My reputation was that I had bad BO, and I was poor, and I was ugly.

I'm not gender-fluid. I'm not gender-nonconforming. I'm not gender-free.

To be existing at all is beautiful simply because of how complicated and unexplainable being alive really is.

When a brand says, 'Our product is great, and we think it'll be great for anyone that loves it, too,' that's the ultimate marketing message.

You have to be satiated with just being authentically yourself at the end of the day.

Gender is a shackle.

I hope, by never hiding, I can show there is never anything to be ashamed of when we are being our true selves.

I want people to realize that they aren't their bodies. They are something more than their bodies.

When I get dressed, I don't think about what other people think. I only think, 'Is this me? Is this my truth? Am I able to move through this world with confidence? Am I able to move through this world feeling that I am I?'

Victoria's Secret is a brand, not a socio-political movement. But at the same time, there is that one-dimensional look.

We've established a world that's binary gendered, and I don't want to be disadvantaged at all. If being male is going to be more advantageous than being female, I'm all about it. I don't really think it's that important.

When I put on a dress, people have a lot of questions to ask, so I like putting on a dress just to get people to ask those questions and open up a dialogue.

I've been told I'd make a great parts model.

During my career path, I've experienced first-hand what people deem as beautiful. It's not me. It's not most people. It's limited and small.

I will conquer Femmeness... And then, I will turn it on its head and redefine it for the world to see.

The way woman is defined by marketable modeling and commercial standards... It makes me feel alien to myself.

My body is sometimes this thing I look at and think, 'What strange, alien thing grew around my consciousness?' It's like this weird fungus that's just there.

You could ask a lot of people in my childhood, and they'd say I was very prudish about showing off skin.

Use she, he, it, one, they. You could call me mow mow, and I honestly don't care. A pronoun is just a sound. All I'm listening for in that sound is positivity.

I look like what we have taught society a lesbian looks like. I just do. I have the short hair. I got the muscles.

I find when I'm perceived as male in society, there is an enormous amount of pressure, but it comes with respect, so it's a balance.

The me that is me is not my body. It's an awareness and an experience.

What it means to look like a woman or man changes regionally - from mannerisms to clothes to posture to makeup to even your vocals - so I just observe, and I replicate.

The reason people wear the things that they wear and accept the standards that they accept is because most athletes make a good portion of their money in advertising and doing campaigns afterwards.