I read an article about Kirstie I'm-a-feminist Allsopp the other day and was so angry I wanted to put my first through my computer screen.

Kirstie admitted that if she had a daughter, she would tell her to put off going to university since fertility is something we can't change but education can wait.

The 43-year-old does have two young sons but she does not have a daughter.

I therefore think she's probably not the most appropriate to say that mothers should tell their children, "I'll help you, let's get you into a flat. And then we can find you a nice boyfriend and you can have a baby by the time you're 27."

I'm almost 24 and I've finished university, does this mean I should start thinking about having a baby?

I tried to make cheesy nachos last night and almost started a fire in my kitchen.

If my mum told me that I should be thinking about starting a family I would laugh in her face.

She is however right in that fertility is something that women can't change and I'm sure it is heart-breaking for women when they realise they're not able to have children.

However, I'm sure it's also hard for women who decide they're going to have children when they are young while their friends are at university, partying hard, meeting new people, travelling the world and going off to find themselves.

I believe there's a balance to be struck as women aren't just baby-making machines who should be ready to churn a human out as soon as they leave school.

I think I'd like to have children one day but I'm certainly not ready (or smart enough or responsible enough or emotionally and financially stable enough) for that yet and I certainly wouldn't consider abandoning education or a promising career just because some people's medieval way of thinking says that's what a woman's job is.

I think it's strange how women like Kirstie think that just saying "I'm still a feminist though" makes it okay to say extremely sexist things.

It seems like so many celebrities either jump on the feminist bandwagon and totally misinterpret the word or - like our Kirstie - decide to make their own definition.

Thanks to the likes of Shailene Woodley confessing that they hate the idea of "raise women to power, take the men away from the power" young fans are getting the totally wrong idea from their idols. Taylor Swift recently told us that she didn't understand the meaning of the word but she's come to realise that it's about women being equal to men, not better. Well done, Taylor *disingenuous applause*.

The very definition of a feminist is someone who wants women to be treated equally to men and not to have other people - male or female - tell women how they're supposed to live their lives.

The famous Royal and Ancient Golf Club in St. Andrew's has decided to finally let women join which is a massive step in the right direction but it seems like we're going two steps forward and one step back. Recently I heard that there's a women's library in Glasgow and felt a little embarrassed for us all.

I mean, really? Why would we need a women's library? As far as I'm aware, there aren't any men only libraries where we're forbidden to tread.

Come on. Get it together, guys (and girls)!