Zitat des Tages von Trinny Woodall:
I'm not good at cutting off from work.
For me as an individual, it's important that I have a career as a role model for my children, that I earn my own money, and I spend it prudently and imprudently.
I hate trends, but I love fashion.
A Joan Crawford dress looks really good on an hourglass figure.
Every morning, I have a drink of spinach, blueberry, celery, carrot and Gillian McKeith energy food with linseed.
Ottolenghi sells lots of delicious sweet things, but my daily addiction is their unbelievable dark chocolate salted caramel biscuits. They're the best things in the world - I go through half a packet every night. I bring them out after pudding at dinner parties.
Even my basic, basic wardrobe is still pathetically colour coordinated. It just is. That is just me.
I'm having to learn to get the balance right, because if you want a full-time career, and you also want to be a mother who is there for your child, then you have to make sure that when you do spend time together, you're really there for them.
I would advise women not to be shy about admitting they've had Botox - it just shows you want to look your best, and there's nothing wrong with that.
I love the idea of cooking, but I don't like using recipe books, so I'll put a mish-mash together, and it might be amazing by total accident, or it will be a catastrophe.
I'd love to say fashion faux pas differ from country to country, but they don't.
I don't have a problem with the stories saying I'm skinny at all.
So many women buy these boxy, shapeless jackets. I always tell them to buy a jacket one size too small to get the right fit.
I am very precise about what food I like. I'm very much a nursery-food person, and really hate chichi dishes.
I'm a mixture of untidy and anal.
To me, the word 'workaholic' is a negative word.
There were times when rehab and the halfway house were very, very tough, but I never felt that I wanted to leave.
I think I just took a while to know myself. I went on a journey to find out. I was a bit wild.
The first time I was given money to shop for myself, I was 13 and staying with my godmother in New York. I went to Clinique and bought the three-step acne programme and felt so grown-up.
I want to feel I have the energy I will need as an older mother having a younger baby. It's really important that when I'm 51, and my daughter is 10, that I feel I can still run around and do things with her, and feel the energy of a slightly younger woman having their kids at school.
In America, there's a programme called 'The Swan.' They take 12 ugly people and call them 'ugly ducklings.' They spend six months and have everything done - plastic surgery, teeth, everything. And then they have this moment where their family is brought in, and they are revealed. It's scary.
You don't find women with great confidence dressed as if they don't care.
So many people hide inside their clothes.
Perhaps British TV companies don't want women my age on screen. I don't know.
My pain threshold is quite high when it comes to vanity.
If you want to make the best of yourself, you don't necessarily need to diet - you need to wear the right stuff.
I felt so unbelievably ugly for years.
Careers, children and homemaking all come above preserving your appearance. Self-preservation is at the bottom of the scale.
I've been nine stone for 20 years. I always eat what I want; it's not an issue for me.
Diets are rubbish. I eat healthily, and often have a day when I stuff myself.
I would never go out in track bottoms and a baggy T-shirt.
Many women are pear-shaped and tend to wear jeans that are too loose. They need to focus on what jeans will re-proportion their body.
I'm very conscious about putting good food into my body. Years ago, I went to see an amazing healer called Allah, who could read your body. She told me that I can't absorb vitamins very well, and I have to eat the right things to get my vitamins. I've always remembered that.