
she is glad her disney days are over here is what she said
"From the time I was 11, it was, 'You're a pop star! That means you
have to be blonde, and you have to have long hair, and you have to put
on some glittery tight thing.' Meanwhile, I'm this fragile little girl
playing a 16-year-old in a wig and a ton of makeup," Cyrus, 22, said.
"It was like
Toddlers & Tiaras
. I had f—king flippers."
She added: "I was told for so long what a girl is supposed to be from
being on that show. I was made to look like someone that I wasn't,
which probably caused some body dysmorphia because I had been made
pretty every day for so long, and then when I wasn't on that show, it
was like, Who the f—k am I?"
"I'd get hot flashes, feel like I was about to pass out or throw up. It
would happen a lot before shows, and I'd have to cancel. Then the
anxiety started coming from anxiety," the 2015 MTV VMAs host told the
mag. "I would be with my friends, thinking, I should be having so much
fun. You get in this hole that seems like you're never going to be able
to get out of."

"Every morning, I was getting coffee jammed down my throat to wake me
up. I just had to keep going, be tough, be strong," Miley said.
"Everything happened to me on that set."
That "everything" included her first period. "It was so embarrassing, but I couldn't leave," she recalled to
Marie Claire. "And I was crying, begging my mom, 'You're going to have to put the tampon in. I have to be on set.'"
"When you look at retouched, perfect photos, you feel like shit. They
lighten black girls' skin. They smooth out wrinkles. Even when I get
stuck on Instagram wondering, Why don't I look like that? It's a total
bummer," Cyrus said. "It's crazy what people have decided we're all
supposed to be."
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