Khloe Kardashian finds it hard to ask for help
Khloé Kardashian finds it hard to ask for help but is always the person her friends and family go to for advice and support.
Khloé Kardashian finds it hard to ask for help.
The 41-year-old reality star is often the first person her friends and family call on when they need help or support, but she struggles to ask them to return the favour because she always feels her problems are too insignificant to bother their busy lives with.
Speaking on SiriusXM's The Morgan Stewart Show, she said: “That's my problem. That's what I work on in therapy.
“I think I would call Kim [Kardashian] the most, but also — my personality — I'll say, 'Ugh. Kim is studying for the bar. She has four kids. She's acting,’ … and I will run this list down in my head and be like, ‘I'm not gonna bother her with my trivial s*** that I'm gonna get over in two days.'
“So that's my brain. But I know Kim doesn't care. She'll be like, ‘Call me.'
While Khloe - who was previously married to Lamar Odom and has True, eight, and Tatum, three, with former partner Tristan Thompson - thinks she is the best "judge of character" among her siblings, she joked it doesn't extend to her own relationships.
She said: “If I'm dating [the person] — no. If it's somebody else, normally, I'm a great judge of character.”
But the Good American founder thinks her youngest siblings, Kylie and Kendall Jenner, are also good at assessing people, which she thinks is largely because they have been in the public eye since they were children, unlike the rest of the family, who were adults when they found fame.
She said: "They have such great heads on their shoulders. Like, they're really realistic and levelheaded.
"And they're really guarded. But I feel like they have to be, because they grew up differently than we did.
“They didn't get as much normal time before the cameras came around."
Khloe noted the Kardashian family have grown more careful about the things they endorse as time passes because they now realise "not all money is good money.”
She said of the early days of their career: “At the time, there was no thought. It was more like, ‘This is so f****** cool. Someone's asking me to do this. I'm getting paid … What a blessing!'
"You don't know how long this is gonna last."
She added: “And then when we got older, I think everything shifted, and we're like, ‘Okay, not all money is good money.’ Our platform is powerful, and we can't just be doing things to do things. And we have to think about what we're doing now, and things need to be authentic.
“I think with anyone, if you were offered all this stuff, you would take it. And then you grow up and you come to your senses, and you realise, ‘Okay, maybe that doesn't feel good if I am promoting something that I don't even believe in — I've never used it.' So that definitely was an evolution."