Katy Perry opened up about a lot in a new interview with GQ magazine and dished on her famous curves, life before fame and falling in love for a second time. The "Roar" singer told GQ for their February issue that has always wanted a curvaceous body and in fact prayed for big boobs when she was younger.
"I lay on back one night and looked down at my feet, and I prayed to God," she said. "I said, 'God, will you please let me have boobs so big that I can't see my feet when I'm lying down?"
By age 11, Perry said her prayers were answered.
"I had no clue they would fall into my armpits eventually," she continued adding that she's "au natural."
"I've never had plastic surgery," she said. "Not a nose job, not a chin, not a cheek, not a tit. So my messages of self-empowerment are truly coming from an au natural product."
The 29-year-old singer flaunted those natural curves on the cover of GQ in a striped, cutout one piece bathing suit. Besides revealing that God blessed her with bog boobs, Perry also talked about losing her virginity when she 16-years-old, her current boyfriend and split from Russell Brand and how she made money (kind of) from singing before becoming an international star.
Check out some of the excerpt from the interview below and read the full GQ spread here.
On life before fame: The "Fireworks" singer and California native told the magazine that at 13-years-old she would go to farmer's market in Santa Barbara and "test out little dirty songs that I would write."
"I would get a couple of avocados, a bag of pistachios, and like, fifteen bucks," she said. "That was a lot of money for me."
On losing her virginity: Perry revealed that she was 16-years-old when she lost her virginity and it was in the front seat of her then-boyfriend's Volvo sedan while "Grace" by Jeff Buckley played in the background.
"Love that record so much," she added.
Read also: Russell Brand
On believing in aliens and how that ties in with President Barack Obama:
"I believe in aliens. I look up into the stars and I imagine: How self-important are we to think that we are the only life-form?" she said in the interview. "I mean, if my relationship with Obama gets any better, I'm going to ask him that question. It just hasn't been appropriate yet."