Naya Rivera became a star playing a singing teen on Glee, but in real life she feels wise beyond her years.
“I’ve
done a lot of living,” the actress says in the current issue of PEOPLE.
“I’m a 79-year-old trapped in a 29-year-old’s body.”
Rivera
has now chronicled that loaded life – including the revelations that
she battled anorexia as a teen and had an abortion she got while on Glee – in her upcoming memoir Sorry Not Sorry, and PEOPLE has an exclusive excerpt before it hits stores.

“By
the time I was a sophomore, I started feeling that what had begun as a
game had maybe gone too far. I just avoided food at all costs,” she
writes in Sorry Not Sorry of coping with her parents splitting
and reuniting at the same time her acting career was stalling. “If my
mom had packed a lunch for me, I’d either trash it or find some excuse
to give it away.”
Rivera says she didn’t really realize the severity of her eating disorder until she decided to write about it in her memoir.
“I
was so young and it just seemed to be the norm. Everyone was going
through similar stuff,” she tells PEOPLE. “I had no way of knowing if I
was going through it worse. I was juggling my feelings and it makes me
sad that there are girls still going through that 15 years after I went
through it.”
Harder for Rivera to open up about was the fact she had an abortion.
Rivera found out she was pregnant with actor Ryan Dorsey’s child in late 2010 – just weeks after breaking up with him to focus on her career.
Rivera says she did not reveal the pregnancy to Dorsey, whom she wed in 2014 and is now the father of her 11-month-old son.
Instead, she made the call to put her career first and terminated the
pregnancy during her one day off from filming an episode of Glee.
“It
was very scary to open up about everything,” says Rivera. “It’s not
something a lot of people talk about, but I think they should. I know
some people might read it and say, ‘What the Hell?’ But I hope someone
out there gets something out of it.”
For
more from Rivera – including the exclusive excerpt from Sorry Not Sorry
– pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday.
One person she hopes gets something out of her memoir is her son, Josey.
“I hope Josey will read it one day,” she says of the book. “I hope it gives him a better perspective on the issues women face.”
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