Photo: courtesy Pandora

Ashley Graham for pandora

Ashley Grahamis never one to sugarcoat. The curve model and entrepreneur — who could teach a masterclass on the art of real talk — is happy to use her platform to further conversations about body acceptance and to be a voice for other women who look like her.

“There will never be a time in my life where I’m not talking about my body. There just won’t,” Graham tells PEOPLE. “It’s just a reality of who I am and the ethos of my brand. Can you imagine waking up every morning and having to talk about something that you think the world should just get over?”

As a curve model who isvocal about body-positivity and self-love, Graham, 34, has dedicated her brand to being outspoken on anything and everything related to empowerment and searching for more acceptance in society. “Hey, if I have to talk about it constantly to wake people up, to shake things up, that’s fine,” she says of discussing her curves. “I don’t mind — I’ll use my body for all of that. Also, I love empowering women.”

courtesy Pandora

Ashley Graham for pandora

“It’s interesting to think about how, as women, we just are constantly living in our lives, and we are met with hardship or we’re met with obstacles or we’re met with celebrations — but we rarely take a moment to say, ‘I made it through that.’ or ‘Good job,'” Graham tells PEOPLE. “What we wanted to do with this Pandora collection is to celebrate women and their milestones, big and small.”

“[The breakup] was nasty and took a year to get out of it,” she tells PEOPLE. “I remember looking at the necklace I picked — one of those spin necklaces that you hit and as it’s spinning, it reads, ‘I love you’ — and it was such a good reminder to love myself and take control of my own destiny rather than putting it in the hands of someone else.”

That necklace may not have been expensive, as Graham says she “couldn’t afford a diamond” at that point in her life, but it was the message behind it of putting herself first that made it special. “Even though I don’t wear it daily now, that necklace is my reminder to love myself,” she says.

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Ashley Graham for pandora

It’s a reminder for Graham especially when she has those moments of doubt as a plus-size woman just “taking up space” in the world. “I’m just ready for society to be in a place where we don’t have to champion something that just should be, that just is,” she says of existing as a plus-size person. But it’s the growing acceptance of all body types that keeps her going.

Though she acknowledges that the fashion industry and society as a whole are slowly coming around to being less fatphobic, there’s still a ways to go and “so much to change.”

Graham, who has proudlyshowed off her stretch marks on red carpetsand walked in plenty of runway shows, doesn’t mind being that voice for other plus-size women, because she knows there are so many more just like her who are also helping fashion move toward more acceptance.

“We’re out here doing what we can,” she says. “Hopefully, the generation behind us, and then the generation after that keep it going.”

source: people.com