The model and actress Cara Delevingne revealed how his drug addiction recovery process is going in an exclusive interview published by vogue Americana this Wednesday (8).
The magazine’s April special issue spoke for the first time with Cara after an episode that left the public, and especially her fans, worried.
In September of last year, she was photographed at an airport in Los Angeles, USA, with a different look than the one that made her known, walking down catwalks around the world and starring on the covers of the most famous fashion magazines.

Apparently malnourished and “neglected”, Cara revealed that she had just returned from the Burning Man festival, where she had not slept well and was high “all the time”.
At the time, critics were quick to compare her to her 63-year-old mother, Pandora, who has previously admitted to having bipolar disorder and a heroin problem.
In the interview with Vogue, the model confessed that the photos are still a source of “shame” and “embarrassment”, but that they helped her to “wake up”: “Sometimes you need a shock of reality and, in a way, I have gratitude for those photos”.
Cara also said that she has been sober for four months and intends to continue with the commitment.
The model herself checked into a rehabilitation clinic and acknowledged that she “was ready and willing”, and that she needed help.
Now, she understands that recovery is part of constant and consistent work.
First experiences
Coming from a wealthy family, the British woman started modeling at the age of 18 and soon charmed critics with her very characteristic features, such as her marked eyebrow.
He rose to fame as the face of the Burberry brand in 2011 and has been adding success. In Hollywood, he even starred in films such as Paper Towns (2015) and Suicide Squad (2016).
But, as he revealed to Vogue, his first experience with alcohol came well before that, at the age of seven, at a family wedding.
“I woke up at my grandmother’s house with a hangover. I remember drinking champagne out of everybody’s glass,” she said.
Among other issues over the years, Cara says that at 15 she had to take antidepressants to deal with feelings of isolation.
Today, she recognizes that she always knew that around the age of 30 she would have to make some sudden change, because the way she was living, according to her, was not “sustainable”.
Source: CNN Brasil

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