Cindy Fabre, known for having been elected Miss France 2005, became the president of the Miss France competition in August 2022. Present during the election of the last Miss France on December 14, she was keen to address the criticism that followed the competition. It was on RTL that she confided: “What I often say to candidates, even before they are elected Miss of their region, is that I am very proud of them because they dared to present themselves. In 2024, you are judged on your appearance “We’re going to criticize you for what you said, what you did, and what you are.”. She then added: “You can’t please everyone. On the other hand, Miss France represents everyone. And that’s where we have to reverse the trend. It’s to say to yourself: ‘You don’t like me? “It doesn’t matter. I’m here to represent you.”
Cindy Fabre without filter on her painful postpartum
If the ex-beauty queen does not hesitate to punch her fist if necessary, it is a completely different subject that she spoke on the set of It starts todayfacing Faustine Bollaert. Indeed, invited Thursday January 9 on the set of the show, she returned to her painful postpartum. Having become the mother of Elio in 2012, the fruit of her love affair with Jean-Marc, her partner at the time, she said she took time before getting used to her child: “I admit, it took me a year. I could lie and say it took me a few months but for all the women watching, it can be a long time and that in itself is no big deal“. “Why, for example, do I have four days of amnesia? I only cling to photos…”she clarified.
Very difficult first months
Miss France 2005 had to have an emergency cesarean section and did not really have a good post-operative experience after the premature birth of her son. “Waking up was complicated. I couldn’t see anything”she admitted. Then to return to the moment when her baby was placed on her chest: “I hold a shape without really guessing its face. It’s as if suddenly, you’re put to sleep tonight and tomorrow morning, you wake up, you have a baby and they tell you that it’s your child”. She went on to explain that she had to take medication after the C-section and couldn’t get up to watch her baby’s first moments.
“So I couldn’t give him first aid, his first bath. I was limp”she remembered in pain. Cindy Fabre then opened her heart a little more to Faustine Bollaert: “It’s terrible, because you have a feeling of guilt. Is it me who has a problem? Is it my child? I don’t feel anything. Viscerally, nothing is happening “The weeks passed with this feeling of telling myself, actually, maybe I wasn’t really born to be a mom.”. And to conclude on a positive note: “My anxieties gradually dissipated because he was growing up. My mother has a dimple on her right cheek, I have a dimple and, when he started to smile, his dimple appeared. And then I I said, yes, it’s mine”.
Related News :