Joanna Gaines Struggled with Insecurity After Getting Bullied as a Child for Her Korean Heritage

Joanna Gaines Struggled with Insecurity After Getting Bullied as a Child for Her Korean Heritage

Joanna Gaines is looking back on her journey to embracing her Korean heritage.

Born to her American father Jerry and Korean mother Nan (who met when Jerry was stationed in South Korea with the U.S. military), the Fixer Upper star grew up in Rose Hill, Kansas — a small town outside of Wichita — with her two sisters, Teresa and Mary Kay a.k.a. "Mikey."

"We were literally the only Asians in our entire school," Gaines, 44, recalls of her childhood in this week's issue of PEOPLE.

As a student, Gaines remembers being called names and getting teased for eating rice in the cafeteria at lunch.

"It was deeply personal because that was half of my story," she shares. "I realized if this isn't accepted, maybe I need to hide it and play more into the other side of who I am."

Joanna Gaines rollout
Joanna Gaines rollout

Courtesy

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Looking back, Gaines says, "My early memories, a lot of the things that come up are the moments where I switched off and I thought to myself, 'Oh, I can't be this,' or 'I shouldn't be this' or this won't be approved. Like I won't get the approval, you know, that you want as a kid."

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"I just internally processed all by myself, which as a kid, we all know isn't healthy because what you end up doing is just shoving it somewhere," she continues. "It ends up coming out at some point because we have to deal with it. So for me, sadly, it took years for me to wrestle with that."

It was only after leaving her small town for a college internship in New York City that she began gaining a whole new perspective.

"I saw more people that looked like me than ever before," she says. "I left really understanding the beauty and uniqueness of Korean culture and for the first time I felt whole, like this is fully who I am and I'm proud of it."

Joanna Gaines rollout
Joanna Gaines rollout

Courtesy Joanna Gaines

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But Gaines still had to process the deep-rooted insecurities she had been quietly living with for years.

"There were a lot of things I believed that weren't true," she explains. "I had to go back and cross those out and say, 'This is the truth. You are worthy. You are enough.' My biggest regret is not owning it earlier and really loving who I am."

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The Magnolia Network star addresses the process of undoing those falsehoods in her first solo memoir, The Stories We Tell, out Nov. 8.

"I had to actually go backwards and say, 'This is the lie I believed for 21 years, and now I have to rewrite that,'" Gaines shares. "When we really take hold of our story and write it down, there's so much healing that can come from that."

Joanna Gaines rollout
Joanna Gaines rollout

Courtesy

That process has given her a new sense of purpose.

"When I finished the book, I looked up and I just remember thinking, if I wouldn't have done that, I wouldn't hold what I'm holding now, which is empathy, perspective, and clarity," she says.

For more on Joanna Gaines, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday, or subscribe here.

Gaines' memoir, The Stories We Tell, hits bookshelves on Nov. 8.