Larsa Pippen and Marcus Jordan.Photo:Charles Sykes/Bravo via Getty Images

Charles Sykes/Bravo via Getty Images
Larsa PippenandMarcus Jordanare getting candid about whether they see kids in their future.
TheReal Housewives of Miamistar, 48, and the 32-year-old son ofMichael Jordantackled the topic of having children onthe latest episodeof their new iHeartRadio podcast,Separation Anxiety with Larsa Pippen & Marcus Jordan.
“There’s been conversations around [having kids],” explained Marcus. “When we go and we meet people, or I’m introducing you to some of my friends, or you introduce me to some of your friends I feel like it gets brought up.”
“But I feel like we’ve never had a one-on-one, private conversation about having children,” he added.
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.
“It’s one of those things where I think time will tell, you know?” chimed in Larsa, whoshares four kids— sonsScotty Jr., 22, Preston, 21, and Justin, 18, plus daughterSophia, 14 — with exScottie Pippen.
“I do feel like I’m happy, because I have four kids, and I feel like you don’t have kids, so basically it’d be a question for you. Because I’m really fulfilled with my four children,” Larsa said, though she admitted later in the podcast that she would be “open to having one more child.”
Marcus explained it was something many couples have to consider when there is an age gap, but noted he also feels fulfilled in his own way.
However, Marcus admitted that despite children having been initially “so far out of my mind frame,” he has been having more thoughts around whether becoming a dad is a “possibility” for him.
Larsaconfirmed her relationshipwith Marcus on Instagram in January. The couple posed in front of a Michael 23 jersey, and Larsa drew a line in the sand in terms of basketball loyalty.
“Checks over stripes," she wrote — referencing Michael’s longtime sponsor Nike and “stripes,” a.k.a. Nike competitor Adidas.
source: people.com