The House Bunny star, Anna Faris, 45, revealed her life after divorce, love life in an interview with Chelsea Handler on Handler's podcast.
"Being a stepmom… I'm still learning. I really am, I felt at first I wanted to be kinda like this wild, new, reckless person in their lives, because I was also going through a divorce."
“It hit hard the first time, I turned into somebody I didn’t recognize. Like, I was always the kinda person that had my fridge filled — and I hosted a lot of dinners. That was back when I had friends. But then [post-divorce] I found myself in this apartment with just beer and mustard in the fridge, and I was going out all the time. I had no one to text or call to say, ‘Hey, can I do this?’ It was incredibly liberating, and I reverted back to, like, when I was 17 years old.”
“I was terrified that I wasn’t a good lover, especially when I was younger, I was so self-conscious of my body. I didn’t want anybody to see it, but I would dance on the edges of it. I wanted to be desired desperately.”
“My mom never complimented my physical appearance, I was such a late bloomer — I had chubby cheeks, I wore headgear for f****** years. I think my parents did that to me because they wanted me to stay a virgin,” adding, “that was one of the struggles in my life for sure.”
“I just got fake boobs and bleached my hair. That was my strategy, In Hollywood, if you're at a thing and everybody looks beautiful and someone is like ‘I think you look so beautiful,' I can’t absorb that very well. It’s a little too much.”
"Chris and I work really hard [to coparent] because we have Jack, That is sort of the long game idea and making sure Jack is really happy, which makes us really happy. We have sort of the luxury of circumstance. You know, we are both in other loving relationships, but it's like, how do you not, in general, sink into a place of bitterness?"
"I do want to reiterate though, that I f**king acknowledge, we all do, everyone acknowledges, that there's bitterness and pain with all breakups, and that hopefully makes us more human, But the long game, and it's just the worst being the bigger person. It just is. It f**king sucks! Until then, what [matters most] is that everyone's happy."