Words matter. These are the best Carre Otis Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I had my first seizure, and I had to go in for heart surgery.
My weight fluctuated when I was 30, and I did the unthinkable – I stepped out as a plus-sized model.
Though my parents assured me over and over again that I wasn’t stupid or slow, I sensed that my dyslexia was now a stigma on all of us.
Motherhood has brought me many joys and insights, but the new perspective it granted me on the role I had inadvertently played in young women’s lives for the 2 decades I spent in the modeling industry was downright sobering.
Life is full of change and uncertainty. We know this. We experience it on a daily basis.
When I consider the deeper meaning of yoga, I realize it’s about a lot more than simply performing a variety of postures on a mat.
My days are jam-packed with carpools, classroom assistance, tending to chickens, dogs and seven acres of olive trees!
We come in many different shapes and sizes, and we need to support each other and our differences. Our beauty is in our differences.
But I would assert that despite the wide variety of yoga options and individual preferences, there is one universal element: the union of consciousness and movement, breath and awareness.
My own path towards wellness has been a long and dynamic one. It’s taught me that healing from the inside out takes time and there can be great value in various sources of guidance.
Being born and raised as a Californian, I somewhat ignorantly had taken for granted the diversity and liberal mindset that shaped my childhood and adult life.
My daughters, your daughters, our daughters deserve safety, protection, and the freedom to make their own choices about their personal lives and their physical selves.
But life inevitably throws us curve balls, unexpected circumstances that remind us to expect the unexpected. I’ve come to understand these curve balls are the beautiful unfolding of both karma and current.
I did some great work with my Calvin Klein ads on the motorcycle. It was really groundbreaking because people hadn’t seen a woman actually riding a motorcycle before.
I am not naturally that thin, so I had to go through everything from using drugs to diet pills to laxatives to fasting. Those were my main ways of controlling my weight.
I feel like it’s my responsibility to honestly cover a lot of subjects in part because I have two little girls and I really want them when they grow up to have a voice.
I’ve found that balance is key. I’m no longer an extremist in any one direction.
My parents were both from the East and had moved to San Francisco only so my father could go to law school there.
I’ve learned to surround myself with women who lift me up and leave me feeling nurtured rather than drained.
I think that we can’t deny the public’s want for balancing out the images that are out there depicting women. Not all of us are 17 and a size two.
I was essentially paid to perpetuate the myth that we are all, or should at least try to be, 17 and a size 2 forever.
It not unusual for women with anorexia to suffer heart attacks.
Just because you’re a different size doesn’t mean you’re sitting on the couch eating bonbons all day long watching TV.
I’m proud that today, at 43 years old, I’ve come to value the aging process and focus on inner rather than outer beauty.
I was born in 1968, just eighteen months after my sister Chrisse and just one year after Dad passed the bar exam.
From the time I started school, it was clear to everyone that I wasn’t learning at the same pace as other kids.
I am a daughter, a sister, a wife and a mother. I am a friend of women and I am their advocate.
I didn’t know what to do with calories.
I grew up on antibiotics. Every ailment – sore throats, earaches, flus – warranted a trip to the doctor and in most cases some kind of prescription.
I had dropped out of school and was a runaway, so I didn’t have family to fall back on if I didn’t work. I didn’t have a lot of other options of making money other than modeling.
Anorexia was there for me before I got into modeling, but because of the arena and the demands, the disease really got out of control for me. It’s like being an alcoholic and going and being a bartender.
I believe that as women, we must commit ourselves to sustaining the progress made by our foremothers who fought so hard for women’s equality and liberation.
Eating disorders, body dysmorphia and a general dissatisfaction with one’s life and body seems to ail too many young people.
Just as young people absorb all kinds of messages from the media, young girls learn what it means to be a woman by watching the older women in their lives.
Exposing any subject that is unpleasant or controversial means risking judgment and making some people feel uncomfortable.
The doctor asked what my diet was like and I had to sit down and realize it’s not normal, and hadn’t been normal for about 20 years.
I delight in my family obligations, but they leave little time for breaks let alone quick trips across the country.
Many women who have anorexia put their hearts in a compromised situation.
Part of treatment for drugs and alcohol is you abstain from these, but with eating disorders you can’t abstain from food so the treatment is longer than drugs and alcohol.
The pressure was if I didn’t get into that dress size someone else would – someone else would get the job.
When you become a parent, it’s not all about you anymore.
In the past, I often found that when I reached out for a fast cure it led me down a slippery slope of more medications, hopeful dependence on the next prescription and ultimately a much longer drawn-out illness.
My doctor felt that the main contributing factor was so many years of malnutrition, especially during my formative years, even before I got into modeling.
I bicycle 12,000-foot mountain passes, run, cross train, skate-ski, hike and mountain bike.