Home Entertainment America’s Next Top Model winner Adrianne Curry cried ‘nonstop’ after having breast implants removed

America’s Next Top Model winner Adrianne Curry cried ‘nonstop’ after having breast implants removed

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America's Next Top Model winner Adrianne Curry cried 'nonstop' after having breast implants removed

America’s Next Top Model winner Adrianne Curry revealed she cried “non-stop” for the “first year” after having her breast implants removed.

The 42-year-old rose to fame in 2003 when she won the first season of the reality show and embarked on a career in showbiz.

She modeled for well-known publications such as People and Maxim, and in 2006 she landed the cover of Playboy, posing nude in the magazine.

In 2018, she married moving trailer voice actor Matthew Rhode, with whom she now leads a “normal” life in Montana, away from the entertainment industry.

Five years ago she had her breast implants removed, resulting in a “total metamorphosis” that brought her “to her knees in humility,” she shared.

Adrianne posted two photos of her new figure on social media this week, along with a message saying she “wouldn’t wish plastic surgery on my WORST enemy.”

America's Next Top Model winner Adrianne Curry revealed she cried

America’s Next Top Model winner Adrianne Curry revealed she cried “non-stop” for the “first year” after having her breast implants removed.

She reflected: ‘5 years after the #explant, and I have had a total metamorphosis. The first year I cried non-stop. I had lost over 90% of my natural breasts due to necrosis and refused to have a fat transfer.’

The Illinois-born former model shared, “I was no longer willing to risk my health for vanity. I had a crash course in how to be humiliated and exposed.’

She explained: ‘My husband had to cut all my stitches due to our remote life and the weather. I fell to my knees in humility and passed through the fire of my vanity dying. “It took them two full years to settle down and look human.”

Adrianne wrote lovingly of Matthew: “My husband was my rock… and I can’t believe how little he was bothered by my frank connections.”

Examining her current life, Adrianne assured her fans, “I’m happy and healthy, and I wouldn’t wish plastic surgery on my WORST enemy.” It did nothing to alleviate my body dysmorphia and only caused me years of suffering.’

She closed with a message of self-acceptance, writing: ‘Be okay with who and what you are. In my case, with much LESS than it was.’

Last year, she confessed that another cosmetic procedure, facial fillers, ended up being the impetus for her to leave Hollywood behind.

“I was 32 and they offered me a job doing facial fillers, and it was a huge payday with free facial fillers and one up to my contract and all that,” she said. People.

Arianne is pictured at the Encore Beach Club at Wynn Las Vegas in 2014, five years before she had her breast implants removed.

Arianne is pictured at the Encore Beach Club at Wynn Las Vegas in 2014, five years before she had her breast implants removed.

The 42-year-old rose to fame in 2003 when she won the first season of America's Next Top Model, on which she appears.

The 42-year-old rose to fame in 2003 when she won the first season of America’s Next Top Model, on which she appears.

And I remember sitting there and the money was so good that I considered it. Then I thought: Am I willing to disfigure myself, to mutilate myself for money? she remembered.

“I had to start asking myself things like, ‘Okay, where is this path going to take me if I even for a second consider injecting something in my face to make money?’ At 32 years old, that’s not necessary,” Adrianne said.

In the same interview, she became enraged that America’s Next Top Model had “betrayed and lied to” her during her time on the show’s inaugural season.

“They told us every day that whoever was going to win would be a big Revlon model, and then they would dub the voiceovers when it was on TV because that was never their intention,” Adrianne said.

‘They lied to us because none of us would have fought as hard as we did for a half-assed prize. We’d say, “That’s stupid,” he mused, adding, “That’s the industry.” That’s what it is. It’s ruthless. He’s lying. It’s predatory.’

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