| Isn't JLo 52, not 56? |
Ha, 1+ |
I believe these pics are from 2016, though? Confused as to whether she still looks like this or looks thinner now? |
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"It was God who made me so beautiful. If I weren't, then I'd be a teacher.”
--Linda Evangelista, 1990 Welp, maybe now's her chance to actually do something with her life that actually contributes meaningfully to society. |
With that kind of obnoxious commentary, maybe this is just karma. |
yes |
| I can't wait to turn 56 and blossom into a JLo/Halle Berry |
That was just tabloid BS at the time. There were lots of "quotations" from the super models then, it was just to promote them. Not worth dwelling on at all. |
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https://people.com/style/linda-evangelista-shares-first-photos-of-her-body-since-fat-freezing-nightmare-people-exclusive/
In the photos you can see the hardened bulge on her thighs and bra fat. |
Girl, same! |
You can see those, but I don't see anything wrong with her face? |
My suspicion is that she had done more than you, inspiring designers and other humans, and creating timeless images; but of course you are still morally superior
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| So now she just looks like a true middle-aged, bloated, menopausal "teacher". Welcome to the club, Linda. |
She honestly looks like your average 50-something. I hope she's getting therapy in addition to lawsuit money to help her with her body image issues. I'm sure it's difficult having once been the model of perfection and now being perfectly average. |
I guess I kind of get it. She can't exercise or starve away her fat anymore and apparently plastic surgery doesn't work either. Within three months after Evangelista's treatments, she started noticing bulges at her chin, thighs and bra area. The same areas she'd wanted to shrink were suddenly growing. And hardening. Then they turned numb. "I tried to fix it myself, thinking I was doing something wrong," says Evangelista, and she began dieting and exercising more. "I got to where I wasn't eating at all. I thought I was losing my mind." Finally, in June 2016 she went to her doctor. "I dropped my robe for him," she recalls. "I was bawling, and I said, 'I haven't eaten, I'm starving. What am I doing wrong?' " When he diagnosed her with Paradoxical adipose hyperplasia (PAH), she says, "I was like, 'What the hell is that?' And he told me no amount of dieting, and no amount of exercise was ever going to fix it."
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