Campbell: My temper stems from childhood abandonment

NAOMI CAMPBELL fought back tears as she said her infamous temper had its roots in being abandoned as a child.

Campbell: My temper stems from childhood abandonment

In an interview with Oprah Winfrey, the supermodel said she felt “ashamed” of her behaviour.

In the hour-long chat, Campbell says: “It comes from a deeper place, from another type of emotional disorder.

Her mother, Valerie Morris, who had Campbell when she was 19, left her daughter in another person’s care while she travelled the world to pursue her dream of being a ballerina.

Morris, who was sitting in the audience with Campbell’s Russian tycoon boyfriend Vladimir Doronin, told Winfrey: “I do feel that I abandoned her. Looking back on that, you know, you sort of realise that material possessions are not the only thing that a child needs. But, sometimes, that child needs its biological mother.”

Campbell, who had tears in her eyes after her mother spoke, said of her own behaviour: “It’s not just, ‘I don’t get what I want. I throw’. It comes from, I think, an abandonment issue, and it comes from also just trying to build up a family around me that’s not my immediate family. And if I feel a mistrust, then I really just ... all my cards go down.”

The 39-year-old added that she felt “ashamed of everything I’ve ever done. I take responsibility for the things that I have done, and I do feel a great sense of shame”, she said.

In 2000, Campbell pleaded guilty to assaulting her personal assistant and in 2003 she was sued by another assistant who claimed she had thrown her telephone at her.

Just a year later the she was accused of slapping her maid around the face, and in 2005 another personal assistant accused Naomi of hitting her over the head with her BlackBerry handset.

In 2006, she was arrested after she threw a jewel-encrusted mobile phone at her housekeeper.

She was arrested again in April 2008 at Heathrow airport on suspicion of assaulting a police officer after one of her suitcases went missing. Campbell was sentenced to 200 hours community service after admitting kicking and spitting at officers on board a BA plane.

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