Entertainment
Jewel’s Mom ‘Betrayed’ Her, Left Her $3 Million In Debt
Jewel is getting brutally honest about one of the most painful betrayals of her life. During a deeply personal conversation on “No Magic Pill with Blake Mycoskie,” the singer-songwriter reflected on her difficult childhood, struggles with anxiety, homelessness, and the shocking moment she realized her mother had financially mismanaged her money, leaving her millions of dollars in debt despite her success. For Jewel, however, the revelation ultimately became part of a much larger journey toward healing.
While discussing some of the most difficult chapters of her life, Jewel revealed that one of the biggest emotional blows came after fame.
The Grammy-nominated singer said she eventually discovered her mother had mishandled her finances, leaving her in staggering debt. “I realized my mom wasn’t who I thought she was. It was a deep betrayal,” Jewel shared.
According to the singer, the financial fallout was devastating. Despite reaching major success in the music industry, Jewel said she found herself $3 million in debt because of years of financial mismanagement.
Rather than allowing the experience to define her, however, the singer said she eventually reframed how she viewed hardship. “I am not broken. I don’t have to fix myself. I have to uncover myself,” she explained.
A Childhood Marked By Addiction And Violence
Long before finding fame, Jewel said she grew up surrounded by instability in Alaska. The singer recalled witnessing addiction, violence, and deep hardship from a young age, experiences that shaped how she came to understand suffering.
“I realized nobody outran pain,” Jewel shared. “I saw people die so broke and alcoholic they couldn’t afford a coffin. I realized my job is just to figure out what to do with pain.”
By just 8 years old, Jewel said she was already performing in bars and learning difficult lessons about the world around her. “I have so many stories like that, but again, it taught me before I was sexually active to really mind myself to be aware of people,” she explained. “It taught me a lot of good skills.”
Homeless At 18, Jewel Says She Hit Rock Bottom
Jewel also reflected on living out of her car in San Diego at 18 while battling crippling anxiety, agoraphobia, and compulsive shoplifting. The singer described one moment in particular as a turning point.
“I saw my reflection in the mirror and realized: I’m a statistic,” Jewel recalled. “I’m a homeless kid shoplifting and I’m going to end up dead or in jail if this keeps going.”
Determined to change course, Jewel said she began developing unconventional ways to cope with anxiety long before she could afford therapy. One surprising method involved carefully tracking her physical actions.
“I realized I hadn’t had a panic attack in two weeks,” she said after spending weeks writing down everything her hands did. “What I stumbled on was radical presence. I was so present, I forgot to worry about a future that hadn’t happened yet.”
Jewel Says Healing Is About ‘Uncovering’ Yourself
Throughout the conversation, Jewel emphasized that healing is not about fixing what is broken but rediscovering who you already are.
The singer even reframed anxiety as something more complex than simply a problem to eliminate. “What if anxiety isn’t the problem? What if it’s the side effect of consuming something that doesn’t agree with you?” she asked.
At one point, Jewel compared anxiety to food poisoning. “Throwing up isn’t the problem. It’s the side effect of eating something bad,” she explained. “Anxiety became my body’s way of saying: ‘You just consumed something that didn’t agree with you.’”
Ultimately, Jewel described healing as “an archeological dig” back to one’s authentic self. “Healing is gritty work,” she said. “But being dysfunctional is much harder work.”
Jewel Says Survival Led Her To Purpose
Looking back, Jewel said many of the coping tools she developed came from necessity at a time when she had little support and few resources. Without access to therapy or financial stability, the singer turned to journaling, meditation, self-awareness, and boundary-setting to help navigate some of her darkest moments.
Now, she hopes sharing those experiences might help others feel less alone in their own struggles. Rather than viewing healing as a destination, Jewel described it as an ongoing process of understanding yourself more deeply.
Listen to Jewel’s confessions on Blake Mycoskie’s new podcast, “No Magic Pill.”
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