Kristen Bell's Always Been Happy, but Motherhood Made Her Even Happier

Two children into it and Kristen Bell says she's beyond happy with where motherhood is taking her. In fact, she says it "right-sized everything" for her. Appearing on the cover of the May issue of Good Housekeeping magazine, Frozen's Anna opens up about everything from the joys of motherhood to her stance on vaccinations and her postpartum baby body.

Kristen got sentimental talking about how she understands her mom better now that she's a mom herself. "When she would look at me like I was the first drop of water she'd seen at the end of a desert trip and go, 'You will never understand how much I love you,' I would go, 'God, get away! Enough,'" she says. But now she sees it as a cycle, "Lincoln won't understand it until she decides to have kids . . . that's just the way it's supposed to be. Motherhood right-sized everything for me. I'm happier, and I was pretty happy before."

Read on to see what else the House of Lies star has to say in the new issue.

On Vaccinations

On Vaccinations

"I thought I would be antivaccination before I had kids. I’m very crunchy, and happily so. But there is a lot of scientific, proven information out there that shows why vaccinations are necessary. Kids with autoimmune diseases, kids who are receiving cancer treatments — they can’t be vaccinated because their immune systems [can’t handle it]. If your kid has leukemia, he can’t get vaccinations; if he then goes to school with my kid and I chose not to give my kid vaccinations, I’m putting your kid at risk. To me, that’s unacceptable. There are the weak among us whom we have to protect. As moms, our responsibility is not just to our kids — it’s to all the other kids, too. People often misplace fear. Your child is 100 times more likely to be struck by lightning than to have a severe reaction to a vaccine. That’s a fact.”

On Having Kids

On Having Kids

“I wasn’t positive I wanted kids. But I can now confirm having them is absolutely unmissable. Before we had the girls, I asked a few people in my life who are annoyingly blunt and honest on every level if we should, knowing that if it wasn’t worth it, they’d have the balls to say, 'Listen, don’t. Live your life.' But across the board, everyone said it was unmissable.

"When Lincoln came out, at first I was like, 'Eh, what do I do with it? I can take it home?' But when I started breastfeeding, the oxytocin or my hormones or hundreds of thousands of years of evolution kicked in. I didn’t want to let her go. Having kids feels like that first seventh-grade crush that overwhelms every molecule in your body, but it’s permanent. You don’t get free time as parents; Dax hasn’t gone to the bathroom solo in three months, because Lincoln is obsessed with him! But other than the sleep deprivation in the beginning and trying to figure out how not to screw your kid up, the rewards are mountains larger than the battles.

"Lincoln just started singing her ABC’s yesterday. I left the house and she was singing a sloppy version of it, and I just had a huge grin on my face.”

On Losing the Baby Weight

On Losing the Baby Weight

"I still have 17 pounds to go to get back to my pre-Delta weight. I’ll work out and eat healthy, but I’m not desperate to shed the weight. Body image is what you make of it. I refuse to compare myself to anyone anymore. I’ve done it; it didn’t make me feel good. I don’t like comparison hangovers. I’ve actually lost weight more quickly this time around. I think it’s because Lincoln keeps me really active. She’s fast, man. She runs, she walks, she sasses me all the time. She’s a wonderful handful.”

On the Sisterhood of Frozen
Twitter | IMKristenBell

On the Sisterhood of Frozen

“It’s a story about sisterhood, which, whether by blood or not, is this invisible line that pulls you to someone. I have it with my girlfriends; I have it with my stepsisters. It’ll be a special day years from now when I sit my daughters down and show them this movie.”