Most people think I'm from New York or something. I was, like, 70 pounds heavier than what I am, and I didn't get no girls... I was definitely more on the deep fried crab than I was on the baked chicken side.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I always had a weight thing and felt bad about it, but in New Jersey, I felt like I got attention, and even when I felt bad or chubby, I didn't feel like I a freak.
I think of myself as a girl from Brooklyn.
I was fat because I lived in the Midwest in the 1970s, and everyone was a little fat then and only getting fatter.
I was born in New York and raised in South Florida, so I'm an East Coast girl.
Growing up the way I grew up, food was scarce. So when you had an opportunity to eat, you ate. When I graduated from high school and went to college, I weighed 160 pounds. So, I knew I had to put on the weight. I ate everything from fried food to fried chicken wings. When I came to Green Bay, I did the same thing because I was 172 pounds.
In California, I'm more of a beach chick, and I kind of take on a model city girl when I'm in New York.
I was always bigger than the other girls. My sisters are very, very beautiful and very skinny, and I've always had a more muscular body. So I grew up with a different mentality.
Looking back, I just think I was a really average sort of girl.
I was not a good-lookin' girl. I was extremely skinny. I wasn't pretty. I wasn't cool.
I was very skinny and very lanky and kind of awkward. In Puerto Rico, everybody is a little more voluptuous, with these beautiful bodies, and there I was, the skinny, lanky girl.