Kendall Jenner Is In Her Feelings for Vogue’s June/July 2024 Cover
At first glance, there was nothing atypical about the photos Kendall Jenner shared following her New Yearâs trip to Barbados: of string bikinis and gauzy dresses, palm trees in silhouette against sunsets, wine glasses clanking, fireworks popping. But if you were searching for a dissonant note, you might find it in the copy of The Year of Magical Thinking, Joan Didionâs wrenching 2005 memoir of grief and loss, splayed on the green canvas of Jennerâs sun lounger.
âSomebody said, âDamn, thatâs a beach read for you?!ââ â she recalls. âI would read a few pages on the sand, and then my friends would come out and theyâd be like, âTake a shot!ââ â
A meditation on the peculiar tricks an imagination may play to avoid a goodbye surely chafed against the spirit of the party weekend. But such mental toggling is classic Kendall Jenner. The heavy stuff bubbles up to the point of overflowing, and thatâs when friends and sisters and horses and other salves come to the rescue. âItâs kind of interesting that weâre wired to not think about death all the time,â Jenner muses. âAnd yet we donât know the concept of never-âending. We canât visualize a never-ending universe, but at the same time, nothing scares me more than the end of something. Iâm so bad at goodbyes.â She catches herself and starts to laugh. What better defense against the dark than humor? âThese are the thoughts that creep into my mind. I canât let myself get too deep into them, or else I spiral.â
Such is the tenor of the chatter one day in early spring on Jennerâs back patio, in her home in a gated enclave at the crest of Beverly Hills, halfway between the twin fulcrums of her life: Calabasas (her hometown) and Los Angeles International Airport. The sky is a blue that occurs in Los Angeles only after the rain has rinsed the atmosphere of all man-made assaults. A month earlier, a mudslide landed in and was essentially contained by her swimming pool, though a breeze seen in the surface ripples and heard in the fruit trees and palms has made this a distant memory.
Mud in the water is an apt metaphor for that habit of mind that has been Jennerâs burden since she was a little girl. âIâm a negative thinker,â she says. âThatâs my problem. Iâm always worrying about something that may never happen.â Sunshine filters in wide stripes through the dark wooden pergola above us, but there is a chill in the air, and Jenner sits with her knees up and her legs tucked completely inside a giant gray wool sweater from The Row. (âI donât wear anything else,â she says, exaggerating, though street style observers can confirm that Jenner has made a decisive shift into quiet luxury these last months.) She sees no reason not to say plainly that I have caught her in the middle of a rough patch. âI donât see why I shouldnât be honest about it. In my career right now I feel really stable, really hopeful. But Iâve had a tough two months. I havenât been myself, and my friends see it. Iâm more sad than usual. Iâm way more anxious than usual. So Iâm not going to sit here and act like everythingâs perfect. Thatâs lifeâIâm always going to be in and out of those feelings. In past interviews, when someoneâs asked me about my mental state, itâs always been, âIâm great right now, but this is what Iâve dealt with.â Well, right now Iâm actually in it.â
Because Jenner developed in the great Kardashian public image incubator, habitually in front of the camera since Keeping Up With the Kardashians premiered when she was 11 (now simply called The Kardashians), she is a master of the art of talking about feelings while distilling out the facts that might have shaped them. Boyfriends? Breakups? She knows much better than to go there. âLetâs just say itâs personal-life-journey stuff,â she says. âIâm a stresser and a control freak by nature. Iâll thank my mom for that one. This is also kind of a transitional period for me. Iâm 28 now, and I think Iâm in my Saturn return.â (For the astrologically uninclined, Saturn, which revolves around the sun every 29.5 years, is the planet of wisdom and personal responsibility, and so a Saturn return involves the shaking off of external influences such as parents, teachers, and bosses, and becoming superintendent of oneâs own life.) âIâm so tired emotionally, but I think itâs good. Itâs almost like Iâm purging something for my 30s. Thatâs my theory.â
If transitions sound a little bit like goodbyes, itâs no wonder Jenner should find herself psychically wobbly. This year marks her 10th anniversary as a model, a time for celebration and also, perhaps, recalibration. Though there was assorted juveniliaâa Forever 21 campaign, covers of American Cheerleader and Teen PromâJenner regards landing Marc Jacobsâs fall 2014 show as the true beginning of her career. Eyebrow-less, bewigged, in a sheer brown V-neck T-shirt that left no nipple to the imagination, she was as anonymous as her already operational fame permitted. âI really went into that season thinking, I donât know how this is going to go, but Iâm just going to try,â she recalls. âThen I booked Marc Jacobs, and I thought, Cool, if this is all I get, I can go home happy.â Then Riccardo Tisci of Givenchy called. And soon after, Chanel. âThat was kind of like, What the fuck? This is crazy. This is actually happening. I remember the excitement and the disbelief of that time. And from there the takeoff was really fast.â
In a fickle business, her power has proven uncommonly durable; Jenner is the worldâs highest paid model for six years running. And while her familyâs celebrity may have provided entrĂ©e, or at least invited curiosity, it was not an unalloyed advantage. Back then, the Kardashian name evoked either a luxe-suburban vapidity or a meretricious Hollywood style, neither of which had the warm embrace of the fashion atelier. Marc Jacobs remembers having to rise above that initial skepticism when the stylist Katie Grand, his longtime collaborator, suggested he meet Jenner.
LIFT ME UP
Rabanne top and skirt.
âKatie knew me well enough to know that I wasnât excited by the Kardashian fame,â he explains. âI just wasnât, to be very honest. I was aware of who they were. There was no judgment. But I have a job to do, a fashion show, and that means finding models who can show the clothes the way I think they should be shown. That show was very much about the uniformity of the cast. Some are more about individuality and maybe exaggerating different modelsâ features and personalities. But in this one there was this almost narcotic-like pull to the thing. It was this army of the same person. Kendall couldnât be Kendall Jenner at all. It was really about anonymityâwhich is kind of ironic, and that irony appeals to me.â
It appealed to Jenner too because she was so eager to prove people wrong. âI think they didnât believe in me when I came into the industry. Thatâs been a constant narrative in the hater world online, and at times thatâs been really hard,â she acknowledges. âBut I always say, I like being a pleasant surprise. I like that motivation in a wayâlike, Oh, you thought? You thought! Fashion is always shifting. There are always new vibes and energies. When I came into it, you didnât really see quote-unquote famous girls. Cara Delevingne was probably the biggest one who was known outside of modeling. She opened that door for me, and from there it blew up into a whole new thing. Now thereâs another vibe coming through. Youâre seeing a lot of social media creators at the shows. Itâs great. Itâs always just shifting and changing, and you take it day by day. I suss out the vibe. Does it align with me? If it still does, great. You donât know whatâs around the corner.â
Jacobs feels that while some designers look to leverage the fame of their models, as has lately occurred with the reappearance on runways of the â90s Supers, there is a real risk that the clothes themselves will disappear beneath those outsize auras. (Addressing this distortion, Jacobsâs fall 2024 show had models walk among an oversized table and chairs by the artist Robert Therrien, as if to make them small again.) âWhen you put Kendall or Kaia or Gigi or Bella in a show, you can expect that most of what you will read online the following day is about those four people being in the show,â he says. âYou will know very little about the collection. I think thatâs problematic. But this idea of a personality as a great model is just where weâre at. What might have been the story in the 1970s, with a Lauren Hutton, who started off as a model and became super well-known as a modelânow things are different. I think Kendallâs beautiful. She wears clothes with confidence. I think sheâs also super nice and charming. She photographs well. She has all the things, but then also this thing that makes her very of this moment, this reality-celebrity thing. There are two ways you can deal with that. You can say, I donât want anything to do with this, or say, This is real and I can embrace it. I think thatâs the way you go with Kendall.â
RIDING HIGH
No activity keeps Jenner quite as present as being on a horse. âIn the moment, itâs all I care about,â she says. Balenciaga dress.
Jenner and her sister Kylie grew up in a vast blended family that included eight older half-siblings. The shyest of the brood, she was perhaps the least temperamentally equipped for life on the reality show that her mother, Kris, pitched to Ryan Seacrest in 2007. She liked to be alone, she liked to ride horses, and she struggled to make inroads with her peers. Watching Kylie, two years younger, move so easily among her friends was sometimes painful. Jenner believes she has suffered from anxiety since she was seven years old, though back then she didnât have a name for the feeling. She often approached her mother complaining of difficulty breathing, and Kris found it hard to reassure her. Doctor visits ensued, and she would invariably check out fine. âI was an emotional kid, always in my feelings and my head,â she remembers. âI freaked myself out a bit.â She learned much later that those boom-out-of-nowhere bursts of dread, accompanied by a mix of physical symptoms, were panic attacks.
Fashion cured her of her shyness, as she hoped it would. âI remember being that awkward kid at the beginning of my modeling career and thinking to myself, Iâm going to come out of this,â she says. âItâs such a social jobâworking with photographers and stylists and creative directors all day longâand thatâs how things started to click for me. I tend to get really emotional now talking about my friendships. I still find myself standing at the edge of a conversation at a big social event, but now I have the most incredible friend group, and as a kid I just didnât have that. Iâm huge on the people in my life. I love getting to know people, I love holding on to people from my past. Iâm completely the opposite of the super-shy kid that I was.â
BREAK TIME
Valentino Haute Couture dress.
But a year or two into her modeling career, the panic attacks returned. Air travel, that bane of those who hate to cede control, seemed to invite them. âI remember having these meltdowns on planes,â she says. âThey would come out of nowhere. Iâd be like, Oh my God, oh my God, somethingâs wrong with my heart: palpitations, shortness of breath, dizziness, double vision, tingles. The whole thing. Iâd call my mom hysterically crying and say, âI need them to stop the plane, I need them to turn around.â â In the years since then, Jenner has built a formidable arsenal in defense of her well-being: deep breathing, distraction, meditation, journaling, weekly psychotherapy, periodic consultations with a spiritual healer. Itâs now been two years since her last panic attack.
âKendall is somebody who really cares about growing and knowing herself better and going deeper with herself,â her best friend, Hailey Bieber, explains. âI really respect that about her. Weâre not stingy with each other when it comes to sharing the stuff weâve done or learned or tried, whether thatâs cold plunges or saunas, a really cool naturopath, a new skin-care product or supplement, a trainer, or somebody who does sound baths. Itâs nice when your friend is as into taking care of herself as you are, and we share a little black book of wellness contacts.â
But surviving an onslaught of arrows that fly daily through the tiny holes in her self-esteem has proven more difficult than mere stress management. Jenner has an old and uneasy relationship with âthe haters.â She remembers a moment years ago, in the early days of Keeping Up, when her sister KhloĂ© gave her some advice about how to navigate social media: âShe said to me, âYouâll scroll through comments and youâll see a kajillion I love youâs, youâre great, youâre so pretty, youâre the best. And the one comment thatâs not nice is the one youâre going to harp on.â Itâs so true. Theyâre just soâŠloud. But why do we fixate on these? Are they a projection of our own insecurities? A huge thing I work on in therapy is feeling worthy of where Iâm at and knowing that I canât let whatâs being said about me on the internet, especially about my worthiness, get in my head too much. I let it get there, and I think thatâs what brings me down a lot of the time.â
Jenner doesnât particularly believe the hype about Kendall Jenner. And while this might serve to keep her grounded, it also tends to play into that well-worn worry: Does she deserve to be on that cover, in that dress, next to that man, or whatever it is that piques her detractors on a given day? âI do have that impostor syndrome of, like, Wait, this is all happening to me? What did I do to deserve it?â Someone once told her that anxiety cannot exist in gratitude. This clicked for her, and itâs something she tries to keep constantly in mind. âI think Iâm one of the luckiest girls in the world, and I appreciate every one who has decided to follow meââsome 294 million on Instagram as of last countââbut I also sit there and Iâm like, I feel so regular.â
In these recent doldrums, Jenner confesses to abandoning what for her is a first principle when it comes to her mental health. Cognitive behavioral therapists call it behavioral activation, which essentially means doing the things that experience has shown you will make you feel better. âThis is one of those times when I feel Iâm actively not protecting myself or actively doing things that I know are hurting me,â she explains. âThatâs such an important part of my wellness: recognizing those moments and saying, Stop! Itâs not one-size-fits-all, but for me, getting out of bed in the morning and putting one foot in front of the other is so helpful for me. Moving, getting my blood flowing. When I say Iâm struggling right now, Iâm not doing those helpful things. Choosing to sit in my bed and mope all day is setting myself up for failure.â
But this is the paradox of behavioral activation: The times when itâs most important are the very times when itâs hardest to muster. Jenner believes in the interdependence of thoughts, feelings, and behavior, the classic cognitive triad of CBT. Recently she bought a little book she found on TikTok, Joseph Nguyenâs Donât Believe Everything You Think, that has helped her to think more positively so that she can go out and act more positively. And for Jenner, no activity nourishes her quite like riding her horses, the great pastime of her childhood that fell into remission in the first flush of her career but returned when the demands of work left her brittle and exhausted. She now keeps two jumpers, Dylandra and Lady Bird, at a stable in the deep San Fernando Valley. Her trail horse, Arizona, lives in Hidden Hills near her mother and sisters. And a foal, Copernicus, which she bred herself, is kept in Santa Barbara until he is old enough to train. She calls it a âhealthy addiction,â but the fact that horseback riding was her first passion is crucial to its power.
âI always encourage anyone, especially my friends, to pick up something they loved doing as a kid,â she says. (With this in mind, Jenner recently encouraged Bieber, who was a serious ballerina in childhood, to return to ballet class.) âWhenever I go ride, of course itâs a great excuse to get outside and not be on my phone and forget about work and fully put my brain and my energy into how Iâm going to get my horse over these obstacles. But thereâs something about the nostalgia of it. I liked this so much as a kid, but as a kid youâre working with a trainer, and your parents wonât get you the helmet or the crop you want. Now Iâm an adult and itâs all my choice and I can do all this for myself. Itâs like soul food for me. I loved this as a kid. It was something I did every day that I could. I was obsessed, likeâboys who? I feel like my kid self when Iâm out there.â
Responsibilities, compromises, Saturn return, and all thatâthere is no lasting escape from the weight of adult life. But there are refuges, and for Jenner, accessing her childhood self has become a cornerstone of her care routine. âIn therapy you talk about your childhood,â she says, âand I have an exercise that I do where I have pictures of me as a kid pasted on my bathroom mirror, and if I start to speak poorly to myself, I go talk to her. If someoneâs treated me poorly and Iâm taking it too hard, I go look at her and Iâll say, Iâll never let this happen to you again. I talk to her, like a freak.â She laughs. She knows it sounds corny. âItâs the same concept with riding. Iâm doing it for her. I still love it, but she just loved it so much. Itâs all she cared about, and in the moment itâs all I care about. There are so many big, bad, scary things to deal with when youâre an adult. As a kid, if you told me I couldnât go ride, it was the end of the world.â I ask if sheâs found a way to prevent the world from ending, after all. âYes! Thatâs it!â
Kris Jenner likes to tell the story of how she invited Russell James, the fashion photographer closely associated with Victoriaâs Secret, to her house one day to meet Kendall when she was about 15. Kris is unabashed about her stage-âmothering, and she credits James for setting her daughterâs early career in motion. âKendall decided very young exactly what she wanted to do, and it kind of became my mission to help her get there,â she explains. âSo I told her, âPut on your prettiest party dress and put a big bow in your hair,â like I always did. Instead Kendall came walking down the double staircase in the skinniest jeans, the biggest heels, her hair all messy. Kendall did Kendall, and the rest is history.â
To have spent nearly a decade at the pinnacle of modeling is a special feat; Jenner had no grand plan to achieve it and has no plan to keep it going. She surveys the landscape, sees other women she thinks are doing it better, and feels okay about it. She is competing with no one but herself, she insists. âGrowing up with sisters, you would think it would be the opposite,â she says. âEven with my little sisterâthe biggest thing we would fight over was the TV remote. There was never that whoâs-better-dressed, whoâs-prettier thing. It was always: Youâre you, Iâm me. Iâve never thought of my career as a competition, and thatâs thanks to awesome sisters. I really do me, and if you donât like it, thatâs okay. But I trust that me being the most authentic version of myself will get me to the places it needs to get me.â
Jenner still loves modeling, but her priorities have shifted somewhat. A few years ago, she launched 818 Tequila, and she has relished the quite different role it offers, in which she must consider how her leadership affects the morale of a growing team. (âI did not see this one coming,â Kris says.) Inevitably, the pressures of a new business have compelled her to be more particular about the fashion opportunities she entertains. âItâs a privilege to be able to say no,â she says. Meanwhile, she canât help watching models from the eras that preceded hers bob in and out of fashion and wondering how best to make use of the next decade or two. âThe first 10 years went by so fast, and the second 10 will go even faster. There are so many women who are older than me who still model at a really high level. I look at people like hot-ass Cindy Crawford and hot-ass Christy Turlington, and theyâre still as gorgeous as ever and having fun with it. Mariacarla [Boscono] is fucking bomb. Sheâs never looked better. I think that thatâs only exciting for me, and empowering for me to see women older than me who are smashing it.â
Turlington, whom she has never met, holds especial fascinationânot only as âthe most gorgeous woman to ever exist,â as Jenner puts it, but as a supermodel who somehow seemed to float above or apart from the world she inhabited, and who, when it was time, drifted away to focus on education, fashion, and philanthropy. âI spent a lot of time looking at her face as a kid,â Jenner recalls. âShe seemed so calm and collected. I really appreciated her energy through it all. And it feels like life outside modeling and family were really important to her. Relationships mean so much to me, and I canât wait to have a life with someone one day, to have kids, to create a family. Christy just gives good vibes. Maybe she cared a little bit less! I think thatâs really cool.â
Jenner is now the only daughter who isnât a mother herself and the only one who does not live within walking distance from her motherâs home. She didnât exactly intend to create a boundary when she bought a house in the city almost seven years ago. âBut I always am,â she explains. âEven as a kid, I always have been. There are days when I look at what they have and think, Thatâs really special. I do like being a little bit removed, but one day Iâll make my way, probably. When I was young I used to say that by 27 Iâd love to have kids. Now Iâm past that and I feel like Iâm still so young. Iâm enjoying my kidless freedom.â
TALL ORDER
Jacquemus dress. Khaite earrings.
When the world really does seem to be your oyster, when possibilities professional, romantic, and otherwise abound, how do you find that very personal equilibrium, somewhere between all of it and none of it? Jenner is a poster girl for the all-of-it generation, of lives lived globally, of working hard and playing hard from Aspen to the Super Bowl, from the Vanity Fair party to Easter luncheon at Momâs house. This evening, Jenner has a fitting for an upcoming trip to Paris; tomorrow morning, therapy at 8, a phone meeting at 9, and a press junket for the fifth season of The Kardashians immediately afterward. How much longer will she submit to the reality show cameras? âItâs not my biggest cup of tea,â she admits. âAnd to be honest, Iâve never been very comfortable filming. I just feel Iâm not good at it.â Sheâs grateful for the family time the show createsâbut if it were up to her, off-duty hours would simply be spent hanging at home, whether that means getting in bed early with a TV show or inviting a crew over to drink some tequila and watch a basketball game. Jenner has talked before about making every moment count. A nice idea, to be sure, but one sheâs not convinced she believes in.
MAKING A SPLASH
Ralph Lauren Collection dress.
âItâs really real to say that not every day is a magical day,â she offers. âSometimes the reality of life is that youâre just chilling. If itâs a Sunday and you have nothing to do and no one calls you, letâs please enjoy that as well. People think that life has to be these massive moments, and especially with social media, life is presented by a lot of people like, All these amazing things are happening to me and Iâm doing it all! No. This is something I have to remind myself. Not every day is meant to be the party. Some days are meant to be the chill.â
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