As a teen, I was both anorexic and bulimic.
I try to keep a low profile in general. Not with my art, but just as a person.
I could get away with not taking care of myself as a bachelorette but as a mom I can't.
I thought the more famous I became, the more friendships I would have, but the opposite was true.
At some point, I would like to write a book and other things, but I work best when there is some sort of deadline in my own mind, but not when fifty people or fifty million people are breathing down the back of my neck.
Breakups are a horrible thing for almost everybody I know. For someone who is a love addict, it's debilitating.
I want to walk through life instead of being dragged through it.
I have a profound empathy for people who are in the public eye, whether they manifest it themselves or whether it happened by accident - it doesn't matter to me. I think there's a great misunderstanding of what it is to be famous.
I was taught from a young age that I had to serve, so that turned into me thinking I had to save the planet.
My greatest environments in which I can grow, or grow up, is in personal romantic relationships with a man.
And ultimately the people who produce my records, they know that they're here to serve the purpose of me expressing who I am at this period of time and augmenting that or pulling it forward and I love that process.
I live with some of my best friends from high school, very commune-like, in my house. It's my hippie way of life.
When I was younger, I was terrified to express anger because it would often kick-start a horrible reaction in the men in my life. So I bit my tongue. I was left to painstakingly deal with the aftermath of my avoidance later in life, in therapy or through the lyrics of my songs.
A good man often appears gauche simply because he does not take advantage of the myriad mean little chances of making himself look stylish. Preferring truth to form, he is not constantly at work upon the facade of his appearance.
I wish people could acheive what they think would bring them happiness in order for them to realize that thats not really what happiness is.
There's a continuity between what I care about in any form: I care about it in my music, in article-writing, in how I dress, in how I live, in my relationships, in how I navigate paparazzi, how I decorate my home. There's such a continuity between everything that I don't really care what form it shows up in.
It's not just the 'Grammys' that I've pulled out of. I also pulled out of the English awards as well. The reason that I wanted to pull out was because I believe very much that the music industry as a whole is mainly concerned with material success.
And if I had a preference, it would be to be able to not be in the studio until 4 in the morning.
I saw music as a way to entertain people and take them away from their daily lives and put smiles on their faces, as opposed to what I see it being now, which is a way for me to actually communicate, and a way for me to tap into my subconscious.
I'm doing it because I choose it. And if it's not working, I can make a change.
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