Lynne Spears has got receipts! Britney Spears’ mom has publicly debunked some excerpts from Britney’s memoir “The Woman In Me” where Britney accused her of trashing her (Britney) childhood dolls and black journal.
In the book, the “Toxic” singer claimed she returned to her mom’s home in Louisiana at the peak of COVID-19 to discover that most of her “prized possessions” are gone.
The missing items were her Madame Alexander dolls and three years’ worth of writing and original poetry. According to Britney, 41, “When I saw the empty shelves, I felt an overwhelming sadness,” she admitted how she “never wanted to publish” those writings despite how “important” they were to her. “And my family had thrown them in the trash, just like they’d thrown me away.”
Taking to her Instagram on November 9, Lynne set the record straight by providing picture evidence of her dolls arranged on a shelf and a different picture of her black journal. She began her post with, “I’m not sure who told you I got rid of your dolls and journals but I would never do that!”
She continued, “That would be cruel because I know how much they mean to you. They are special to me too because of the years we spent collecting them. Of course I still have your things, and I am happy to send them to you if you’d like me to. Please let me know and know how much I love you!”
Britney Spears — Britney Struggled With Maturity
Britney Spears has been sharing bits and pieces of what she went through during her conservative days under her father Jamie Spears online.
One by one she used her social media platforms to share how hellish her life was throughout the 13 years her conservatorship lasted.
This time around, instead of sharing bits and pieces, Britney decided that writing everything in a book is better so she went and wrote a memoir titled “The Woman in Me,” and made sure she left no detail out. The book contained lots of bombshells about her conservative days.
In the book, the “Baby One More Time” singer shared that her conservatorship completely “Stripped her of her womanhood.”
“I became a robot. But not just a robot—a sort of child-robot, I had been so infantilized that I was losing pieces of what made me feel like myself,” said Britney as she added, “The conservatorship stripped me of my womanhood, made me into a child. I became more of an entity than a person onstage. I had always felt music in my bones and my blood; they stole that from me.”
Britney went on to share that the way she was caged made her struggle between being a child and being the adult she is and at a point she was indecisive about which one to be and it was a great deal of struggle, “between being a little girl and being a teenager and being a woman.”
She went ahead to explain, “They had robbed me of my freedom. There was no way to behave like an adult, since they wouldn’t treat me like an adult, so I would regress and act like a little girl; but then my adult self would step back in—only my world didn’t allow me to be an adult.”
Continuing, she wrote, “The woman in me was pushed down for a long time. They wanted me to be wild onstage, the way they told me to be, and to be a robot the rest of the time. I felt like I was being deprived of those good secrets of life—those fundamental supposed sins of indulgence and adventure that make us human.”
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