Gwyneth Paltrow, 51, says she doesn’t ‘give a f***’ about aging now that she is in her fifties as she poses in her undies: ‘This is good’
Gwyneth Paltrow doesn’t ‘give a f***’ about ageing now she’s hit her 50s.
The Oscar-winner, who turned 51 in September, admitted she had already ‘really flipped out’ about maturing after her 40th birthday.
But now that she is older – and despite her Goop range being laden with anti-ageing products – she insisted she has giving up caring about ageing and how she’s viewed by others.
‘Fifty was great. I was concerned I was going to feel a lot of grief or fear because I remember when I turned 40, the anticipation… I really flipped out,’ she told the online magazine Bustle.
‘I didn’t have that at all at 50. I was like, “I love my friends. I love my husband. I love my kids. Yeah, my job is hard. But this is good,”‘ she added.
No worries: Gwyneth Paltrow doesn’t ‘give a f***’ about ageing now she’s hit her 50s. The Oscar-winner, who turned 51 in September, admitted she had already ‘really flipped out’ about maturing after her 40th birthday
Happy to be 51: But now that she is older – and despite her Goop range being laden with anti-ageing products – she insisted she has giving up caring about ageing and how she’s viewed by others
‘… it’s like, I don’t give a f*** what anyone says about me, thinks about me, this is who I am. I felt like 50 was a deepening into myself.
‘And, apparently, that just keeps getting better.’
Gwyneth has 19-year-old daughter Apple and 17-year-old son Moses with her Coldplay frontman ex-husband Chris Martin, 46, and has since gotten remarried to 52-year-old TV producer Brad Falchuk.
She also admitted she found leaving her 30s behind ‘so jarring’ because it was when she began seeing the years on her face.
She added: ‘I think that’s also why turning 40 was so jarring, because that’s when I started to notice crow’s feet and this and that.
‘It’s so interesting to me how until you have that, you somehow think you’re never going to have that.
‘You think you’re going to be impervious, and it seems like this whole thing that other people are needlessly worrying about.
Bustle babe: ‘Fifty was great. I was concerned I was going to feel a lot of grief or fear because I remember when I turned 40, the anticipation… I really flipped out,’ she told the online magazine Bustle
‘Then you’re like, “Oh, my God, my face.” So it’s double-pronged for me.
‘I am constantly in an exercise of embracing where I am and also embracing this painful thing of not being young and beautiful.
‘Sometimes I almost think of it as a person that I’m hugging, like, ‘This is supposed to happen. This is OK’.’
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