Demi Moore Doesn’t Focus On Her Flaws
In an interview with Harper’s Bazaar, actress Demi Moore says that she tries not to focus on her flaws when she looks in the mirror (when Ashton lets her use it, that is):
“Look, I would be lying if I said I don’t have moments of panic when I look in the mirror and see things creeping in that weren’t there before,” Moore, 45, tells Harper’s Bazaar for its April issue, about getting older. “But now I stop, and instead of focusing on my flaws, I think about all that I have in my life.”
Those rewards are not only tangible, she says, but human: “I have a wonderful marriage, I have three wonderful daughters, I have an incredible extended family, and I have loving, wonderful friends.”
As a result, she says, “when I look back in the mirror, the reflection I see isn’t so bad, because I’m seeing the beauty of my whole being and my whole life.”
Isn’t that just lovely. I’m so happy that Demi has reached a place in her life where she’s comfortable with how she looks. Of course, this is after hundreds of thousands of dollars of plastic surgery, including a knee lift, so I hope she’s good with it. It’s nice when people get their money’s worth out of something.
What she’s saying is all well and good, but I’d be much more likely to take her comments seriously if I didn’t already know she’s spent over $200,000 on remaking her body. It just goes to show that just because you’re in Hollywood, just because you’re a successful actress with a boytoy husband, just because you seem to have a happy marriage and beautiful children, doesn’t mean that you’ve got your head on straight when it comes to yourself. She’s spent past interviews going on about ageism in Hollywood (true dat) and how once a woman hits a “certain age”, they don’t know what to do with her. Yeah, you can’t have an ageosuction, Demi…everyone knows how old you are, no matter how much fat you have sucked out of your thighs. And, unfortunately, the entertainment biz is notoriously youth-oriented…to its detriment, I’d say.
I hope she finally does look past the reflection, because age happens to the best of us. Hush, your actions are speaking so loud that I can’t hear what you’re saying.













