Gloria Camila Ortega has surprised many in her last public appearance, daring to talk about issues as intimate as her adoption process in an interview before the microphones of Europa Press.

“Really, I think that we adopted people are neither less nor more, but we are grateful in the sense that they have given us a new life,” Gloria Camila assured with tears in her eyes. “I could be, perhaps as they say, collecting cassava but I also value it in the sense that nobody really knows the pain or damage that coming from there has caused,” she added.

The influencer has acknowledged having sought professional help to work on the traumas derived from her childhood. “I am learning a lot with the psychologist that mine does not come from now that they insult me ​​or that they tell me, it comes from childhood traumas or affective deficiencies that I learn that those faults are emotional, they come from behind,” he said. visibly excited.

In addition, the young woman has indicated that the fact of being adopted should never be used as a disqualification. “I am a super grateful person and that they make those kinds of comments or that they attack you, that it is an insult. In the end we have taken it as an insult when someone makes a comment, even in movies, ‘this is my adopted brother’, we have normalized that and it is like very ugly ”, she explained.

Ortega Cano’s daughter has also spoken about the hateful and racist messages that she has received through social networks and has confessed that they affect her: “Crying in therapy, that job leaves me as soon as I see a message in which they threaten you of death or have racist comments about ‘go back to your country’ or ‘they should not have adopted you’, he said.

“I am in the process, but it is difficult for me. In fact, if I talk about this, I cry. I have come to wonder if I really deserved to be a daughter or not and if I even had to say ‘I change my last name and make a new life outside from another site’”, he expressed.

Finally, Gloria Camila has stated that she does not believe in eternal happiness. “I don’t believe in happiness, at least, eternal or permanent. I believe that we can be happy at some specific moment in our lives, but I just can’t find happiness as such or at least I’m not living it. I’ve been submerged for a long time as in a loop of not knowing where to go, where to go ”, he has settled.