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Living so much of her life in the public eye, on purpose, D'Amelio told E! News that her professional content obligations make it all the more important that she keeps the particulars of her relationship with Noah Beck to herself.
Doing so is "much healthier for both of our mental health," she said at the opening of the Social Tourist pop-up in June. "Our relationship is better. It's just so much more fun when you're not worrying, 'Oh my god, wait. You need to like my picture right now,' or because people are saying that we hate each other because we didn't do this or whatever."
She also realized that having a super-harsh reaction to someone's random online comment tends to be an indicator that something is off with her.
"I've seen the difference from when I'm mentally healthy versus not," D'Amelio explained. "When I'm healthy, I could read a comment and it doesn't mean anything to me. But if I read a comment and it freaks me down for three days, I realize that something is going on and I need to look deeper than people are just being mean online."
"I feel like it's a lot of reflecting on yourself and thinking how you're feeling," she concluded, "and it's an important conversation we need to continue having, and it's a journey."