I've always been a headstrong girl. I had my first child at 17, and it was a mistake, but I got a beautiful child out of it.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Listen, I've always been very headstrong.
After having your first child, it's a massive shock to the system. I work in an industry where people judge you and the way you look, and you always want to put your best foot forward when you can.
To be a head boy, you have to be very clever, you have to be a scholar, and I was never a scholar in any shape or form.
I am a kid. I'll always be a girl at heart.
I was a God-fearing child, innocent and physically attractive.
There's an unconscious bias in our society: girls are wonderful; boys are terrible. And to be a boy, or young man, growing up, having to listen to all this, it must be painful.
When I was very young I never thought I was attractive, because I was a tomboy and I was always the biggest girl in the class.
I was married by 18 and I had a beautiful little girl.
I didn't grow up thinking I was pretty; there was always a prettier girl than me. So I learned to be smart and tried to be funny and develop the inside of me, because I felt like that's what I had.
Babies did not attract me, and I was altogether without the maternal sense so highly developed in small and adolescent girls.