
Chalk it up to the New Year and the exciting things happening in my life (more on that later), but I’ve been thinking a lot about my career thus far as I work on on plans the next stage. This, of course, leads me to both face past mistakes and reminisce on the highlights. Over the course of 15 years as a journalist, I covered a wildly diverse mix of subjects—from welfare moms in West Virginia trailer parks, to haute couture shows at the Chanel townhouse in Paris. When considering this myriad of stories and people, my favorite—hands down—was one I did on Diane von Furstenberg when she launched a fine jewelry line several years ago.
Sure, her stature as one of the most famous female fashion designers in history was alluring, as was the location (her private office in New York’s Meatpacking District... yes, that's a shot we took beside her famous Warhol prints). But what makes it my favorite was how inspiring I found Diane herself. How can you not be charmed by a woman who, at the pinnacle of her success in the international fashion arena, pads into her office barefoot to meet the reporter and ask for input on what she should wear? A woman who—fittingly—prominently displays a small Wonder Woman statue in her office? A woman whose life story is an ode to faith in second chances.
After arriving in New York on the arm of a prince, becoming a society darling and building a fashion empire in the 1970s, Diane watched her marriage fall apart and her empire crumble into financial ruin. She retreated for a while, regrouped, dabbled in other areas, learned from her mistakes; then launched her current fashion label in 1997. From there, it’s been nowhere but up.
Diane’s confidence in her career and comfort in her own skin struck me when I met her but, being personally on the heels of my own short-lived and disastrous marriage that led to my own flight from New York, confidence and comfort seemed very foreign, unattainable things to me at the time. Today, however, I finally have them locked in my sights as I head into 2012.
Regarding her re-emergence in the 1990s, Diane once told the New York Times: "This time around I decided I was going to be very much who I really am."
Ditto that.


