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Tuesday 1 November 2011

Thalia Details Private Moments In His New Book


NEW YORK (AP) - Thalia was known most of his life. The singer and TV highlights of nova actress and painful struggles have been well documented by the media following his every move.

However, his new book, "we are stronger", contains disclosures that may surprise even her biggest fans - how at the age of 6 years, the death of her beloved father has caused such great impact that could not make noise about a year. or the guilt that was home after removal of their sisters in Mexico in 2002. Or how her husband, music mogul Tommy Mottola's won his heart.

Thalia, 40, told The Associated Press last week in the chapters of your life, sometimes laughing, and tears, remembering her mother, Yolanda Miranda, who died last May, just a month before she gave birth his son (who also has a 3 year old daughter.

"It 'a very intimate book in which I expose to 1000 (percent), without a mask, not a small place to guard," said Thalia.


The book was published on Tuesday.

AP: What made you write this book right now in your life?

Thalia: This is the moment I am very sure of what they are, very successful, very quiet, satisfied with what I have done in my life, both personally and professionally. I thought it was important opportunity to share stories, experiences and good evil ... hoping that somehow, in my experience can help the lives of others.

AP: You touch the subjects pleased that your success, your marriage and your children. But also delve into very painful for them. How hard was to revisit your past?

Thalia: I am exposed and left me vulnerable. ... It was very difficult for me to put my life on paper. This process was very intimate, very psychological, but liberating at the same time. It was like cleaning the closet, like cleaning the house. ... It was very refreshing.

AP: Is it cathartic in some way?

Thalia: Yeah (laughs). ... This book really gave me the opportunity to save as a woman as a human being as a child, as an artist, and really helped me restructure my mind, psychologically, physically, spiritually, and get shiny, clean, ready for another adventure in my life.

AP: What were the most discussed topics you?

Thalia: I think that life in general, that no man, has its ups and downs, moments of great light, and moments of great darkness. In my case, it seems to me that maybe those moments were really extreme: they were either too high or too low. And I thought it was an opportunity to grow as human beings, to learn, sharing these stories, and also to make others see that there is a chance to feel good despite the tragedy.

AP: You were expecting your second child when you wrote this book, and hormonal changes tend to make it more vulnerable. Maybe this will help your heart to speak in this book?

Thalia: yes. Surely having been pregnant during the trial, was part of the feeling of opening up the inside of my mom as well. ... When you're pregnancy, you will feel full of life, you feel full of joy, you feel full of fantasy stories. And this was a special moment that fate has decided to put this book on my way.

AP: Your mother must have read this book, and also helped to change it, how to write an overture. What did he say?


Thalia: the book was already finished, and my mother came to visit me a week before what happened to (his death). I gave him the manuscript. I told him: "In this book, let's see what you think." And not only him read it yet, but as soon as he finished the last page, he began again. And we began to remember these stories. And we started to add anecdotes that have been left out. We started to laugh. And he began to cry. And for me it was a very important moment, because it was also the possibility that a week before his death, re-live all your life, all those times we spent together, my birth ... greatest moments of my career. Perhaps this book, also gave the closing of some (things).

AP: I know you two were very close that you talked about every day ... What will you miss most about it?

Thalia: It 'just that. Every day is like a wish to dial a number and nobody answers. Getting a place to sit and think, 'I'm going to text him "but does not have anyone to send a message. ... The fact that he is not here physically, it is painful. ... It' s something that I have not worked on a daily basis, or by the hour, but minute by minute. I try to be stronger here every day.

___

Online:

http://www.thalia.com

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