When I was a bachelor with a different girl on my arm every week, people didn't think I was quite legitimate.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I've never necessarily chosen to be a bachelor. I've had girlfriends throughout the last 20 or 30 years. It's just that there were times when I met people that fascinated me and times I didn't.
People thought I was this doll that came to life, so I would have different people just treating me very strangely as far as I was concerned. They wanted to see if I was real.
From a young age, I was rubbing elbows with a very different kind of person and social class, and I felt a lot of tension and conflict in my identity because of that.
At 14, I'd have given my left arm to be a boy: I thought I was horrible and that no-one would ever find me attractive.
I'm a lifelong bachelor, but that doesn't mean I wouldn't marry the right woman.
People tried to make me something that I wasn't at the beginning of my career.
Somebody wanted me to autograph her breast and I kindly refused. She was in college. I thought maybe I shouldn't do that.
I feel like my entire career and life, I've been judged by people who did not really know me. I definitely think that they probably were right to assume what they had assumed about me, because there was such little to go on out there.
Other women looked on me as a rival. And it pained me a great deal.
I didn't know how it was to be a bachelor. I never felt like one. I think it's a mental state.