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Jessica

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Jewel in People Magazine
« on: September 15, 2015, 04:35:32 PM »
There's a video interview on the website:

Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger'

 http://www.people.com/article/jewel-opens-up-divorce-struggles-memoir-album?xid=socialflow_twitter_peoplemag

Quote
Jewel has never been one to shy away from talking about life's ups and downs.

And Jewel has weathered her share of storms. From her 2014 split from Ty Murray to her battles with sexual harassment in the music industry, things haven't always been easy for the 41-year-old singer.

So why sing about things that are so personal? "It's really about being truthful," Jewel tells PEOPLE. "And being true to who I am, and not shying away from things. I try to be brave in all my decisions."

Jewel gets startling candid in two new projects. Her first studio album in five years, Picking Up the Pieces, debuted Friday. Her new memoir, Never Broken was released on Tuesday.

In the memoir, she opens up about her teenaged homelessness, her rise to fame, and her estranged relationship with her mother. (They haven't spoken in 12 years.)

So was Jewel worried what her 4-year-old son, Kase, would think when he grows up and reads the book?

"I'm aware that someday, Kase will be reading it," she says. "So that certainly did inform some of the things I was willing to say. But in general, I think the best gift we can give each other is transparency – what it really takes to be human, what we really face. Otherwise, there's tremendous isolation if we think we're going through things alone.

"I'm not ashamed of anything that I've been through or how I've gone through it," she adds.

That includes her divorce from Murray. "If there's a person out there who doesn't know heartbreak or loss, then I'm very happy for them," she says. "But I think it's pretty rare. My heartbreak has made me stronger."

Jewel tells PEOPLE that she doesn't regret the past five years. "I took time off to try to build a family. I enjoyed it, and taking time to learn what being a mom meant to me. I turned my career around so I could make being a mom a priority."

"Now, I feel like it's reasonable to start working again," she says. "As a mom, I didn't want to do a 6-7 months promo tour. I made an album that won't be played on the radio, and that's fine with me."

So what does she make of her struggles now? "These are the things that make us human," she says. "I've had heartbreak, but I've also had a lot of happiness. I can still laugh."

Check out some of the more lighthearted moments from Jewel's PEOPLE interview in the video above.

Randy

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Re: Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger' in People Magazine
« Reply #1 on: September 15, 2015, 08:09:41 PM »
That video was pretty damned awesome. I love it when she's kidding around and making faces and stuff...

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Re: Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger' in People Magazine
« Reply #2 on: September 24, 2015, 10:42:19 AM »
Never have I ever...


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Re: Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger' in People Magazine
« Reply #3 on: October 09, 2015, 10:11:11 AM »
Jewel was on that People Now ... only a snipped about the Oregon shooting.

It starts at 3:36 if you want to watch it.  I typed out the response already if you don't want to muck with the video:

Quote
It’s very frustrating seeing how much this is happening.  I’ve never seen bureaucracy help problems that are psychological.  I think how we handle mental care in our country really needs to be looked at much more … as much as gun control. If people want to do bad things, they’re going to find ways to do them, so why are people doing this? That’s a much harder issue to get at, and I don’t think bureaucracy can really get at the heart of that.



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Re: Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger' in People Magazine
« Reply #4 on: October 12, 2015, 04:15:51 PM »
More of this interview posted today:



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Re: Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger' in People Magazine
« Reply #5 on: October 12, 2015, 04:19:12 PM »
And another bit about dating Sean Penn because that's what's important to these people.


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Re: Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger' in People Magazine
« Reply #6 on: October 12, 2015, 04:20:43 PM »
Just Jewel's gun control snippet:


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Re: Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger' in People Magazine
« Reply #7 on: October 15, 2015, 06:28:11 AM »

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Re: Jewel: 'My Heartbreak Has Made Me Stronger' in People Magazine
« Reply #8 on: October 26, 2015, 01:40:39 PM »
They're really spreading this one out!!  From today:


Jessica

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Re: Jewel in People Magazine
« Reply #9 on: May 09, 2016, 03:50:20 PM »
Jewel Says Amicable Co-Parenting with Ex Ty Murray Is 'Work': 'You Obviously Don't Get a Divorce Because Things Are Going Well'

http://www.people.com/article/jewel-amicable-coparenting-work-ty-murray

Jewel and Ty Murray made an amicable split seem easy when they announced their divorce – but the singer insists it came with its challenges.

"It's work. I don't want people to think it's effortless – it's work to do this because you obviously don't get a divorce because things are going well," the 41-year-old star says in the new issue of PEOPLE. "But it's letting those things live in the past."

The singer-songwriter and rodeo cowboy, 46, announced their split in 2014 and have since worked hard to maintain a positive rapport for their 4½-year-old son Kase.

For Jewel – who's on the road for her Picking Up the Pieces tour through May – that meant "realizing you're in a relationship forever, so learning to treat one another with respect and dignity and just doing the right thing for Kase."

Jewel and Ty Murray made an amicable split seem easy when they announced their divorce – but the singer insists it came with its challenges.

"It's work. I don't want people to think it's effortless – it's work to do this because you obviously don't get a divorce because things are going well," the 41-year-old star says in the new issue of PEOPLE. "But it's letting those things live in the past."

The singer-songwriter and rodeo cowboy, 46, announced their split in 2014 and have since worked hard to maintain a positive rapport for their 4½-year-old son Kase.

For Jewel – who's on the road for her Picking Up the Pieces tour through May – that meant "realizing you're in a relationship forever, so learning to treat one another with respect and dignity and just doing the right thing for Kase."

Last fall, the star released her memoir, Never Broken, and the experience inspired her to evaluate her life – and how she would lead by example for her son.

"Going through a divorce really caused me to say, 'What kind of woman am I? What kind of woman do I want my son to know?'" says Jewel. "I wanted him, as he goes through his life, to have permission to redraw himself as many times as he needs. We have many chapters in our life, and we actually get to rewrite them."

As for what kind of woman Jewel is today? She's still a devoted mom – and is taking another chance at romance.

As the singer tells PEOPLE, she's been dating Indianapolis Colts quarterback Charlie Whitehurst for "almost a year."


Jessica

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Re: Jewel in People Magazine
« Reply #10 on: May 09, 2016, 03:52:54 PM »
Jewel Talks Boyfriend, Indianapolis Colts Quarterback Charlie Whitehurst: 'I Was Very Slow About Going Public'

http://www.people.com/article/jewel-boyfriend-football-player-charlie-whitehurst-slow-going

Having weathered a public split, Jewel appears to have put the pieces back together: She's in a relationship and finally opening up about her new beau.

"We've been together almost a year," the singer-songwriter says of football player boyfriend Charlie Whitehurst in the new issue of PEOPLE.

And while they've been dating for a considerable stretch, the Never Broken author – who is on her Picking Up the Pieces tour through May – says they made a point of keeping it under wraps in the beginning.

"I was very slow about going public," says Jewel. "We're not people to go out on 'the scene.'"

Indeed, the singer, 41, and the Indianapolis Colts quarterback, 33, kept their romance private until casually making it Instagram official in January, when Jewel posted a shot of herself with Whitehurst and Terminator star Robert Patrick at the Leonard Cohen Experience.

Having weathered a public split, Jewel appears to have put the pieces back together: She's in a relationship and finally opening up about her new beau.

"We've been together almost a year," the singer-songwriter says of football player boyfriend Charlie Whitehurst in the new issue of PEOPLE.

And while they've been dating for a considerable stretch, the Never Broken author – who is on her Picking Up the Pieces tour through May – says they made a point of keeping it under wraps in the beginning.

"I was very slow about going public," says Jewel. "We're not people to go out on 'the scene.'"

Indeed, the singer, 41, and the Indianapolis Colts quarterback, 33, kept their romance private until casually making it Instagram official in January, when Jewel posted a shot of herself with Whitehurst and Terminator star Robert Patrick at the Leonard Cohen Experience.

And Whitehurst has popped up a few times in her feed ever since: once while racing Porsches in Atlanta, then again on a tropical getaway to the British Virgin Islands.

Having weathered a public split, Jewel appears to have put the pieces back together: She's in a relationship and finally opening up about her new beau.

"We've been together almost a year," the singer-songwriter says of football player boyfriend Charlie Whitehurst in the new issue of PEOPLE.

And while they've been dating for a considerable stretch, the Never Broken author – who is on her Picking Up the Pieces tour through May – says they made a point of keeping it under wraps in the beginning.

"I was very slow about going public," says Jewel. "We're not people to go out on 'the scene.'"

Indeed, the singer, 41, and the Indianapolis Colts quarterback, 33, kept their romance private until casually making it Instagram official in January, when Jewel posted a shot of herself with Whitehurst and Terminator star Robert Patrick at the Leonard Cohen Experience.

And Whitehurst has popped up a few times in her feed ever since: once while racing Porsches in Atlanta, then again on a tropical getaway to the British Virgin Islands.

Dating Whitehurst is the first time Jewel has taken a relationship public since she and rodeo cowboy ex Ty Murray announced their split in 2014.

Jewel and Murray, 46, have remained amicable since their divorce, as they continue to co-parent their son, 4½-year-old Kase.

And Jewel's focus in both her family life and career continues to be on her preschooler – especially when it came to planning her Picking Up the Pieces tour.

"My son comes with me on tour," she says. "But I changed how I tour, so I just tour Thursday, Friday and Saturday, sometimes Sunday. We go out on weekends, and that way he's able to stay in school. I have a year to figure out a job where I'm going to be more stable."

Adds Jewel: "I work very hard at making sure I'm putting my son at the forefront and not myself."





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Re: Jewel in People Magazine
« Reply #11 on: May 03, 2024, 02:03:51 PM »
Jewel Has Finally Found True Love. And You'll Be Surprised Who It Is (Exclusive)

In a candid interview, the singer and activist opens up about healing from an abusive childhood and painful divorce through motherhood and mental health advocacy

By Danielle Bacher

Published on May 3, 2024 03:30PM EDT

https://people.com/jewel-found-true-love-healing-within-exclusive-8642273

 Growing up Jewel felt unworthy of love.

And as she made her way into adulthood, the '90s folk icon (born Jewel Kilcher) had deep scars that she didn't dare uncover ? especially for herself to see. Each day was a challenge as she battled her way through a fog of physical and emotional abuse.

No one had taught the four-time Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter, now 49, to address her childhood trauma, and as she found success in the music industry, she struggled to untangle her past from her present.

Moments before this interview, she had been trying on a dazzling Iris van Herpen gown to wear to the May 3 VIP opening of her new exhibit, The Portal: An Art Experience by Jewel, at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.

"It's not that I was sitting there thinking of taking my own life," Jewel, wrapped in a white bathrobe, tells PEOPLE over Zoom from Bentonville, Ark.

"I never had a psychotic break," she continues. "[But] I was thinking, 'Is this tenable?' If this is the rest of my life... Who wants that?"

When the singer was 8, her mother, Lenedra Carroll, left the family, and Jewel and her two brothers were raised by their father Atz Kilcher (a star on Discovery's Alaska: The Last Frontier) on their 300-acre ranch in Homer, Alaska.

"I grew up in a very traditional Mormon family. But everything changed when my mom left. My dad started drinking and being physically abusive, so like hitting us, and that's what caused me to move out," says the star, who previously detailed her father's abuse in her 2015 memoir. "He was in a lot of rage and a lot of yelling."

Outside of her family home, she also faced sexual harassment from a young age. At 8 years old, she would have men tell her, "Call me when you're 16. You're going to be a great f---," she recalls. Another time, a man slammed her against a wall after her performance at a local bar when she was 12, demanding to know if she had "cheated" on him, she says.

After years of mistreatment she was no longer willing to put up with Atz's abuse, and Jewel ? who opened up to PEOPLE in 2020 about reconciling with her father, a Vietnam veteran who developed PTSD, after he got sober in his 60s ? moved off her family's homestead and into her own cabin at 15, when she began shoplifting to survive.

Then in 1993 she moved to San Diego, where she worked at a computer warehouse to pay the bills while pursuing her music career. Her boss fired her after she turned down his advances, and she was left broke and homeless after her car was stolen.

"It was a violent era, but the Hells Angels actually were very protective over me. But there's still violence," recalls Jewel, who suffered from anxiety and panic attacks, kidney problems and agoraphobia (an intense fear of leaving the house alone or of being in crowded places). "It was men in positions of power from TV networks to record labels, and women faced it every day."

The harassment only worsened when her music career began taking off, and today she throws her support behind younger female artists to protect them against the abuse she endured.

A few weeks ago on the final night of her Madison Square Garden Guts world tour show on April 9, Olivia Rodrigo welcomed Jewel onstage for a duet of her 1995 hit "You Were Meant for Me." The two women strummed their guitars and took turns singing the song's lyrics before joining together in harmony for the chorus. "Dreams last so long, even after you're gone / I know that you love me," they sang.
Olivia Rodrigo Says 'It's an Honor' to Sing 'You Were Meant for Me' with Jewel at 4th Sold-Out N.Y.C. Show

"It is so neat to see Gen Z fighting the good fight, wanting to stand up for things... and that I can be there for them. I was humiliated and teased. I was publicly ridiculed for being different and speaking my values and for needing to heal," she says. "That's what's so touching about Olivia because I'm glad to be a role model ? not just for singing and writing ? but for the type of human I fought to be."

Jewel met her ex-boyfriend Sean Penn in 1995, the same year her debut album Pieces of You was released. She caught the actor's attention with her first TV appearance on Late Night with Conan O'Brien.

Back in her hometown one day during a break from the road, she got an unexpected call.

"My dad came to find me, saying, 'Jewel, you must be getting some kooky fans out there in the Lower 48. Some guy just prank-called and said he was Sean Penn,'" she wrote in her memoir. She eventually wrote a song, "Emily," for his 1995 filmThe Crossing Guard, and they went on to have a short-lived romance.

Despite being so new in the business, Jewel knew she wanted to keep the relationship under wraps.

"Even when I was dating Sean really early on, nobody knew I was dating him. I wouldn't do a red carpet with him. I was just very prideful," she reflects. "I wasn't famous and my album was flopping, like failing spectacularly. I remember going to the Venice Film Festival with him, and I could have done the red carpet and received a lot of media attention."

"People would've said, 'Who is this girl?' and I could have plugged my album. But I'd rather be unknown the rest of my life than have that be the way the world was introduced to me," she says. "I don't need fame that badly. I need to be fulfilled. I need to be happy. I need to be a songwriter. I wasn't thirsty in that way."

Jewel wanted people to know her for her heart, her music and her authenticity ? not for the man by her side.

Once she hit it big, she faced other cruelties. "I was called the chubby Ren?e Zellweger," she recalls. The humiliation fueled her eating disorder, which started at age 16. "I was bulimic," she continues. "I was at a weight I didn't like. I didn't know how to fix it other than love myself. I was trying to love what I was eating, not lose more weight or get worse."
Jewel Details Romance with Sean Penn: He Said 'It Would Be Impossible Not to Fall in Love with Me'

She took years off following her critically acclaimed 1998 album Spirit, which peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard charts. Stepping away at the time was an "act of power," she says now.

"I had to learn how to handle the male ego and turn them down in a way that didn't cost me in the workplace. It's awful. Nobody should have to learn that, and sometimes it didn't work," she says.

A year later she met rodeo star Ty Murray, and after nearly a decade together they tied the knot in the Bahamas. In July 2014 the couple announced their divorce, and the singer says she fell into a major depression while navigating being a single mom to their son Kase, 12.
Ty Murray on His Divorce from Jewel: 'We Are in a Really Good Spot'

"The divorce wasn't easy. Choosing not to work for seven years wasn't easy. Choosing to build something else other than music wasn't easy. Insisting that I had to change and grow so I could be the most available mom, those were all things that I lived privately, and this was a way of honoring myself too," Jewel says. "I'm a lot more present now. I'm a present mom, which I worked hard on. It wasn't easy in the beginning to be present. Divorces... you have so much grief, and it's hard. Not wanting to let go of that dream kept me in a marriage much longer than I probably should have."

She detailed her heartbreak on the song "Love Used to Be" (off her twelfth studio album Picking Up the Pieces). "It's a funeral song," she adds, admitting that she cries every time she sings it.

Over the years Jewel sought counseling and studied wellness. She began to meditate and journal, chronicling her sorrow.

In her 30s she discovered her mother, who used to manage her career, embezzled over $100 million from her, she alleged on a 2023 episode of the Verywell Mind Podcast. "Our relationship messed with my head so much. It was so much psychological abuse that I was afraid to let a therapist get close to me," she says. "But I don't personally believe in forgiveness. I don't have to have a relationship with my mom to heal. I don't have to hear her say 'I'm sorry.' Not all of us get the storybook ending, and that's OK. We can still heal." (They haven't spoken since 2002.)

After her divorce, Jewel began seeing a therapist again ? and this time it helped. Still, she felt uninspired and beaten down by life. So she did what she knew best: create change for herself.

Her new, self-curated 90-minute immersive art exhibit (open to the public from May 4 to July 28) reflects the growth and peace she's found.

For Jewel, the experience represents the "three spheres" of existence: the inner realm, which is our thoughts and emotions; the physical realm, which includes our jobs, finances, families and nature; and the unseen realm, which humans have been trying to define since the dawn of time.

"For me, mental health and emotional well-being is a side effect of our three spheres working in harmony. And suffering is a side effect if they aren't," says the singer, who's been a staunch advocate for mental wellness through her nonprofit, the Inspiring Children Foundation, and Innerworld, a virtual reality-based wellness center where people can use an anonymous avatar to access free mental health tools in a safe space.

She hopes fans visiting the exhibit this summer will take the time to learn about "what's working and what isn't" in their lives. "It's about being curious about ourselves and discovery," she says. "It's about being aware of our three realms and being committed that we can change it and have input in it."

In the evening a 200-piece drone light show, choreographed by Jewel and set to her new song "The Portal," will cap off the experience.

While each of the 10 pieces she selected for the exhibit has personal meaning to her, the most moving for her is an oil painting she created of her son specifically for the experience.
Jewel Says Son Kase, 12, Has a 'Beautiful Voice' but He's 'Not Obsessed' with Music (Exclusive)

"Mothering is not given much credit in this world, or celebrated," she says. Reflecting on the creation process, Jewel grows emotional.

"It's also a way for me to deal with my feelings about my son getting older and the transitions that we are both going to be making in our lives," she says, crying. "It was a way to honor him with every single brushstroke. I just loved painting the curve of his face."

What does her son think of his famous mom? Jewel likes to think Kase would say their relationship is filled with laughter. "We're very, very, very silly. We're ridiculous and wrestle a lot," she says. "I didn't think that's the type of mom I'd be, but we do play fight every day, and it's so funny."

Motherhood has helped keep her grounded, and for her, being a parent is about explaining life and teaching her child: "I'm the kind of mom that wants to explain probably too much. That might be on the negative list, but that's the kind of mom I am. I want to break things down. I want to help him understand. And I hope I'm a good listener."

Indeed, guiding the next generation with her own experiences and speaking candidly about mental health has been a key way for Jewel to process her own trauma.

And today the star says she's never been happier. "I'm more inspired now than I've ever been in my life. The most since I was like 19 or 20 years old," she says, beaming.
Jewel Says Her Son Is 'Very Emotional' and She's Learning to Not 'Over Empower' His Feelings

And like her younger self ? the one who dated Sean Penn all those years ago ? it's clear Jewel still refuses to be defined by anyone else.

Asked about the rumors she's in a relationship with Kevin Costner, she shuts down the notion that a man has anything to do with where she is in life. "I found love, and I'm not talking about Kevin's. I'm so happy, irrelevant of a man. It has nothing to do with being in a relationship or not being in one," she says, declining to answer questions about the actor.

"I'm just happy," she emphasizes, speaking with a keen understanding that everyone wants to know about her love life.

The love she's willing to share is the one she's found within herself ? one she's been searching for her whole life. "I'm good," she says.

Nick_00

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Re: Jewel in People Magazine
« Reply #12 on: May 04, 2024, 03:45:12 AM »
Thanks. Nice interview.
I'm laughing at the title of the article. The news sites can't live without clickbaiting, apparently. It was obvious Jewel wouldn't confirm or deny anything.