This "Sunday in the Country" on November 5 was rich in emotions. Director Claude Lelouch recounted how his schoolteacher saved his life during the occupation. A testimony listened attentively to Frédéric Lopez and the other guests, the sportsman Martin Fourcade and Marine Lorphelin.
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She also opened up about her past. Marine Lorphelin grew up in the south of Burgundy in a "very healthy and loving" environment. His mother works in human resources, his father is a musician and music teacher. School is a value that is passed on in one's family.
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"I like to learn, I'm curious to learn," recalls Miss France 2013. "On my birthday, at Christmas, I get encyclopedias. I'm always at the top of the class," she adds, almost apologetically.
Isolated at school
Because being brilliant "hurt" him. "At the end of elementary school, I was a bit rejected by my group of girlfriends because I was doing a little bit of everything. I did well in school, I was pretty good at sports... It could be a little annoying," says Marine Lorphelin. A feeling of rejection that disgusts her with the school she loves so much.
I need love and I've been looking for it in the eyes of others with the idea that you have to be perfect to be loved
Marine Lorphelin in "A Sunday in the Country"
"When you have more friends, you say to yourself "What's the point of going to school?" Social isolation, being rejected by others, is a very difficult feeling for a child. Being the perfect girl can be overwhelming," says the young woman. "I need love and I looked for it in the eyes of others with the idea that you have to be perfect to be loved," says Marine Lorphelin. An illusion that caused anxiety disorders. His first anxiety attack occurred during his fourth year of medical school. "I don't understand what's happening to me. My heart is racing, I have very distressing thoughts," she describes.
A Found Calling
However, these good results led her to medicine. After her year as Miss France, she resumed her studies. Notoriety is not always easy to manage in your job. However, she took advantage of her exhibition to "convey health messages", as she confided to Frédéric Lopez. Indeed, she is also a columnist in "Le magazine de la santé" on France 5.
It was the death of his grandparents that inspired his vocation. "Losing my grandparents at such a young age, and to illness, it triggered in me a desire to postpone death a little bit," she explains.
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