Be kind, don't judge, and have respect for others. If we can all do this, the world would be a better place. The point is to teach this to the next generation.
— Jasmine Guinness
I don't believe in diets, as I always put whatever I lost right back on again. I think we should all just eat healthily and get as much exercise as we can.
We have too many poisons in our diets now, like sugar and caffeine.
As a model, I travel non-stop.
Arnica is great. I got kicked in the stomach by a horse once, and some adult slapped arnica all over it, and I had no bruise at all to show for my pain.
I used to be frightened of the countryside after dark. Now I enjoy it. There is something wonderful about those strange country and wildlife noises.
I love 'Saturday Live' with Fi Glover. I find that very relaxing.
I've known my best friend since I was a baby, and I don't know what I would do without her. She is always straight with me and can make me laugh hysterically. Everyone should have someone like that in their life.
As a teenager, I was teased at school about my height and long legs, but now they are my best assets. Kids can be mean. When I was at school, I considered myself ugly, but that was when I was silly enough to believe that what other people thought mattered. Now I think I am pretty. I'm not beautiful. There is a difference.
Men are definitely getting more avant-garde, experimenting with colours, patterns and fabrics.
Because I was very big and she was very small, my mother had a horrible birth when I was born. So she always said: 'I'm never having any more kids!'
I was very lucky growing up, and I got all my dad's and aunts' toys from the 1950s and 1960s and loved those old pedal cars.
We've got to make greedy banks pass on interest rate cuts in full, and we've got to see rents coming down.
People talk about me as if I am the sole inheritor of the Guinness family fortune and worth masses, but I have hundreds of cousins.
It's really hard work being a model.
It's all very well setting up your own brand of face cream or exercise wear - but Christ, it's so shallow.
I knew nothing about my mum's family. Her parents were dead by the time she was 14. She was brought up by two aunts, and she only ever met one uncle.
I grew up in Ireland, so I do not have a lot of respect for most politicians.
I hate my hair! When clean, it is fuzzy, and when not clean, it is lank.
I always dreamt that I would marry in the Piazza Del Campo in Siena and go on my honeymoon down the Amazon, up the Nile, on a gallop through the pyramids, to Nepal and Kerala, on a safari and finally to Lake Titicaca in Peru.
People who read on holiday always have a better time because it's total escapism, both physically and mentally.
When I had my kids, I took a lot of homeopathic things, and I had them both with no painkillers.
While farmers' markets are booming in cities, actual rural market towns are in decline.
I'm a total technophobe. What is wrong with paper and pen? I was delighted when I learnt the word 'Luddite,' as I thought it described me perfectly.
My husband is experimental, loves to cook, and is really good at it. If I do the cooking, I lose my appetite. Why is that?
I have my father to thank for my build and height, and my mother to thank for my lips and eyes.
Being mum is a number one job. That takes priority.
I think children of divorced parents do grow up quicker. You just do.
My husband says he wants to have the best hay field in Britain. I can't wait.
The government has got to do something to help independent businesses.
People have always assumed that I am privileged. And that has been a problem sometimes. When I first started modelling, and I was schlepping around London with no money, I found it rather irksome that people thought I had a private income when I didn't.
I want to do something to help people.
I've worked since I was 18. I have no trust fund and don't expect anything.
People tend to assume that I come from a long line of castle-dwelling gentry and am made of money.
Books have always been an important part of my life.
I try not to wear too much makeup, as I think there comes a point where too much makes you look older.
I once stayed in a roach-infested hotel in Istanbul for a work trip. I had to share my room with a male model, and pointedly all we talked about was our other halves.
Drugs seem to turn people into paranoid bores. Why would anyone want to go there?
I spent a day in a neck brace on a hospital trolley after falling from a horse and cart in Ireland. All the nurses thought I was a traveler, which made me laugh. Who else comes into a hospital saying they've fallen off a horse and cart?
I always dress scruffily, but at weekends I live in muddy Wellies.
Since having kids, I am more careful about saving rather than splurging. I used to spend all my money on trainers and high heels that I couldn't walk in.
I'd never go under the knife because I have a phobia of needles.
My face hasn't matured as I've grown up, and neither has my sense of humour. In the mirror, I see an older version of myself as a child, although I do have more wrinkles and freckles.
Yes, I was on the cover of 'Vogue,' but girls on the cover of 'Vogue' are the most scared of rejection. Models are the most insecure of them all. Actually, actors and actresses are, and then musicians, and then models!
It was tough going to boarding school. It was very hard work.
It has long been a childhood dream of mine to have a farm.
I have always loved clothes, and the opportunity to design my own line could not be missed. It's a dream job.
In my twenties, I was obsessed with what other people thought of me. In my thirties, it's about my children, my husband, my work. In my forties, it's going to be about me, and I shan't care what anyone else thinks. I can't wait!
It's appalling how much money raised at some charity events gets wasted on paying personnel and admin staff.
Mum and I were delighted to find out we were descended from 'bog-trotters.'