Here's What Real Love Means To Bethenny Frankel Now
Like most of us, Bethany Frankel has loved and lost. The Real
Housewives of New York star, self-made mogul, and committed
philanthropist is famously direct, outspoken, and take-no-bullshit, but fans
are just as enamored by her rawness and vulnerability. When Frankel spoke to
Refinery29’s global editor-in-chief and co-founder Christine Barbaric for a
live recent taping of Unstilled in New York City for Ad week,
she was characteristically honest about, well, everything – from hitting up
titans of industry and A-listers at an intimidatingly swanky Hollywood party,
to frenemy Ramona Singer, to her early days hawking muffins inside a Costco.
And the twice-divorced single mother’s romantic life hasn’t been easy.
(Her ex-boyfriend, Dennis Shields, died suddenly in August.) “Real
love, to me, is the sum being greater than its parts,” Frankel told Barberich.
“You don’t have to like every cheesy movie, but [you need to find] a person who
makes you want to be a better person. [Who] makes you want to be nice to them,
love them, and take care of them – and vice versa.”
“Real love is not settling. I'm not a settling kind of person. I feel
like I've made decisions out of fear versus love, many times,” admitted the
Skinnygirl founder, who joined RHONY in its first season as
the only unmarried, decidedly un-wealthy woman in the bunch. She,
who struggled financially, endured relationships that weren’t working, and
contended with a painful, dysfunctional childhood.
“We all do that; it's what are our parents did. You know, ‘I'm supposed
to be doing that, this guy's so great, everybody loves him, my biological clock
is ticking, he has so much money,’ or whatever.”
Older, wiser, and more confident, Frankel has learned her lesson —,
battle scars and all. “A lot of times people make decisions out of fear, versus
true love, and I just won't make that mistake again.”
Another vital takeaway from her years in the public eye: shattering the
myth of the perfect, “great life.”
“People would rather you think they're having a great life, than
actually have a great life,” she mused. “I'm really the
opposite of that. I felt a responsibility to discuss that, only because I had
gotten married on TV. I feel a responsibility to discuss the demise of [my
second marriage to Jason Hoppy], because I'm not going to pretend everything's
perfect.”
Hear
Christene’s wide-ranging, freewheeling, and often hilarious chat with Frankel by clicking here and subscribing to Unstilled via Apple Podcasts today.
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