Tracey Gold (born Tracey Claire Fisher; May 16, 1969) is an American actress and former child star best known for playing Carol Seaver on the 1980s sitcom Growing Pains.
I don't believe things happen in vain. I believe they happen for a reason.
My body started to shut down. I got really, really ill. When you're starving yourself, you can't concentrate. I was like a walking zombie, like the walking dead. I was just consumed with what I would eat, what I wouldn't eat.
Our family has gone through a very difficult time. My husband and I have taken the brunt of it. I've never known what it truly felt like to be so sad and desperate inside.
You can never prepare yourself enough to see your mug shot and DUI.
I'm the most cynical person, and I know what that sounds like when you say, I don't drink and drive, and I don't. But I know people look at that with skepticism, and I understand.
I have faith in the justice system, and what will happen will happen. I'm just trying to do the right thing.
I knew that by getting behind the wheel of the car and having had something to drink, the responsibility laid on my shoulders.
I will never have a drink and get behind the wheel of a car. It's not illegal to drink and drive, but there becomes a certain point where it does become a crime.
Any actor will tell you, anybody in the public eye, that the tabloids are the worst kind of ramification of being a celebrity.
Anorexia is such a self-consuming, selfish disease. It's all about you. Becoming a mother, all of a sudden it wasn't about me anymore.
I just don't like to drive. I'm not a bad driver, I just don't like to drive.
I'm not a religious person. I'm Catholic, so I consider myself more of a spiritual person. I believe in God.
I unwittingly became sort of this anorexia spokeswoman.
I'll always have a baby face.
I've got a pretty good appetite right now.
You can't enjoy life if you're not nourishing your body.
I had a very public battle with anorexia.
I've experienced the tabloids when I had anorexia.
After the crash happened, I was so humiliated and embarrassed. I thought of Mothers Against Drunk Drivers, that they must hate me.
I'm not acting, but I am acting.