I think that women's lives are multilayered.

I have no problem understanding that women are interested in mascara and the Middle East.

Feminism means, basically, are you in favor of equal opportunities for men and women? It's hard to argue with that.

I don't get my ideas from reading other people.

Price is nothing when it comes to fashion. It's all about the style.

I think the single most important thing for a job interview is leave the phone in your bag and do not look at it for 20 minutes.

Every time I've been offered a new job, I've automatically said, 'Oh, I don't think you want me for that job.' It's sort of a weird female - or, at least, it is in me - a weird female defense, when, in fact, what you want to do is scream, 'Hooray, I want to do this!'

The thing that I always try and say to young people starting out is your peer group is really the most important influence on your life because you are going to rise and fall together.

I was a dogged reporter.

I grew up in Yorkshire, which is like the Texas of Britain. It's a proud free state and not always liked by the other counties in Britain.

It was quite jarring to go from newspapers to magazines, and the reason I did it was because I had my second son, and with my second child, I just thought, 'I can't travel at will,' which you really need to be able to do. And so I had a sort of slow realization that I could no longer do the job that I loved.

Having diverse leadership means there are more voices in the room, and there are more different points of entry for people who are being bullied or abused at work. There are more points of entry for them to complain to.

If you keep dating and keep out there, you keep a higher level of hope, and also, your skills at doing it improve because you're doing it more often, and you are bringing less anxiety to the table.

As long as you're interested in people and things, that curiosity propels you forward.

I look at my time on this earth as social anthropology, at home and in work life.

You're only worth as much to one employer as you are to another.

At the age of 10, I had my first piece published in what was known as the 'Junior Post,' which was part of the 'Yorkshire Post,' and it was just for kids. I read it every week. And I got paid for it. So I thought... 'I can actually do this. I can get paid to write, and this is going to be fine.' I wrote several pieces for them.

I think probably the moments of failure have been when I didn't really understand that other people were around to actually help me. There were moments when I thought I had to solve everything on my own, and I didn't realize that I had resources.

I don't really have an average day, and that works for me. If I knew what I had to do ahead of time, I would be so depressed. I love the unexpected. I love change. I love things being thrown at me.

If you're in journalism, the U.S. - and New York City in particular - is an exciting place to work.

The biggest stress for me at New York Magazine was when I was a middle-of-the-pack editor, and I had no control over my own schedule.

As the editor of 'Cosmopolitan,' I talk to hundreds of young women about the sometimes bewilderingly rapid changes taking place in our romantic lives and the role new technology plays in our search for intimacy and commitment.

My favorite meal would be a big piece of steak with salad and then Brussels sprouts and Jerusalem artichokes.

Up until the age of 13, girls are confident, and they feel like they can conquer the world. Then adolescence sets in, and girls lose their confidence. And 'Seventeen' is really about them taking an hour out of their month, unplugging, lying on their bed, and reading a magazine that believes in them.

With beauty, I think one never finishes it. I'm always exploring. I like the concept of change.

It's a great thing to be underestimated because it puts off your rival or enemy - they're not on their full game if they underestimate you.

I love to be underestimated.

With experience, you suddenly realise you know how to do things or that you've done something like this before. And I think as you get more confident, you can sit back and try and weigh up the options of doing something or not doing something.

My parents, they gave me everything. They taught me how to work hard. They taught me how to be a good Catholic. They taught me how to love people, how to respect people, but how to stand my ground, as well.

I don't do fights on Twitter.

I want people to talk about me in five, 10 years, 20 years, that I was one of the best female MMA fighters, that I was one of the best UFC champions in the world back in the day. This is what I want.

Maybe some people think that it's all about the hype, about the fame, but it's not. It's all about being the best. It's all about challenging myself everyday.

I'm a professional athlete, I'm a businesswoman and I know who I am.

I want to have my own kids, I want to raise them and just be a happy grandma.

I'm one hundred percent into my life, and into my fighting career. This is who I want to be in the future - as a mother - and if I'm going to leave the sport, I leave the sport. When I finish with fighting, I'm done.

I'm not cocky. I'm not arrogant. I know my value.

I like the good part of the sport, the sport side of the fighting.

Since I moved to American Top Team, I feel like I'm the bird that got to escape from its cage, if you know that meaning.

You can be an underdog, but you can beat the champion.

I'm very hard on myself everyday, you can ask my coaches, and after a good training session, I'm not happy because I know I can do better or change something to do better, you know?

I always set my ambitions very high. You want to be the greatest athlete, but I realized that life is not about that. I was a little bit blind.

I have almost 100 Muay Thai fights, so I used to train and fight with really tough kickers.

I cannot help that I'm simply the best.

For myself, I'm still little Joanna from the hood - from a small town in Poland, and I'm still having my goals, my dreams.

We need real and dedicated fighters and champions in the UFC. It's simply the best organization in the world.

Winning is like an addiction, but I'm also afraid of losing.

This sport is all about winning the fight, setting records, and defending titles.

100 Muay Thai, boxing, and kickboxing fights. Six times world Muay Thai champion, five times European Muay Thai champion, very dominant UFC champion for three years. I know my legacy. They can say whatever they want to, but I'm huge.

I have lots of power in my hands.

I like to break the records, break the limits.