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Ayesha Curry

Source: Nicky Nelson/WENN.com / WENN

Ayesha Curry Says She Got A Botched Boob Job

After already getting (unfairly) eviscerated by the Internet for her “Red Table Talk” comments, Ayesha Curry’s got more truth to spill.

The mom of three and wife to Steph Curry recently chatted with Working Mother about postpartum depression. Ayesha’s postpartum apparently peaked so high after the birth of her daughter Ryan that she ended up getting a boob job that she’s currently unhappy with.

“I didn’t realize at the time, but after having (my second child) Ryan, I was battling a bit of postpartum that lingered for a while. It came in the form of me being depressed about my body. So I made a rash decision,” said Ayesha.

“The intention was just to have them lifted, but I came out with these bigger boobs I didn’t want. I got the most botched boob job on the face of the planet,” she added. “They’re worse now than they were before. I would never do anything like that again, but I’m an advocate of if something makes you happy, who cares about the judgment?”

For reference, this was Ayesha a few years ago at the 2017 ESPYs…

Ayesha Curry

Source: FayesVision/WENN.com / WENN

 

and the entrepreneur just last week at the James Beard Foundation Awards.

Ayesha Curry

Source: Timothy Hiatt / Contributor / Getty

They don’t look botched to us, but we appreciate her honesty.

Ayesha not only spoke on her “botched boob job”, but she also talked not feeling “black enough” for the black community and teaching her children about race, hit the flip for that.

According to Ayesha, her babies initially didn’t quite grasp the concept that despite their light-skin they’re still black.

The mom to Riley, Ryan and little Canon told Working Mother that she was hit with culture shock about race after moving to the states as a teen, and with that in mind, she’s ensuring that her kids truly understand what it means to have melanin.

“Growing up in Canada, I identified as all things,” she says of her childhood in Toronto, where her neighbors were mostly Asian and Indian. “Then I moved to North Carolina at 14, and that was a culture shock. That’s where I realized, I’m a black woman, something I’ve grown into appreciating and loving.” It’s also a lesson she’s passing on to her daughters. “They’re fair in complexion, and they’ve said: ‘I’m not black; look at my skin.’ And I said: ‘No, no, no. You’re a black woman. You have melanin. It’s part of who you are. Our descendants are from Africa. This is what that means.’ It’s been a journey teaching them that.’”

Ayesha whose mother is Jamaican and Chinese and whose dad is black, also said she sometimes she feels “too black for the white community” and “not black enough for my own community.” Despite that, she’s proud to be a CoverGirl because she’s breaking the mold.

“My own community needs to embrace everyone better. Sometimes I feel like I’m too black for the white community, but I’m not black enough for my own community. That’s a hard thing to carry. That’s why my partnership with CoverGirl was special for me because I felt like I didn’t fit the mold [of a CoverGirl],” she adds. “I’m not in the entertainment industry, in the traditional sense. I’m not thin; I’m 170 pounds on a good day. It’s been a journey for me, and that’s why I want my girls to understand who they are—and to love it.”

If Ayesha Curry is nothing else, she’s absolutely HONEST.

What do YOU think about this non-timid truth teller???

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