Loquacious Lohan in love

If you weren’t quite sure that Sam and Lindsay were a couple, Lindsay Lohan is still avoiding naming names in a new Harper’s Bazaar article.

“I feel like it jinxes it,” Lindsay said. “It’s hard. The second I start talking about whomever I’m seeing, a month or two later it’s failed.”

She’s not hiding the relationship – the two have been spotted all over L.A. and New York as well as on vacation in Mexico.

“I think it’s pretty obvious who I’m seeing,” Lindsay eventually admitted. “I think it’s no shock to anyone that it’s been going on for quite some time. … She’s a wonderful person and I love her very much.”

Though she currently loves a girl, Lindsay balked at calling herself lesbian or even bisexual.

“I don’t want to classify myself. First of all, you never know what’s going to happen – tomorrow, in a month, a year from now, five years from now. I appreciate people, and it doesn’t matter who they are, and I feel blessed to be able to feel comfortable enough with myself that I can say that.”

Lindsay knows she still got work ahead to convince Hollywood that she’s employable again. “(B)ut I know people wouldn’t have gone to see my movies if I didn’t make them laugh or make them cry. I think it’s a matter of finding the right thing. I’m sure my first thing back might not be that, but eventually it will come. That’s what this business is. It builds you up to take you down and then sees how far you can come back. I don’t really worry, though. I’m a fighter. I’m up for a challenge, and I won’t settle.”

Lindsay, who recently completed her first film in more than a year, “Labor Pains,” a comedy in which she stars as a secretary who fakes a pregnancy to hold on to her job, recognizes the immaturity of her previous lifestyle: “I was going to clubs all the time, and it was not okay. I was so alone. It made me not focus on what I was doing. I was living (at a hotel) for almost two years. Who blows that much money on a hotel? I could have bought a house!”

But Lindsay admits candidly, “I did it to myself, and I have to deal with the consequences. I’m thankful for what I can take out of it. Now I feel clear. That’s my past, and I’m a different person now. I have goals and I’m working to achieve them. I’m not hanging out with people who are out every night getting fucked up.

“And,” she adds sheepishly with a smile, “I think that I’m happy.”

For more of the interview, visit the Harper’s Bazaar Web site here.

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