The lovely
and talented Taylor Swift
It's
sometimes hard to believe that the country cutie is only 22.
Taylor
Swift likes to wear the pants…metaphorically speaking.
The
22-year-old girly girl is rarely caught in any trousers, preferring frilly
dresses, but Swift is still totally in control.
“There’s just something so feminine about a dress,” she told Harper’s
Bazaar , in their December/January issue. “Whether it’s a summertime dress that
makes me feel carefree, an evening cocktail dress that makes me feel fancy or a
vintage dress that makes me feel like a ’50s housewife — which I enjoy feeling
like, for some reason — I just really like dresses.”
But don’t
let Swift’s dresses fool you. The pop and country sweetheart is a force to be
reckoned with. She is her own manager, and she even takes charge of her
finances, handling her $57 million fortune.
"When
I'm in management meetings when we're deciding my future, those decisions are
left up to me," she told the magazine. "I'm the one who has to go out
and fulfill all these obligations, so I should be able to choose which ones I
do or not. That's the part of my life where I feel most in control."
So what’s
one area where Swift is willing to cede a bit of control? Her love life. Swift
explained that she thinks relationships are “the ultimate collaboration.”
“It needs to be equal. If I feel too much like I’m wearing the pants, I
start to feel uncomfortable and then we break up.”
And break
up she does. Swift reportedly called it quits with Connor Kennedy last month,
and before that she dated teen idols like John Mayer, Joe Jonas and Jake
Gyllenhaal. And let’s not forget that brief time when she and Taylor Lautner
got together, and the “Taylors” traipsed around town, confusing everyone with
their identical names.
To cope
with these breakups, the singer turns to her music. She said her songs help her
understand the worst parts of her breakups.
“Some combinations of people are toxic, you know? You have to find the
right one that isn’t just going to explode into fiery ash and destruction,” she
said. “Despite all of that and how unpleasant it is, as a writer you get a lot
from it. It’s a crazy justification system. You know that guy you really wish
you could erase from your memory? But then the answer is track six, eight, 12,
and 13.”
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