MiNDFOOD (New Zealand)

GET TO KNOW ADRIA ARJONA

-

Which emotions does fragrance evoke for you?

I smell everything and I love to smell everything. Sometimes it’s a virtue but it’s a curse also because it just reminds me of the good times and the bad times. I use it a lot in acting as well. Every character that I’ve ever played has a different scent. Finding the character’s scent is the most beautiful journey in creating a character. Someone else’s scent tells you a lot about who they are.

You are half Guatemalan and half Puerto Rican – does having roots in two different cultures influence the way you see the world?

A lot! Coming from Guatemala, I can live in a place like Los Angeles and still understand that I am in a bubble. I live in a bubble and I’m aware of it. I understand what’s going on with the politics around our world and what is happening with the environmen­t.

I go to Guatemala three times a year. I see how people live, what they suffer, the difference­s in terms of economic wealth, and that’s the same in Puerto Rico. The weather has affected us and destroyed our island, but with good spirit, patience, laughter and great salsa music, we brought that island back together. Being both Guatemalan and Puerto Rican has helped me to see the world and to remind me that we’re not all in this tiny little bubble.

What is your vision of beauty?

Beauty is a little tricky for me in some ways, because here I am, being the face of a fragrance, and I look the way I look, but I did nothing for it. I just have two parents who met and created me, and I just came out the way that I came out.

Beauty goes way beyond the physical. It is whatever you portray from the inside. That’s why I’m so in love with people’s eyes. Relying only on physical beauty is a huge mistake, but having something a little bit more and having that little sparkle in your eye, that’s beautiful.

Beauty is a woman or a man who is secure, comfortabl­e with being unique, with being herself or himself, and who is unapologet­ic. I love seeing someone who doesn’t apologise for who she or he is.

To me, it’s not only beautiful, but it also takes a lot of courage to just be yourself, so I guess the beauty I like is the courageous kind.

What made you the woman you are today?

Experience­s have made me who I am today, both positive and negative. My failures and my struggles have made me.

I feel stronger and more secure in myself each time I overcome an obstacle in my life. It has helped me accept and be proud of who I am.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand