Categories
Politics

An aboriginal deacon explains why he embraces Christianity despite the church's history

Sunday February 21, 2016

more stories from this episode

In Canada, the largest religion among aboriginal people is Roman Catholicism.

The 2011 National Household Survey reports that more than half a million aboriginal people in Canada affiliate themselves with the Catholic Church. However, some aboriginal people see the church as a willing partner of government in their colonization. The church has also been at the centre of court cases involving abuses at federally-mandated residential schools it managed. 

Rennie Nahanee is a deacon with St. Paul’s Indian Catholic Church in North Vancouver, and he’s a member of the Squamish First Nation. In this interview, he explains why he believes there are similarities between Catholicism and traditional aboriginal culture, and how faith survives the abuses of the past. 

Click the button to hear the interview. 

Source:: http://www.cbc.ca/radio/the180/refugee-arrival-stories-are-too-happy-the-harm-of-french-immersion-and-who-gets-to-decide-who-s-a-feminist-1.3452586/an-aboriginal-deacon-explains-why-he-embraces-christianity-despite-the-church-s-history-1.3452651?cmp=rss

      

Categories
TV & Movies

The Mermaid

Thumb_mermaid

“The Mermaid” will make you laugh.

It doesn’t matter if you don’t like subtitles. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never heard of the director. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never seen a Chinese
movie in your life.

It will make you laugh. Guaranteed.

“The Mermaid” is a romantic-comedy fantasy from actor-director-producer Stephen Chow (“Kung Fu Hustle,” “Shaolin Soccer”) about a billionaire who falls in love with a mermaid. Paul Reubens’s description of Pee-Wee
Herman as “a simple thing to hang a bunch of stuff on” could
apply to this movie. It’s a gag machine with gears that never stop turning.
Chow’s broad, at times bawdy sense of humor is tempered by a
keen eye for composition, and his comic timing makes even the goofiest, broadest jokes work. In fact nearly all of the jokes of every kind work. If you’d told me this in advance of my first viewing of the film, on opening night in a Manhattan theater, I wouldn’t have believed it, but the sound of a sold-out audience laughing from start to finish is the surest metric of whether a comedy works. This movie works.

The plot: Jerkish tycoon Liu Xuan (Deng Chao) has made a ton of money off of sonar technology that incidentally murders all nearby
sea-life. This includes an understandably pissed-off community of
mer-people, led by spiteful Octopus (Show Luo) and naive mermaid
Shan (Lin Yun). Since Liu Xuan has a weakness for the ladies, Shan is
tasked with avenging her fellow cryptids by seducing and killing him.

But there’s a problem: Shan and Liu Xuan like each other.

“The Mermaid” has many hallmarks of Chow’s working-class-egotist-makes-good
style of comedy. Chow may not play an (apparently
not-so-) exaggerated version of his petulant public persona, here as he
often does. But Liu Xuan can easily be read as Chow’s stand-in:
he’s rich, but “low-class,” in the words of Shan’s spiteful, mega-rich
rival Ruolan (Zhang Yuqi). Flashy clothes and “Cribs”-style parties,
complete with pool-side babes and decades-old wine, are the hallmarks of
Liu Xuan’s nouveau riche lifestyle. So when
Shan shows up, wearing smeared make-up and ugly rubber weights to
disguise her fins, everybody knows that Liu Xuan will still chase after
her. He’s a phony, as is made apparent by his paste-on pencil mustache.
Tony Stark he ain’t. But
that’s part of his character’s wisp-thin appeal: he’s instantly recognizable as a fake who nevertheless wants to make good.

Still, while Chao’s appropriately
exaggerated performance makes Liu Xuan a likable antihero, Lin’s turn as
Shan is the film’s secret weapon. A skilled supporting cast
of comedians, including Shan’s fellow sea-people, all earn earn
laughs, but Lin has the unenviable task of making
you believe that Shan is as awkward as she seems. You have to buy the
notion that Shan’s sincere when she flashes Xiu Luan and he
insists that he get a better look at her
wild charms.

Lin’s apparent sincerity works wonders since Chow’s sense
of humor always tends to be more extreme than you expect. I’ve seen a
fair number of Chow films, but his sexual or violent humor always takes
me by surprise, as in a police-sketch
routine involving a merman penis and a routine about roast
chickens and cunnilingus. Lin thankfully makes you believe that such a
naive woman could stumble into a romance with a man she wants to
assassinate. Lin’s not a victim of Chow’s dirty mind:
she’s an essential collaborator.

You may be wondering, If this movie is so bizarre, so wonderful, so funny, why haven’t I heard of it? The answer to that question is infuriating. Chow’s “Shaolin Soccer” and “Kung Fu Hustle” were international hits, and he’s a mega-star
in his native Hong Kong. Last weekend, “The Mermaid”
shattered domestic box office records in China and

became the #2 movie in the world, after “Deadpool.” Its American release is an afterthought for one reason: mismanagement by its American distributor, Sony Corporation of America. (In theory the film is distributed by Asia Releasing, a subsidiary that handles the release of Asian films in the US and Canada, but the print I saw had a plain old Sony logo in front of it.)

Sony
ought to be ashamed for keeping such a good film from American viewers
who aren’t already part of the Chinese diasporic
community. Three of the four Sony representatives I spoke with didn’t
even know that the company was releasing “The Mermaid.” The fourth
rep told me that his company hadn’t thought to set up advanced
screenings for US press, or even send out an email alerting them to the film’s impending release. I was told that the film
had already gotten positive reviews—all pegged to its release in
Asia—and that Sony didn’t expect it to interest many people, outside of Chinese or Chinese-American film fans.

This is the sad reality of foreign films in
America today: the domestic marketplace is so hopelessly biased in favor of English-language films, most of them produced in the United States, that the second most popular movie in the world is treated as if it doesn’t even exist.

Prove Sony’s ignorant assumptions wrong. Go see this movie.

To find out if it’s playing near you, click here.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-mermaid-2016

      

Categories
TV & Movies

The Mermaid

Thumb_mermaid

“The Mermaid” will make you laugh.

It doesn’t matter if you don’t like subtitles. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never heard of the director. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never seen a Chinese
movie in your life.

It will make you laugh. Guaranteed.

“The Mermaid” is a romantic-comedy fantasy from actor-director-producer Stephen Chow (“Kung Fu Hustle,” “Shaolin Soccer”) about a billionaire who falls in love with a mermaid. Paul Reubens’s description of Pee-Wee
Herman as “a simple thing to hang a bunch of stuff on” could
apply to this movie. It’s a gag machine with gears that never stop turning.
Chow’s broad, at times bawdy sense of humor is tempered by a
keen eye for composition, and his comic timing makes even the goofiest, broadest jokes work. In fact nearly all of the jokes of every kind work. If you’d told me this in advance of my first viewing of the film, on opening night in a Manhattan theater, I wouldn’t have believed it, but the sound of a sold-out audience laughing from start to finish is the surest metric of whether a comedy works. This movie works.

The plot: Jerkish tycoon Liu Xuan (Deng Chao) has made a ton of money off of sonar technology that incidentally murders all nearby
sea-life. This includes an understandably pissed-off community of
mer-people, led by spiteful Octopus (Show Luo) and naive mermaid
Shan (Lin Yun). Since Liu Xuan has a weakness for the ladies, Shan is
tasked with avenging her fellow cryptids by seducing and killing him.

But there’s a problem: Shan and Liu Xuan like each other.

“The Mermaid” has many hallmarks of Chow’s working-class-egotist-makes-good
style of comedy. Chow may not play an (apparently
not-so-) exaggerated version of his petulant public persona, here as he
often does. But Liu Xuan can easily be read as Chow’s stand-in:
he’s rich, but “low-class,” in the words of Shan’s spiteful, mega-rich
rival Ruolan (Zhang Yuqi). Flashy clothes and “Cribs”-style parties,
complete with pool-side babes and decades-old wine, are the hallmarks of
Liu Xuan’s nouveau riche lifestyle. So when
Shan shows up, wearing smeared make-up and ugly rubber weights to
disguise her fins, everybody knows that Liu Xuan will still chase after
her. He’s a phony, as is made apparent by his paste-on pencil mustache.
Tony Stark he ain’t. But
that’s part of his character’s wisp-thin appeal: he’s instantly recognizable as a fake who nevertheless wants to make good.

Still, while Chao’s appropriately
exaggerated performance makes Liu Xuan a likable antihero, Lin’s turn as
Shan is the film’s secret weapon. A skilled supporting cast
of comedians, including Shan’s fellow sea-people, all earn earn
laughs, but Lin has the unenviable task of making
you believe that Shan is as awkward as she seems. You have to buy the
notion that Shan’s sincere when she flashes Xiu Luan and he
insists that he get a better look at her
wild charms.

Lin’s apparent sincerity works wonders since Chow’s sense
of humor always tends to be more extreme than you expect. I’ve seen a
fair number of Chow films, but his sexual or violent humor always takes
me by surprise, as in a police-sketch
routine involving a merman penis and a routine about roast
chickens and cunnilingus. Lin thankfully makes you believe that such a
naive woman could stumble into a romance with a man she wants to
assassinate. Lin’s not a victim of Chow’s dirty mind:
she’s an essential collaborator.

You may be wondering, If this movie is so bizarre, so wonderful, so funny, why haven’t I heard of it? The answer to that question is infuriating. Chow’s “Shaolin Soccer” and “Kung Fu Hustle” were international hits, and he’s a mega-star
in his native Hong Kong. Last weekend, “The Mermaid”
shattered domestic box office records in China and

became the #2 movie in the world, after “Deadpool.” Its American release is an afterthought for one reason: mismanagement by its American distributor, Sony Corporation of America. (In theory the film is distributed by Asia Releasing, a subsidiary that handles the release of Asian films in the US and Canada, but the print I saw had a plain old Sony logo in front of it.)

Sony
ought to be ashamed for keeping such a good film from American viewers
who aren’t already part of the Chinese diasporic
community. Three of the four Sony representatives I spoke with didn’t
even know that the company was releasing “The Mermaid.” The fourth
rep told me that his company hadn’t thought to set up advanced
screenings for US press, or even send out an email alerting them to the film’s impending release. I was told that the film
had already gotten positive reviews—all pegged to its release in
Asia—and that Sony didn’t expect it to interest many people, outside of Chinese or Chinese-American film fans.

This is the sad reality of foreign films in
America today: the domestic marketplace is so hopelessly biased in favor of English-language films, most of them produced in the United States, that the second most popular movie in the world is treated as if it doesn’t even exist.

Prove Sony’s ignorant assumptions wrong. Go see this movie.

To find out if it’s playing near you, click here.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-mermaid-2016

      

Categories
TV & Movies

The Mermaid

Thumb_mermaid

“The Mermaid” will make you laugh.

It doesn’t matter if you don’t like subtitles. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never heard of the director. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never seen a Chinese
movie in your life.

It will make you laugh. Guaranteed.

“The Mermaid” is a romantic-comedy fantasy from actor-director-producer Stephen Chow (“Kung Fu Hustle,” “Shaolin Soccer”) about a billionaire who falls in love with a mermaid. Paul Reubens’s description of Pee-Wee
Herman as “a simple thing to hang a bunch of stuff on” could
apply to this movie. It’s a gag machine with gears that never stop turning.
Chow’s broad, at times bawdy sense of humor is tempered by a
keen eye for composition, and his comic timing makes even the goofiest, broadest jokes work. In fact nearly all of the jokes of every kind work. If you’d told me this in advance of my first viewing of the film, on opening night in a Manhattan theater, I wouldn’t have believed it, but the sound of a sold-out audience laughing from start to finish is the surest metric of whether a comedy works. This movie works.

The plot: Jerkish tycoon Liu Xuan (Deng Chao) has made a ton of money off of sonar technology that incidentally murders all nearby
sea-life. This includes an understandably pissed-off community of
mer-people, led by spiteful Octopus (Show Luo) and naive mermaid
Shan (Lin Yun). Since Liu Xuan has a weakness for the ladies, Shan is
tasked with avenging her fellow cryptids by seducing and killing him.

But there’s a problem: Shan and Liu Xuan like each other.

“The Mermaid” has many hallmarks of Chow’s working-class-egotist-makes-good
style of comedy. Chow may not play an (apparently
not-so-) exaggerated version of his petulant public persona, here as he
often does. But Liu Xuan can easily be read as Chow’s stand-in:
he’s rich, but “low-class,” in the words of Shan’s spiteful, mega-rich
rival Ruolan (Zhang Yuqi). Flashy clothes and “Cribs”-style parties,
complete with pool-side babes and decades-old wine, are the hallmarks of
Liu Xuan’s nouveau riche lifestyle. So when
Shan shows up, wearing smeared make-up and ugly rubber weights to
disguise her fins, everybody knows that Liu Xuan will still chase after
her. He’s a phony, as is made apparent by his paste-on pencil mustache.
Tony Stark he ain’t. But
that’s part of his character’s wisp-thin appeal: he’s instantly recognizable as a fake who nevertheless wants to make good.

Still, while Chao’s appropriately
exaggerated performance makes Liu Xuan a likable antihero, Lin’s turn as
Shan is the film’s secret weapon. A skilled supporting cast
of comedians, including Shan’s fellow sea-people, all earn earn
laughs, but Lin has the unenviable task of making
you believe that Shan is as awkward as she seems. You have to buy the
notion that Shan’s sincere when she flashes Xiu Luan and he
insists that he get a better look at her
wild charms.

Lin’s apparent sincerity works wonders since Chow’s sense
of humor always tends to be more extreme than you expect. I’ve seen a
fair number of Chow films, but his sexual or violent humor always takes
me by surprise, as in a police-sketch
routine involving a merman penis and a routine about roast
chickens and cunnilingus. Lin thankfully makes you believe that such a
naive woman could stumble into a romance with a man she wants to
assassinate. Lin’s not a victim of Chow’s dirty mind:
she’s an essential collaborator.

You may be wondering, If this movie is so bizarre, so wonderful, so funny, why haven’t I heard of it? The answer to that question is infuriating. Chow’s “Shaolin Soccer” and “Kung Fu Hustle” were international hits, and he’s a mega-star
in his native Hong Kong. Last weekend, “The Mermaid”
shattered domestic box office records in China and

became the #2 movie in the world, after “Deadpool.” Its American release is an afterthought for one reason: mismanagement by its American distributor, Sony Corporation of America. (In theory the film is distributed by Asia Releasing, a subsidiary that handles the release of Asian films in the US and Canada, but the print I saw had a plain old Sony logo in front of it.)

Sony
ought to be ashamed for keeping such a good film from American viewers
who aren’t already part of the Chinese diasporic
community. Three of the four Sony representatives I spoke with didn’t
even know that the company was releasing “The Mermaid.” The fourth
rep told me that his company hadn’t thought to set up advanced
screenings for US press, or even send out an email alerting them to the film’s impending release. I was told that the film
had already gotten positive reviews—all pegged to its release in
Asia—and that Sony didn’t expect it to interest many people, outside of Chinese or Chinese-American film fans.

This is the sad reality of foreign films in
America today: the domestic marketplace is so hopelessly biased in favor of English-language films, most of them produced in the United States, that the second most popular movie in the world is treated as if it doesn’t even exist.

Prove Sony’s ignorant assumptions wrong. Go see this movie.

To find out if it’s playing near you, click here.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-mermaid-2016

      

Categories
TV & Movies

The Mermaid

Thumb_mermaid

“The Mermaid” will make you laugh.

It doesn’t matter if you don’t like subtitles. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never heard of the director. It doesn’t matter if you’ve never seen a Chinese
movie in your life.

It will make you laugh. Guaranteed.

“The Mermaid” is a romantic-comedy fantasy from actor-director-producer Stephen Chow (“Kung Fu Hustle,” “Shaolin Soccer”) about a billionaire who falls in love with a mermaid. Paul Reubens’s description of Pee-Wee
Herman as “a simple thing to hang a bunch of stuff on” could
apply to this movie. It’s a gag machine with gears that never stop turning.
Chow’s broad, at times bawdy sense of humor is tempered by a
keen eye for composition, and his comic timing makes even the goofiest, broadest jokes work. In fact nearly all of the jokes of every kind work. If you’d told me this in advance of my first viewing of the film, on opening night in a Manhattan theater, I wouldn’t have believed it, but the sound of a sold-out audience laughing from start to finish is the surest metric of whether a comedy works. This movie works.

The plot: Jerkish tycoon Liu Xuan (Deng Chao) has made a ton of money off of sonar technology that incidentally murders all nearby
sea-life. This includes an understandably pissed-off community of
mer-people, led by spiteful Octopus (Show Luo) and naive mermaid
Shan (Lin Yun). Since Liu Xuan has a weakness for the ladies, Shan is
tasked with avenging her fellow cryptids by seducing and killing him.

But there’s a problem: Shan and Liu Xuan like each other.

“The Mermaid” has many hallmarks of Chow’s working-class-egotist-makes-good
style of comedy. Chow may not play an (apparently
not-so-) exaggerated version of his petulant public persona, here as he
often does. But Liu Xuan can easily be read as Chow’s stand-in:
he’s rich, but “low-class,” in the words of Shan’s spiteful, mega-rich
rival Ruolan (Zhang Yuqi). Flashy clothes and “Cribs”-style parties,
complete with pool-side babes and decades-old wine, are the hallmarks of
Liu Xuan’s nouveau riche lifestyle. So when
Shan shows up, wearing smeared make-up and ugly rubber weights to
disguise her fins, everybody knows that Liu Xuan will still chase after
her. He’s a phony, as is made apparent by his paste-on pencil mustache.
Tony Stark he ain’t. But
that’s part of his character’s wisp-thin appeal: he’s instantly recognizable as a fake who nevertheless wants to make good.

Still, while Chao’s appropriately
exaggerated performance makes Liu Xuan a likable antihero, Lin’s turn as
Shan is the film’s secret weapon. A skilled supporting cast
of comedians, including Shan’s fellow sea-people, all earn earn
laughs, but Lin has the unenviable task of making
you believe that Shan is as awkward as she seems. You have to buy the
notion that Shan’s sincere when she flashes Xiu Luan and he
insists that he get a better look at her
wild charms.

Lin’s apparent sincerity works wonders since Chow’s sense
of humor always tends to be more extreme than you expect. I’ve seen a
fair number of Chow films, but his sexual or violent humor always takes
me by surprise, as in a police-sketch
routine involving a merman penis and a routine about roast
chickens and cunnilingus. Lin thankfully makes you believe that such a
naive woman could stumble into a romance with a man she wants to
assassinate. Lin’s not a victim of Chow’s dirty mind:
she’s an essential collaborator.

You may be wondering, If this movie is so bizarre, so wonderful, so funny, why haven’t I heard of it? The answer to that question is infuriating. Chow’s “Shaolin Soccer” and “Kung Fu Hustle” were international hits, and he’s a mega-star
in his native Hong Kong. Last weekend, “The Mermaid”
shattered domestic box office records in China and

became the #2 movie in the world, after “Deadpool.” Its American release is an afterthought for one reason: mismanagement by its American distributor, Sony Corporation of America. (In theory the film is distributed by Asia Releasing, a subsidiary that handles the release of Asian films in the US and Canada, but the print I saw had a plain old Sony logo in front of it.)

Sony
ought to be ashamed for keeping such a good film from American viewers
who aren’t already part of the Chinese diasporic
community. Three of the four Sony representatives I spoke with didn’t
even know that the company was releasing “The Mermaid.” The fourth
rep told me that his company hadn’t thought to set up advanced
screenings for US press, or even send out an email alerting them to the film’s impending release. I was told that the film
had already gotten positive reviews—all pegged to its release in
Asia—and that Sony didn’t expect it to interest many people, outside of Chinese or Chinese-American film fans.

This is the sad reality of foreign films in
America today: the domestic marketplace is so hopelessly biased in favor of English-language films, most of them produced in the United States, that the second most popular movie in the world is treated as if it doesn’t even exist.

Prove Sony’s ignorant assumptions wrong. Go see this movie.

To find out if it’s playing near you, click here.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-mermaid-2016

      

Categories
Entertainment

Cindy Crawford Is Turning 50 and We Should All Celebrate Her Refreshing Philosophy on Aging

Cindy Crawford

Ron Asadorian/Splash News

Cindy Crawford is wise beyond her years. 

The timeless beauty rings is celebrating her 50th birthday today…sure, no problem, we’ll give you a second…

OK, now that the shock has worn off—yes! The brunette stunner who had every girl scrambling to pencil on a makeshift beauty spot in the 1980s and ’90s is indeed marking a major milestone.

Over three decades the supermodel posed for the fashion industry’s finest photographers and walked the most enviable runways, made Pepsi the sexiest soft drink ever and started her own skincare line. And along the way, she fearlessly confronted that little taboo subject nobody in the modeling world wants to address.

Crawford has admitted that the aging process can be “daunting,” especially for a model—but let’s just say, if everyone had her attitude about Father Time, there’d be a lot fewer worry lines in the world. Celebrate her birthday with 11 of her most thoughtful quotes on getting older:

Cindy Crawford’s best looks

Cindy CrawfordGetty Images

1. The body positive:

“I’m actually happier with my body now… because the body I have now is the body I’ve worked for. I have a better relationship with it. From a purely aesthetic point of view, my body was better when I was 22, 23. But I didn’t enjoy it. I was too busy comparing it to everyone else’s,” she told the Daily Mail in 2007 about being in her 40s.

Cindy Crawford, Golden Globes, 2015Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

2. On retiring one day, maybe:

“Every year, I tell my kids I’m retiring. It’s a running joke in our family,” she wrote in an Instagram caption just weeks ago. “And yet every year, opportunities pop up that really excite me. While it’s true that I’m eager to shift my focus a bit to concentrate on my businesses, friends and family—I’m not making any final statements (not all headlines tell the whole story!). I have loved being part of the fashion industry for the past 30 years—and if that time has taught me anything, it’s this: never say never.”

Cindy CrawfordGetty Images

3. Her anti-aging secret:

“The secret is that there is no secret,” she told The Violet Files in 2014. “Do all the stuff we know: Don’t smoke, get enough sleep, drink plenty of water, find what makes you happy.”

PHOTOS: Check out Cindy Crawford’s & more supermodels’ first runway appearances

Cindy CrawfordGetty Images

4. Looking within for happiness:

“I don’t want to look in the mirror every day and be down on myself,” she also told The Violet Files. “Look, I’m holding together pretty good, but I don’t look like I did when I was 25 or 30 or even 40. What I’m finding for myself is that if I continue to be engaged, to do what I love, that’s how I get my self-esteem cup filled. I get a lot of that from my family and work. I’m good at my job. I know I’m a good model at this point in my career. Though some days I feel like I’m too busy or too stressed out, I’m still excited to go to work. That kind of translates from the internal to the external.” 

PHOTOS: Stars looking fab at 50

Cindy Crawford, Kaia Gerber, Presley Gerber Anthony Kwan/Getty Images for Omega

5. The real joy of aging:

“I think honestly I am probably the hardest on myself,” she said on the FABLife. “It’s beautiful as a mother to watch your children grow up and become whoever they’re going to be and I think that makes it easier for me to watch myself also getting older.”

Tyra Banks, Cindy CrawfordDonato Sardella/WireImage

6. Do unto yourself:

“I don’t look at [my friends] and think ‘Count their wrinkles.’ I look at them and see their beauty,” she added. “I feel like that’s what we should be doing to ourselves…why aren’t we as kind to ourselves as we are to our girlfriends?”

PHOTOS: Cindy Crawford & more stars who’ve aged in reverse

Cindy CrawfordAP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool

7. Age is but a number:

“The buildup is way worse,” Crawford told Yahoo! last fall about the prospect of turning 50. “Once the birthday has come and gone, you’re like, ‘I’m just the same.’ I feel like, our society, and especially being a model, we put such significance on those numbers…. but there’s also so much to celebrate about the journey that you’ve taken, and we’re so fortunate to be here, with our health. This is my way of embracing it and celebrating—as opposed to being afraid of the number.”

Cindy Crawford, Best LooksPascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

8. (Role)modeling at home:

“I suspect that the way my children learn the best is not from what I say to them but just by watching me and if she doesn’t see me being like, ‘Oh my god, I look terrible, I have so many wrinkles,’ then she won’t get that message. I feel like I have to lead by example,” Cindy shared with Harper’s Bazaar in 2014.

Models, Then and Now, Cindy Crawford, 2014Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

9. It’s OK to admit you’re not entirely cool with aging:

“Having been a model now for more than 30 years and dependent on my looks for my work, seeing those changes might even be a little bit harder for me,” she dished to The Sunday Times last fall. “At times the pressure to live up to the fashion industry’s expectations feels overwhelming. I can still pull off a miniskirt and 5-inch heels on set—but probably not in real life.”

Kaia Jordan Gerber, Rande Gerber, Cindy Crawford, Presley Walker Gerber Anthony Behar/Sipa USA

10. Enjoy the ride:

“Life goes by quickly, and I’ve learned that decisions made from a place of confidence—rather than one of fear—are the ones that get me to the place I want to be,” Crawford wrote in her book, Becoming, which came out last September.

Cindy CrawfordLloyd Bishop/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

11. Laugh it off:

“I was doing an interview the other day and I’m like, you know, one of the great things about getting older is you’re more comfortable in your own skin,” she mentioned to InStyle in December. “And then, I was like, maybe because it’s a bit looser!”

Nothing like a few smile lines to show that a woman is enjoying life. Happy birthday, Cindy—you remain a beauty, inside and out, for the ages!

PHOTOS: Celebs’ quotes on aging

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