Now 46 years old, Sylvie Tellier is aware that the passage of time has very real physical effects. Asked about her relationship with the body, the former Miss France spoke frankly.
At 46, Sylvie Tellier is an accomplished businesswoman and mother. Miss France 2002 then general director of the Miss France Society for no less than 17 years, she also founded an association which aims to improve the living conditions of women, Les Bonnes Fées. But don’t think that time has no influence on her…
Sylvie Tellier for or against cosmetic surgery? She answers cash
On January 17, the mother of Oscar (15 years old), Margaux (soon to be 11 years old) and Roméo (6 years old) indulged in long, intimate confidences on Maïtena Biraben’s sofa. At the microphone of the media dedicated to women over 45, LadiesSylvie Tellier first readily acknowledged that time passes: “It’s going quickly. It’s going by too quickly (…) But I have a little one so I’m still a little young in my head.” Her youngest, born from her marriage to Laurent Schenten, is still only in CP.
Asked about the physical challenges that are inevitable when you get older, the former beauty queen responded most honestly: “Today, there are plenty of techniques to respond to concerns. I am not against cosmetic surgery (…) A woman who has cosmetic surgery at 50, 60, 70 years old if she needs it, if she wants it, and if that can allow her to respond to certain anxieties, so much the better for her.” It remains to be seen whether Sylvie Tellier herself will one day take the plunge into cosmetic surgery…
Sylvie Tellier confronted with changes in her body: “The skin is transformed…”
On the other hand, when it comes to her relationship with her own body, Sylvie Tellier was more nuanced. “Gravity is there. We age, the skin transforms, changes”she first admitted. Then the one who gave up her place as Miss boss to Cindy Fabre added: “I’m faced with lots of questions about how my skin will age, the drop in hormones, pre-menopause, all these things…”
Sylvie Tellier’s technique for staying in shape? The race. “I run, I do a lot of sport. I have always considered that our body is like a car. That is to say, if we do a lot of kilometers, we will need a lot of gasoline… I likes to live, I like to eat, I like to drink I am an epicurean So as I don’t like to deprive myself, I run.she readily admits.