There are so many single moms and dads out there, and we are all just trying to pick up the pieces together. It's hard.

I don't want to be single for the rest of my life. And I felt that way for a long time.

It's really hard like when people ask me questions like 'So what is your life like?' I mean, I almost feel like saying, 'Do you have 10 years for me to explain it?'

I feel like I know what my role is as a mom, and I know that there is eight people on the planet that matter to me and their opinions matter. If those eight people say that I've done a good job, honestly the rest doesn't even matter.

Walk a day in my shoes and you'd be irritable too.

I'm not going to be somebody I'm not.

I've learned to deal with stress. In fact, things that would make the next person go over a cliff don't even make my radar anymore.

My faith and my kids are the two things that matter.

I am seeking to be positive, have integrity, and speak with grace.

With every positive, there is a negative across the board in life. It's about choosing to see the positive and working with the negative.

My main concern is my kids. And I don't want them to see or hear anything on TV that I didn't discuss with them.

Each day the thought crosses my mind that when they get older, my kids are going to look back and think about how they were raised. I know they will have a lot of questions about things that may not make sense because they were raised so unconventionally.

I'm not a mom that's going to tell my kids everybody wins.

You have to work really hard to be first place in life.

You have to be comfortable enough to take what people say about you and laugh.

Everyone makes mistakes, and they never go unnoticed when you're in the public eye.

I have a business-running personality.

I am a strong personality.

Drama gets in the way of getting work done.

I know that I'm glad to be divorced and on my own.

I wouldn't change my marriage because I have eight awesome kids that I would not change.

No phone, a movie, a glass of wine, and some salad. Perfect!

Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels.

People think your success is just a matter of having a pretty face. But it's easy to be chewed up and spat out. You've got to stay ahead of the game to be able to stay in it.

You can be a pretty face, but if you're not a nice person, it just doesn't work. I'm not traditionally a beauty, but apparently people think I'm all right. If you're a nice person, it definitely helps.

It's a sin to be tired.

I like a scarf with a shirt; it throws it off a bit.

I'm not really a fashion designer. I just love clothes. I've never been to design school. I can't sketch. I can't cut patterns and things. I can shorten things. I can make a dress out of a scarf.

Well, I met Frank Sinatra and Bob Dylan in the space of 15 minutes. Frank Sinatra kissed me on the lips. He kissed me on the lips. And then he gave me a filterless cigarette. And then I met Bob Dylan. I came off all lightheaded and had to go sit on his dressing-room steps.

The first time I went to New York, I went with my first boyfriend, Clark. His dad had just bought an apartment in New York, and my dad dropped us off, and we were there for a week on our own. I must have been 15 or 16. I remember I went to Harlem and bought a goose jacket. That was the hip, hot thing.

Even if I wore a hat and a wig, you can always tell it's me.

There's nobody that's ever really been able to take care of me. Johnny did for a bit. I believed what he said. Like if I said, 'What do I do?' he'd tell me. And that's what I missed when I left. I really lost that gauge of somebody I could trust.

It was kind of boring for me to have to eat. I would know that I had to, and I would.

What people say isn't going to stop me. I have to do things for myself.

With confidence, I think anyone can get a dress and make it their own. I don't think you should have it off the runway and wear it like they want you to wear it. You know, with their hair and makeup - their woman. I just think it's boring. You have to make it your own. That's what fashion is all about.

I think women are really good at multitasking. Men just cannot do it.

People don't hear me talk. They don't expect me to.

I don't really go to clubs anymore. I'm actually quite settled. Living in Highgate with my dog and my husband and my daughter! I'm not a hell-raiser. But don't burst the bubble. Behind closed doors, for sure, I'm a hell-raiser.

I was doing things that weren't good for me. So I checked into the Churchill Priory clinic. It was the best thing I've done for ages.

I love the Sixties with Julie Christie and Jane Birkin - those natural English beauties. That's the look that is most me, when I wore the tight-to-the knee dresses. I don't think I bleached my hair until I was 20. I like experimenting for big occasions, though. You've always got to do a bit of a number for the birthday!

Once I was walking from The Mercer in New York - because otherwise I don't walk anywhere - and this woman paparazzo who was following me fell over a fire hydrant and her whole tooth went through her lip. I leant over her, saying, 'Are you all right?' and she was still taking pictures.

I always put on Chanel No 5 after I've had a bath or before I go to bed. If I'm going out, I'll layer other fragrances on top.

Now I'm being blamed not only for anorexia but for lung cancer. - On being a social smoker.

If the plane lost all my luggage, and I was somewhere sunny like Ibiza, I would just get a bikini, shorts, T-shirt, and sandals. If it was somewhere colder like New York, I'd go for jeans, jacket, and a pair of Louboutins.

When you're shooting you go to references in your mind. You think about how you should stand in these particular clothes, or how you should move. You think about the different characters you're playing, really.

Modeling can be a bit brain damaging. Starting my own brand was what I needed to do. I only model if there are such good jobs that you don't want to say no to. All that dressing up makes me say, 'What do I want to wear?' and, 'What do I want to do with Topshop?' It all kind of leads into the other things.

In my next life, I'm going to be a rock star. I was a ballerina in my last life.

Modeling is a job. Even my mum doesn't believe that I do work hard.

I worked with Herb Ritts on the Marky Mark shoot, and then Steven Meisel, and then they'd start sending limos for me, and I was like, 'That is so embarrassing. I'm not getting in a stretch limo by myself to go to a shoot.' That whole New York thing of, 'You are fabulous! Turn up to a Meisel shoot in a limo and you're fabulous!'