<p>Over the years, there has been a huge transformation from the glamourous Yaana to the frank, honest and in her own words, a “happier” Yaana. <br /><br />“There was a time when I enjoyed the attention and did things I wouldn’t have done. But today, I no longer want anyone to tell me that I am good-looking. I don’t even make an effort to look glamourous. I have started looking within for inner beauty and give least importance to the outer part of me,” says Yaana, who was in the City as a showstopper for her friend Neeru.<br /><br />Coming from someone, who started as a model, this is a shocker. “I share a close relationship with Neeru so I agreed to come back on the ramp for her. But frankly, I feel modelling is really dumb. It’s not creatively challenging anymore,” she says. “I love to learn, challenge myself and grow in the process.” <br /><br />But if there is one thing Yaana is open to, it is working in South Indian films. “The people in South are honest and professional. I enjoyed working and dancing with Prabhu Deva and had fun time shooting for the song in Jogi. It’s something I don’t mind continuing.” <br /><br />Her stint in Bollywood was short with a few item songs to her credit. Yaana says she does not miss even a minute of it. “I wasn’t getting interesting projects. Plus, the people out there are very fake.” <br /><br />Gradually, she directed her energy towards writing and making music. Now, she is busy writing a health book and making pop music with hard-hitting lyrics. She is also particular that her new blonde look does not mean she is going to do a Britney Spears. <br /><br />Music, she says, is a soothing therapeutic process. When she first began writing songs, most of them were in English and revolved around relationships, pain and anger.<br /><br /> “That was when I was sorting things out in my personal life. But now, I am a happier person and have begun to see the real beauty the world has to offer.”<br /><br /></p>
<p>Over the years, there has been a huge transformation from the glamourous Yaana to the frank, honest and in her own words, a “happier” Yaana. <br /><br />“There was a time when I enjoyed the attention and did things I wouldn’t have done. But today, I no longer want anyone to tell me that I am good-looking. I don’t even make an effort to look glamourous. I have started looking within for inner beauty and give least importance to the outer part of me,” says Yaana, who was in the City as a showstopper for her friend Neeru.<br /><br />Coming from someone, who started as a model, this is a shocker. “I share a close relationship with Neeru so I agreed to come back on the ramp for her. But frankly, I feel modelling is really dumb. It’s not creatively challenging anymore,” she says. “I love to learn, challenge myself and grow in the process.” <br /><br />But if there is one thing Yaana is open to, it is working in South Indian films. “The people in South are honest and professional. I enjoyed working and dancing with Prabhu Deva and had fun time shooting for the song in Jogi. It’s something I don’t mind continuing.” <br /><br />Her stint in Bollywood was short with a few item songs to her credit. Yaana says she does not miss even a minute of it. “I wasn’t getting interesting projects. Plus, the people out there are very fake.” <br /><br />Gradually, she directed her energy towards writing and making music. Now, she is busy writing a health book and making pop music with hard-hitting lyrics. She is also particular that her new blonde look does not mean she is going to do a Britney Spears. <br /><br />Music, she says, is a soothing therapeutic process. When she first began writing songs, most of them were in English and revolved around relationships, pain and anger.<br /><br /> “That was when I was sorting things out in my personal life. But now, I am a happier person and have begun to see the real beauty the world has to offer.”<br /><br /></p>