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Demi Moore’s life lessons

Society Materials 18 January 2008 15:30 (UTC +04:00)
Demi Moore’s life lessons

(celebrity-gossip.net) - She's been in the Hollywood arena since her career started on General Hospital back in the early 1980s.  And Demi Moore has much to show for her years of experience in such a whirlwind industry.

The "Indecent Proposal" actress recently revealed her own struggle to think 'young' now that she's in her mid-40's.  "If you think you're old, feel that you're done growing, then you're going to have a stale life force around you. I've always enjoyed being childlike and placed an importance on being silly and playing and remembering not to take myself too seriously, because I certainly have in the past."

She continued, "It's important not to get yourself obsessed, because it's a game you're going to lose. When people get too obsessed we start to see these faces that don't move and are so manipulated that there's no life to them anymore. One of the most important things about anti-aging is really in your thinking, it's what you believe."

Having 29-year-old Ashton Kutcher as a husband probably don't hurt the whole 'maintaining her youth' thing.  And the "Ghost" actress says bringing him into her family of three daughters wasn't as painful as she thought it would be.

"I definitely can't answer for him but I think it certainly wasn't a difficult transition. Ashton's relationship with his own mother is really wonderful, so it made the transition to being with a woman with daughters something he didn't bat an eye at. It also says a lot about the confidence that he holds within himself as an individual.  Thank goodness I have a male assistant - otherwise Ashton would have gone from being a single guy with a male roommate to being overloaded."

As for her daughters, Demi says she's had to trust them to be wise in the Hollywood context.  "It's hard to say no to curious teenagers when exciting events or things are happening. You can't live in a bubble. A key thing, and I've said this before, is to try to help your children be good decision makers."

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