Trending News|June 17, 2015 11:43 EDT
Zoe Saldana News: Actress Explains Why She Won't Show Her Twins' Faces Online
As actress Zoe Saldana continues to promote her upcoming flick 'Infinitely Polar Bear' which is all about the bipolar disorder that her character's father had which she had to deal with, Saldana also talked about her own personal family which just had two new members added, her twins.
Saldana had been showing a few intimate moments with her new babies with husband Marco Perego but are not showing the faces of their identical boys and Saldana explained why at her latest interview with E! News.
"I just don't want 16 years from now to get 'You are so disrespectful. You invaded, you exposed me and I wasn't ready,'" Saldana shared while at the Los Angeles Film Festival. "Even though they're babies and they're under our care, it's still their face."
For some, Saldana's way to protect her children may be a little too much but apparently, the actress just wants her children to freely express themselves when the time comes on their own terms. Right now, they're not in the position to speak for themselves or make a decision...I don't want to make it for them," she continued.
So as she continues to raise her children, Saldana shares that they are currently in the phase of sleep training the two boys. "We're in the middle of sleep training so we have two nannies who are wonderful. One that's helping us and sort of guiding us and teaching us how to sleep train," she explained. "We just have extra hands because we are new time parents and the twins are giving us a run for our money," she added.
It seems like Saldana is indeed fond of her two new twin boys and is expressing how lovely they are. "The moment they popped out, they had personalities. They are two different people. Identical boys but two people," she said.
And in her career life, Saldana talks of what the movie 'Infinitely Polar Bear' is all about. "It was about bipolar disorder," Saldana shared. "There's very little that we know yet so many people are affected by this and not being well diagnosed."