American singer-songwriter Miley Cyrus recently appeared on Apple's New Music Daily Radio with Zane Lowe for an interview, which was published on Monday (local time), the same day as her birthday. According to Fox News, during the conversation, the 28-year-old songstress was asked by host Zane Lowe about her one-year sobriety when she admitted, "Well, I, like a lot of people, being completely honest, during the pandemic fell off and felt really a lot of ... and I would never sit here and go, 'I've been f*****g sober.' Miley Cyrus Birthday Special: 5 Inspirational Quotes of the Wrecking Ball Hitmaker That Will Impress You
"I didn't, and I fell off and I realized that I now am back on sobriety, two weeks sober, and you know I feel like I really accepted that time," Cyrus stated.
She went on to explain that "one of the things" that she's used is, "'Don't get furious, get curious,'" Cyrus said. "So don't be mad at yourself, but ask yourself, 'What happened?'" Miley Cyrus Birthday: The Wackiness in Her Persona Transcends in to Her Red Carpet Outings (View Pics)
Cyrus also said that she believes "everyone has to do what is best for them."
For herself, the 'Wrecking Ball' songstress says she doesn't "have a problem with drinking. I have a problem with the decisions I make once I go past that level of ... Even into, I've just been wanting to wake up 100 percent, 100 percent of the time." She further explained that she's "very disciplined."
Cyrus said, "That's why it's never easy, but it's pretty easy for me to be sober or in and out of sobriety because it's like the day I don't want to f***ing do it anymore, I don't. The day that I do, I do. You know? But when I don't want to it just is. I'm just very disciplined." In addition, Cyrus spoke specifically about being sober at the age of 27.
As reported by Fox News, the '27 Club' is an accounting first of popular musicians -- such as Jimi Hendrix, The Doors' Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, and The Rolling Stones' Brian Jones -- who have died at age 27, as a result of drug and alcohol abuse. Since its origination in the 1970s, it has expanded to include young actors and artists. The list of causes has also been broadened to include suicide, accidents or acts of violence.
She told Lowe, according to People magazine, "Twenty-seven to me was a year that I really had to protect myself. That actually really made me want to get sober was because we've lost so many icons at 27. It's a very pivotal time. You go into that next chapter or this is it for you. I just feel that some of the artists that almost couldn't handle their own power and their own energy and their own force. It's energy. I, no matter what, was born with that."
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