Christophe Farkas et
Charlotte Kohler
Model Stefanie Giesinger, 28, got lost and found herself. How writing, therapy, and solo travel helped her research.
October 12, 2024, 2:22 p.m.
Published in
Campus ZEIT n° 5/2024
To summarize
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In an interview with ZEIT Campus, Stefanie Giesinger talks about her childhood, modeling, her self-perception and her crisis. After years of mental struggle, she learned to overcome the pain and take time for herself. She reflects on self-optimization compulsions, her identity, and her future. Today, she is a grateful and happy woman who looks forward to her 60th birthday to celebrate with her loved ones and thank them for their support.
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Campus TEMPS : Stéfanie, as a child, how did you imagine your adult life?
Stefanie Giesinger: My parents arrived from Siberia to Kaiserslautern shortly before I was born. They always had to work a lot and we didn’t have much money. I remember lying on my childhood bedroom bed when I was ten and it was like I saw my whole life in one second. It sounds very spiritual, but I knew at that moment that I would live a similar life to the one I live today. As a model, in a big city, I travel a lot around the world. Maybe it was just my dream world come true.
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