Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half the Story (33 page)

fire burns it all down cleansing allowing rebirth
there is a wisdom in death
and we experience a shedding of our skin
many many times in life
and in fact the more committed
we are to living
the more deaths we experience
along the way
loss of friends who no longer feel like
who we have become over time
loss of self, even
loss of “girl” as we redefine
ourselves as woman and mother
loss of fertility as we redefine ourselves
as matriarch and goddess
wisdom keepers and doers
free of small children and able
to focus on self after so long
. . .
loss of boy as eros consumes
loss of eros as husband emerges
death of child ego as manhood
must take root
redefined by the need to no longer
be the center of the family
but the supporter of wife and child
rediscovery and redefinition of self
as husband and father die within giving way
so that
the next phase where self must be
attended by self and self alone
may come fully into realization
when elderly
and so many deaths in between
as we re-create who and how we want to be in the world
I have learned to treasure the
eclipse of my soul
to let myself explore fully the infinite
ache the sorrow when it washes over me
for to resist is to miss it
and to miss it is to not fully grasp
what is next in my life because I
struggle so hard to keep what was
and this is truly painful
hanging on is much more painful
than listening in the darkness
for my future calling to me
let all else fade away for a few moments
spend some time with sorrow
see what it is asking for
there is a deep wisdom in you
tapping yourself on the shoulder
asking for some attention
it asks quietly at first, but if ignored
it will demand you listen
by creating so much discord you must
finally pay attention
it will not be denied
for to deny it is to
be buried alive
inside your own flesh
as your inner life and outer life
become so out of sync
drastic changes must be made
to rectify them
make them!
live!
give yourself permission!
write so you may see
the snakeskin of your soul
as it sheds
read the scales so you may see
who you have been
and honor it
then get excited
even in this time of mourning
for something new your way comes
nothing is wrong with you
you are alive and living and growing
if we are truly pushing ourselves to learn
we are reborn
many times in one life
have the courage
right now
to sit in your sorrow
in your silence and know
something is right with you
your body is working beautifully
it is experiencing a longing
from your soul
and making room for something new
in your life
it is emptying its self out
getting rid of what no longer serves
tune your ear to what is next
trust your body to do its work
nature knows its job
trust it knowing soon
you will be full again
(never doubt this—it’s a mathematical certainty—the
only mystery is the quality you will be filled with, which will
be determined by the quality and creativity and the thoroughness
of your grieving)
turn your ear toward it
so you may calibrate
to the level to which you want to rise
bring your consciousness
to the moment
don’t numb out
don’t escape
don’t rob yourself of the gift
so that you may better choose and guide
and inform what should be next for you
get to know the exact nature
of your discontent
for only in becoming intimate
with what we lack
may we know what to replace it with
be vulnerable enough
to want without knowing if you will receive it
dare this much
engage your creativity
let your mind daydream about
how you wish it to be
imagine the face of what is unborn
and have the courage to name it
don’t rush
for you are pregnant with yourself
a new you
and it has its own gestation period
because you cannot
force nature
only nurture
it

twenty-six

brilliant resilience

I
t was a huge risk to make
0304
. When I’d originally come up with the concept I thought I had all the money in the world, and had never before let money govern my decision about what direction to go. With “Intuition,” I made a song I loved even though it was manipulated into being. It was still an authentic part of my soul and I was proud of it and believed in what it said. Knowing how much I needed the money made it surreal. So much was on the line, though I never doubted my direction. It was a risk in terms of the media or those who did not follow my career closely. My real fans saw it coming. I had experimented with loops on my third album,
This Way
, with tracks like “Jupiter” and “Serve the Ego.” I began doing dance remixes. I was pushing myself. I felt if an artist was put in a box, it was their own fault for not being willing to break out of it. Now was not the time to safety up. I had to define what being a sellout meant to me. Being a sellout was doing what everyone expected of you, if it went against your own instincts or heart. I could have done
You Were Meant for Me 2
and the press would have loved it and said I was being true to my roots, but I would have felt like a sellout. Only we know when we are being true to the small and quiet voice that whispers from our soul. Very few on the outside of our skin are in a position to know. Bob Dylan and Neil Young taught me that. The fans will know the difference between changes made of contrivance versus authenticity. And if they didn’t, I would. I knew it would be controversial but I was tired of being controlled, of being told as a woman that I had to hide my sexuality to be considered smart. I doubled down on my instincts.

As usual my label heard nothing until I turned it in. Ron Shapiro was still my champion at Atlantic, along with Craig Kallman, Judy Greenwald, and Andrea Ganis. They all believed in it and my vision, and we went for it. I went to Europe to tour, and while I was there my label called me to say “Intuition” was at the top of the charts. My video, which I thought clearly articulated my satirical comments on pop culture, was widely viewed but also wildly misunderstood, which tickled me to no end. It infuriated people to see me dolled up. It was polarizing, although I felt it was in line with my values—to question, to seek, to explore. Regardless, it became a performance piece, illustrating the mindlessness in culture and the fight for irony alongside the fight for truth alongside the right for sexuality alongside the right to just have fun. I remember talking with Clive Davis about writing for an artist of his, and even he said no one wants to see this generation’s Joni Mitchell wear a miniskirt. It created a huge debate, and that was all I could have hoped for. I never hoped to tell people what to think with my music; I hoped to start a conversation so they could think about it for themselves. My experiences at this point made me more determined to never be dogmatic in my music. I was so relieved my single was doing well. God knows I needed it to be. I had done it against impossible odds, and I would slowly get back on my feet. I would never get back what I had lost, but I would be okay.

After my European tour I went back to the States. And I went back to Ty.

It was hard to come to terms with the fact that I had let go of a man who loved me and stayed with a mom who did not. I chose so wrongly. I told Ty as much. We rekindled our relationship, though he was hurt by our parting and I had to earn back his trust. He was an absolute knight in shining armor. He stood by me and held me when I cried. He stayed up nights talking with me as I tried to make sense of it all. And when there were no words, he stayed close as I tried to heal a broken heart. I confided all the things I had never told him before. All the things I never told anyone. I told him about how Jacque was not just a dear friend but about Z as well. I told him about Dean and Solano. Telling this to a true-blue cowboy was quite an experience. He turned to me and said, “Jewel, I think you were in a goddamned cult!”

I told him about all the things I’d been raised believing. That I could control the lights with my mind if I focused hard enough. That when I failed it meant I didn’t have enough focus. That life was a web of interconnectedness, and that if I didn’t anticipate something in my life it was because I was not connected enough. That if we could harness and fully grasp our true genius and spirituality we would be able to absorb the frequency of any object around us, even be able to walk through walls. Again, I’d always failed. That I would be sick if I lowered my frequency too much. There were some legitimate spiritual beliefs and practices, especially in the beginning, but with time the net effect made me feel insignificant, subservient, obedient.

Ty was the opposite of all this, it seemed, and it felt good. There was nothing touchy-feely about this man. No gray area. It was all black and white and real in his world, and I needed that. He felt like rock-solid earth that I could fall the hell apart on. I began to research cults and how they worked and came across the word
programming
a lot. I don’t know if
what I was involved in was a cult in the classic sense, but I did know I had ideas and thoughts in my head that didn’t belong to me. It was hard to tell where I ended and my mom began. My mind felt as if someone had shattered it with a hammer. There was a lot of guilt and shame, and I trusted no one, especially when it came to my mind. My God, I could spend years in therapy and never get over this. I wanted to look back over my life and think of everything my mom had ever told me, to try to see whether any of it was real. I called my dad.

My dad told me that he didn’t blackmail my mom into letting him keep us. She told him she was tired of being a mom. He told me that she did not have cancer that year we lived in Anchorage. She had told him that she had one year to live and that he needed to give her the money to have us for one year. Every single thing I thought I knew about her no longer seemed real. Nothing about my life seemed real. I found out our former employee had never had cancer. Suddenly the grief and stress of everything I had gone through, it all caught up with me, and I could not just go back out on the road like nothing had happened. I had been juggling all this while I worked. I was smiling on the cover of every magazine. I did all the interviews and all the TV shows. My album was a hit. But I needed to stop. I needed to be with Ty. I called Irving and said I needed to cancel my American tour. He didn’t bat an eye. He asked if I was okay. I said I would be. He said okay, he would take care of it. I would make no money.

I was on my way to the bathroom one day—where all eureka moments happen, right?—when I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror. I knew something in a flash. It was like a revelation. I see thoughts visually. I saw an image of light that had layers upon layers of sediment covering it up. But the light was under there, intact. I said to myself,
A soul is not a teacup. It is not a chair. It cannot be broken
. I knew I was alive in there. I was
just covered in layers of shit that did not belong to me. That idea would be my key to deprogramming. The idea of therapy was depressing to me, and I didn’t trust a therapist or a support group at this point. I was terrified to give anyone influence over my mind again. But I saw that I had been operating on the premise that I was ruined and needed to fix myself. I knew in that instant that I was not broken and I did not need to be fixed. I needed to go on an archaeological dig back to myself, where I was still there. Whole. Unspoiled. I had a memory of myself as whole, before all the heartbreak. I remember being a child and lying on my back in a green field and I felt free. I could shut my eyes, go inward to this part of myself, and tell when a thought or a feeling was not part of my genuine self, and I could gently push it away. I could lovingly remove all that had been put on me. It would lead me back to myself.

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