'I'm done with plastic surgery' - Actress, Jane Fonda @ 82
American actress and political activist, Jane Fonda hassaid
she's officially done with altering her looks.
Speaking in a recent interview with Elle Canada, the
82-year-old 'Grace and Frankie' star opened up about the pressures of keeping
up appearances in Hollywood and vowed never get plastic surgery again.
“I can’t pretend that I’m not vain, but there isn’t going to
be any more plastic surgery — I’m not going to cut myself up anymore,” she
revealed. “I have to work every day to be self-accepting; it doesn’t come easy
to me.”
Having previously struggled with bulimia, Fonda told the
magazine she aims to be more open to her fans about her appearance.
“I try to make it very clear that it has been a long and
continuing struggle for me,” she explained. “I post pictures of me looking
haggard — and once with my tooth out!”
“This is a fake tooth,” she continued, pointing out an
incisor to the magazine. “It came out in a restaurant in Portugal, and I posted
it.”
The Oscar winner also explained why she chose to come clean
about her plastic surgery regrets.
“I knew that if I really told the truth, it would be
universal,” she said. “All these issues are universal among women: ‘I’m not
good enough; I have to please, starting with Daddy; I’m not pretty enough; I’m
not thin enough; I’m not smart enough.'”
“Showing up is something you have to learn — although there
are certain emotional disabilities you pick up when you are young that you
can’t entirely undo,” she shared. “I have psychic scars that I will never be
able to give up. You learn to manage them. You learn to banish them to the
corner and put a dunce cap on them and forbid them to come out.”
“I grew up at a time when the thinking was that women were
like cats, competing with each other, knocking each other down,” she continued.
“But, in fact, there is no limit to what we can accomplish if we work
together.”
Fonda added that she now surrounds herself with women who
support one another.
“The people who tend to really show up for me — and whom I
show up for — are my women friends,” she said. “I grew up in the ’50s, and on
top of that my mother killed herself, so I totally identified with men, which
meant rugged individualism, so it was very hard for me to overcome that.”
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