Paulina Porizkovawould define 2023 as no less than a “year of change.”

During this time, the 58-year-old supermodel and writer has learned to accept herself andlet go of the past. The desire to put her unfiltered self “out there” encompassed part of that journey, whether it was sharing photos of herselfmakeup-freeorin a bikini.

“As soon as you start filtering yourself or auto-tuning your photos and stuff, well then, it’s not really all that authentic anymore,” Porizkova told PEOPLE. “I feel a responsibility to put myself out there as I am.”

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Paulina Porizkova

“We’ve suffered these enormous losses and our lives have been blown up,” Porizkova recalled. “I don’t even know who I am and I’m middle-aged and I feel like I’m getting lost. You don’t just lose the person that you love – you lose a sense of yourself.”

Her rediscovery stemmed from realizing her needs were not “secondary” to the needs of others, regardless of her role as a wife and mother. By spending more time learning how to accept herself, she was no longer looking for “the same kind of things” in a significant other as she had before. That led Porizkova to meet her current boyfriend, television writer and producerJeff Greenstein, just three days into the new year.

Self-acceptance in aging has delivered far more benefits than just a significant other for the Swedish model, who believes freedom can be found after menopause.

“One of the incredible things about aging is that you care less and less about what other people think,” Porizkova admitted. “You’re like, ‘You know what? I’ve done my bit. I’ve been serving everybody else for 50 years – now, it’s my turn.’”

Paulina Porizkova/ instagram

Paulina Porizkova

While the formerSports Illustratedcover model still is looking for “ultimate freedom” from societal expectations, she appreciates the “enormous” amount of wisdom she’s gained.

“I know without a doubt that I am the best that I’ve ever been,” Porizkova said. “Why do I need improvement? I’m in my prime right now. I’m sorry that you think my wrinkles dismiss me from being in my prime, but as a person, as a fully formed woman at the height of her power, this is it.”

Navigating two different identities has proved to be a new challenge for the writer. At book events, she resonates more with the women who know her “Instagram me” as opposed to those who come because of her modeling days with Estée Lauder. Fighting the urge to “not chase youth” or “pretend that she is younger” is a kind of acceptance she admits to still be “working on.”

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Paulina Porizkova during the Ernsting’s family Fashion Show 2022 at Hotel Atlantic on June 20, 2022 in Hamburg, Germany.

The same goes for managing changes in the body post-menopause, including weight gain. After exercising more (“great for my emotional state … [but] it made me be more hungry”) she found her happy medium withintermittent fasting, where, she says, “it’s all about balance.”

“I don’t eat very much, but when I eat, I eat the stuff I want to eat,” Porizkova explained of her routine, which she’s done the past four years. “Sometimes they’re very healthy, and sometimes they aren’t, because they make me happy.”

In comparison, she felt she was never too “comfortable” during her modeling career because of its objectification. However, she still looks back with a sense of gratitude.

“I’m working on this as hard as I can,” Porizkova said. “This self-acceptance thing, the looking at yourself in the mirror and going, ‘Okay, well, looking older than I did yesterday, but you know what? When I’m 70, I’ll think back at this time as like, ‘Damn, I was pretty hot. What was I complaining about?’”

source: people.com