In her book All Those That I Am, available since Monday, November 4, Ayem Nour talks about her journey, but also her private life. She talks about her weight gain and how some teammates treated it.
On November 4, Ayem Nour published her autobiographical book “All those that I am”, where she reveals herself without filter.
Ayem Nour shares her personal experience facing criticism about her weight and the impact these remarks have had on her life.
Learn how Ayem Nour uses her story to inspire and support other women through her journey of resilience.
Public figure, femme fatale, single mother… In her autobiographical work All those that I amavailable since Monday, November 4, Ayem Nour reveals herself in all her facets. She is no longer afraid of hiding. For her, it's finally time to learn to be yourself.
“Time to surrender myself to you as I have never done, out of fear, out of fear, out of doubt, out of pride. Time to be proud of everyone the ones I was, the one I am, the ones I no longer want to be… Time to release my words in the hope of accompanying yours”, she confided a few weeks earlier on her social networks.
Ayem Nour speaks openly in his book
“At first, I did this for myself, to take a weight off my shoulders. Then, little by little, I got into a fight. A fight so that no woman feels alone since there are so many of us.” she adds, ready to give a little hope to all these women.
In his book, Ayem Nour discusses the remarks she received on set about her weight gain, and the impact these words may have had on her.
Ayem Nour: “He asked me to…”
She writes: “One last look at my reflection before joining the set (…). I see myself again pregnant, fat, deformed, deformed ; I see myself fighting to regain a semblance of dignity; I see all the women I have been. The ones I will still be and the ones I will never accept to be again.”
During his return to television, his reunion with Matthieu Delormeau seems to have had an impact on him. But not in the best way. “The hustle and bustle of a TV set, the live countdown (…), my reunion with Matthieu. And what a reunion! He asked me to get up, to look around so that everyone notices that I am no longer the big Ayemthat I fit again into my size thirty-six jeans and into the beauty codes imposed on us. And I, as a good student of the patriarchy, allowed myself to be treated like a fairground animal.” she said.