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Paris Hilton talks about the worst years of her life in boarding school

2020-08-25T14:22:17.377Z


Paris Hilton, 39, opened her heart and revealed what the period of her adolescence was like that she kept buried for years.


Paris Hilton opened her heart and recounted the drama she lived through for 11 months, when in 1998 her parents decided to send her to boarding school to harden her life and leave behind the rebellious spirit that characterized her in her adolescence.

In an interview with People magazine , the 39-year-old model noted, "I buried my truth too long."

"I am proud of the strong woman I have become. People can assume that everything in my life was easy, but I want to show the world who I really am."

In the talk, Hilton also told what her next documentary about her life "This Is Paris" will be about, the one in which she reveals that she has nightmares about her childhood, and you can see the famous woman shedding tears.

In the talk, the socialite also related, "It was very easy to sneak out and go to clubs and parties. My parents were so strict that it made me want to rebel. They punished me by taking away my cell phone, taking away my credit card, but it didn't work. I'd still go out on my own. "

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The parents of the singer, Rick and Kathy Hilton , thinking that their eldest daughter's life could take a wrong turn, decided to take her to a boarding school in New York, one of the best known in the Big Apple, the Provo Canyon school.

When he learned his fate, Paris also intuited what his life would be like, "I knew it was going to be worse than anywhere else."

"It was supposed to be a school, but the classes weren't the focus at all. From the time I woke up until I went to bed, they spent the whole day screaming in my face, it was a continuous torture," the designer recalled. and American DJ.

"The staff said terrible things. They constantly made me feel bad about myself and intimidated me. I think their goal was to break us. And they were physically abusive, hitting and strangling us. They wanted to instill fear in the children so that we would be too afraid to disobey them," she added .

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Paris explained to journalist Aili Nohas that in Provo Canyon "no one could be trusted."

They were days of terror, where the goal of breaking his will was paying off in the most brutal way. The consequences began to be terrible, especially psychological, "I had panic attacks and cried every day. It was so miserable. I felt imprisoned and hated life."

"I couldn't really talk to my family, maybe once every two or three months. We were cut off from the outside world. And when I tried to tell them once, I got into so much trouble that I was afraid to say it again. They would pick up the phone or they tore up the letters I wrote saying, 'No one is going to believe you.' And the staff were telling the parents that the kids were lying. So my parents had no idea what was going on, "Hilton said.

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Finally, when Paris left the place in 1999, she felt free from one of her worst nightmares and decided not to tell anyone what she had suffered.

"It feels like my nightmare is over. I want these places to be closed. I want them to be held accountable. And I want to be a voice for children and now adults around the world who have had similar experiences. I want it to stop forever and I will do everything possible to make this happen, "he concluded.

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SEE ALSO:

Paris Hilton cries over childhood trauma in trailer for her documentary

IN VIDEO: Michelle Obama took a look at her new documentary

Source: telemundo

All life articles on 2020-08-25

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