' Mom Friends "I think at least in my experience, so many of my friends are having kids later in life, whether it's by choice or it's by circumstance or biology," the actress said in July 2025. "I think the thing that I had the most trouble with is just like this system in general kind of treating us as this anomaly that we're too old and we're too complicated or high risk, and really, it's like, 'Nope, we're just human beings.'" Courtesy Mandy Moore/Instagram The This Is Us alum noted that the term "geriatric" is an "outdated label" when it comes to fertility. "It's less about how I think the people and the perceptions they may have had, like the people in my life, it was just more about the healthcare system in general. It feels like such an outdated, one-size-fits-all approach when it comes to just women in general," she added. Along with leaning on her husband, Moore has found support from fellow moms while raising her three kids. Moore has frequently spent time with Hilary Duff, Ashley Tisdale French and more Hollywood parents - a connection which recently raised eyebrows. Earlier this month, French, 40, penned a personal essay for The Cut titled "Breaking Up With My Toxic Mom Group," a follow-up to a recent blog post. "There's one recent topic that has made my phone blow up like no other since I first wrote about it a few weeks ago. It's a subject that has made women DM me to say 'I feel seen' and to share their most emotional stories with me," she wrote. "It's one that has also made wannabe online sleuths try to do some investigating like they're on CSI (please, don't even try - whatever you think is true isn't even close). The topic? Mom-group drama." After welcoming daughter Jupiter in March 2021, French connected with a group of friends who were also pregnant during the COVID pandemic. (The actress and her husband, Christopher French, welcomed their second daughter, Emerson, in September 2024.) Mandy Moore and Husband Taylor Goldsmith's Family Album Eventually, Ashley began to feel like she didn't belong. "I remember being left out of a couple of group hangs, and I knew about them because Instagram made sure it fed me every single photo and Instagram Story," she wrote. "I was starting to feel frozen out of the group, noticing every way that they seemed to exclude me. ... I told myself it was all in my head, and it wasn't a big deal. And yet, I could sense a growing distance between me and the other members of the group, who seemed to not even care that I wasn't around much." Ashley put her foot down, sending a text to the group that things felt "too high school" and disengaging. "It didn't exactly go over well," she admitted. After the essay was published, speculation spread online that Ashley might have been referring to her friendships with Moore, Duff, 38, and Meghan Trainor, as they were frequently seen spending time together with their kids. Ashley allegedly unfollowed Moore and Duff on Instagram, further fueling the rumors. A rep for Ashley denied the chatter, however, telling TMZ on Monday that the article simply intended to highlight the feeling of growing distant from a friend group.