Call Her Daddy - Halsey: Power Dynamics & Toxic Relationships (FBF)
Episode Date: April 11, 2025Join Alex in the studio for a sit-down interview with Halsey. Halsey opens up about her volatile childhood, loneliness, the danger of using sexuality as currency, breaking the cycle of toxic relations...hips, and finally finding happiness with her fiancé. Halsey also discusses their health journey and their new album. This episode is so powerful and insightful...Enjoy!
Transcript
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What is up, Daddy Gang? It is your founding father, Alex Cooper with Call Her Daddy.
Halsey, welcome to Call Her Daddy.
Thanks for having me.
I am so happy that we're finally doing this. I feel like I've been waiting to meet you
for so long.
I know, me too.
So thank you for coming.
Of course.
I realized that some of the Daddy Gang may not know that your legal name is Ashley and Halsey is a stage name.
What do the people closest to you call you?
Ash.
Everyone calls me Ash.
My son just started calling me Ash.
I was like, you better get it together.
I'm mommy to you, okay?
It's like, I'm gonna start,
I'm gonna have to make him a shirt
and make myself a shirt, so let's call me mommy. I'm obsessed. Because he's like, I'm gonna start, I'm gonna have to make him and make myself a shirt, so let's call me mommy. Like.
I'm obsessed.
He's like, he goes, Ash?
I'm like, mm-mm.
He goes, well, I wanna call you Ash.
I'm like, well, you can't.
Well, you can't, I'm mother.
I know, I don't know how to explain it to him
in a way that doesn't sound like so,
like, psychotically, like you have to respect me
and give me this, like there's no way to explain it.
Like, he's like, why can't I call you Ash
if everyone else does?
I'm like, that's a great question.
But I just don't like it.
But I also think it's like the rite of passage,
like when you become a parent,
you're like, give me at least like 10 years
of calling me like mom and mommy.
And then- Yeah, you're three.
Right. You can call me Ash later.
Like it's like, it's so funny.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Is it weird if anyone in your life
would like refer to you as Halsey?
Some people do.
Like, I think it's kind of interchangeable at this point.
I like answer to it the same way as if it was my name.
It feels the same in my body.
It does.
You know, like it feels like, it's like,
it registers the same emotionally
as if someone says Ash or Ashley.
Have you ever looked at it like it's an alter ego?
Recently, yeah.
I didn't mean to when I started.
It was just a name because my name's Ashley Frangipani.
And like, you can't be Frangipani, you know what I mean?
You have to say it in your New Jersey accent.
My name is Ashley Frangipani.
So, you know, there was no, that wasn't happening.
So it was just supposed to be like an easy moniker.
And then, yeah, I would say like a couple of years ago,
I started having thoughts that were like,
oh, well that's very Halsey.
Or like, well I dress like this when I'm Ash,
and then I dress like this when I'm Halsey.
And then I kind of was like, whoa,
when did I start differentiating between the two?
Like when did they become two separate things?
Was that like freaky or no?
Kinda, yeah.
Cause I was kinda like, how did it happen?
What is the difference between Halsey and Ashley?
Like give us an example.
Well, you know what's funny is I think Ashley is like,
like when I'm Ash, like I'm definitely way more,
I think masculine than when I'm Halsey.
And I'm not really certain like where that's kind of started
to divert. You know what I mean? Like when I'm home, like I'm like a boy clothes, short
hair, like not just like gender clothes, but like you know what I'm saying. And I'm definitely
kind of, I think that Ash is like less provocative.
Like I'm very like chill, very patient.
You know what I mean?
Like very like maternal.
And then I feel like Halsey,
a lot of people have this idea that I'm like,
really provocative and like, you know,
I'm like always like yapping, I'm a big yapper.
Halsey's a yapper, Ash is not so much a yapper.
Have you ever become like a little resentful
of the persona that you've created?
Yeah, oh yeah, definitely.
I think that the part of the problem though
is that like, you know, people just kind of decide
who you are based on like when they got to know you.
You know what I mean?
Like I've been seeing a lot of that happening
like every now and then like, I'll see like a comment under like a picture of like me and my partner and some is like I thought she was
dating blah blah blah and it's like someone from like six years ago and I'm like oh your update and
like I don't expect everyone to know everything about me that's going on at any given moment but
like they just locked in something from like a big press moment or like a time when I was like really
on or like they were reading about me a lot and they were like, and that's who you are forever.
And I'm like, whoa, it's been like six years.
So much has happened.
That's like kind of a mind fuck mentally to be like,
no, no, no, I've progressed and grown,
but you guys see this persona that like was very there
in your minds and it never grew.
And I'm like fully grown as a human being.
And yet Halsey is just like almost like stuck in time
for people, which I think a lot of celebrities
or performers have that like,
and everyone decides when they want to grow
with a performer or not.
Like it's fucking confusing.
How would you describe your relationship to fame?
I'm kind of indifferent at this point.
I used to be like, it used to be not that way.
It used to be just torturous
You know what I mean? Like I I will say like it never really felt normal
It still doesn't like I've I've been doing this for like 11 years
You would think at this point that I would just be like, yeah, I'm famous. I know that is not how it is
I like still wake up every day and
Not and they're like I wake up every day and I'm like, oh my god It's more like I wake up every day and not and they're like I wake up every day
and I'm like, oh my god, it's more like I wake up every day and I'm like, what the fuck, you know
what I mean? And I think that I also like I've kept like a lot of really normal people around me and
you know what actually that's the distinction. That's when the distinction started happening
was that was that when I started to become like a celebrity, like
the distinction between Halsey and Ashley I think is very much that like Ashley stayed
the same, you know?
We're like, when I'm out with my friends, like my best friend Erica, she's been my best
friend since I was like 13.
And she's like, she says to me like, once a month or like a couple times a month, like
we'll be out somewhere doing something and someone will be like,
oh, can you picture there's like a paparazzi
who's like whatever.
And she'll be like, dude,
I like just forget you're famous every day.
That's the best.
I just forget all the time.
And she's like lived with me.
She's been around for like every step of the journey.
She's like backstage at the VMAs with me.
And then like the next day she's like,
I forget you're famous.
I'm like, how, you were at the VMAs yesterday.
How did you forget?
And she's like, you just are still so, you're like, how, you were at the VMAs yesterday, how did you forget? And she's like, you just are still so,
you're exactly the same as you were,
you know what I mean?
I do think like that's so important to have though,
because at the end of the day,
like all these people that are famous,
you're famous for like something
that you're really good at, obviously.
Some people are just famous because they're famous,
but like you are so talented
and your talent has made you famous, of course.
But with that, you are just still a human being
that likes to sleep and likes to eat
and likes to chill with friends.
And so I think having those friends around you
must still make you feel like the person from New Jersey
that was just growing up and had a talent.
I think that's helpful to have.
When do you feel most like yourself?
What would you be doing?
Well, I'm pretty boring.
I didn't used to be.
I got it out of my system, you know what I mean?
I had a couple years where I look back on it
and cringe into a black hole when I see those photos.
But I'm also really grateful for them
because I just did it in a contained set of years and then I'll never have to do it again. So now I'm also really grateful for them because I just did it in a contained set of years
and then I'll never have to do it again.
So now I'm just boring.
No, you're not boring,
but I know what you're talking about.
I think we all have that.
We're like, what was I doing?
What would you say you did that was cringe?
Oh my God, there's so many pictures of me
just fucked up, leaving a club.
Paparazzi, it like three in the morning.
I'm like, what are you doing?
But also I was like 22, you know what I mean?
So when I see that I'm a gentle with myself about it,
but like, or like times where I like, I don't know,
there's stuff that's like maybe cringe,
but also maybe pardon me, I'm a little bit like, go off.
Like, you know, like I clapped back at someone
or I like, you know, like I went off or something like that.
And like, I see that and I'm like, gosh,
you were so angry and so confused and so like overwhelmed
and like you had no one to help you.
So I have like a lot of compassion for that version of me.
But then there's also times where I'm like,
girl, shut up, you know, like shut up.
No, I think that's like, no matter if you're famous or not,
like people can look back at old Facebook photos
and be like, what was I up to?
Like what was going on there, Alex?
But then at the end of the day, you're like,
well, I was fucking young.
And like I was having, I think a good time.
I mean, I didn't go to college, you know what I mean?
So I didn't have like those years.
And it's funny, the same like,
I feel like the same people who will pass judgment
for like photos of me in like my
20s like not even in my 20s like at 20, you know, cuz I was 19 when I wrote my first album and
you know, there's like pictures of me from that time and people like oh gosh like and I think there's this almost
indication of like no class and I'm like
what if I were at like a
University and like these pictures were just like on Facebook
or like whatever and I was just like going,
like you would just consider that a natural part of me,
like finding myself and like, you know,
but because there's this extra set of expectations,
I think there's like a separate judgment that's passed.
And like, I try to, I try to like contextualize it that way
and be like, girl, you would have been doing the same thing
if you stayed in Jersey, if you went to Rutgers, you know what I mean?
Oh, you may have been worse. Actually, I was just saying, if you went to Rutgers,
you would have been like face up on a keg stand. Like you would have had pictures of you on the
keg stand. Like it would have been similar, if not worse. I know. How do you choose what to keep private and what to put into your art and your music?
I don't know that I really choose.
I think it kinda, I just like write what I'm feeling.
There's a song on this album called Hurt Feelings
and it's about my dad.
I've written a song about my dad every single album
and every single time, just when we get to the time
We were deciding the track list I cut the song so I'm like I can't do it
I'm too scared. I'm too scared. I'm too scared
And this time I didn't and I put it on the album and that was like a moment for me where I was like
Okay, this is something I have kept private
But now I feel ready to like get out there and I feel like I have a responsibility
Kind of do you have a relationship with your father?
Like does he know this is going to be on the album?
He doesn't know it's going to be on the album.
We have a pretty complicated relationship, which is like, you know, I don't think that's
like groundbreaking.
I feel like a lot of young women have complicated relationships with their fathers.
I think for me, especially, you know, I started making music when I was 18 and it kind of
started to blow up when I was 19 and it just changed everything about our family's dynamic because
I became the breadwinner and I became kind of like, you know, in a way, like I became
like the matriarch patriarch of my family. And I think that, you know, for a man who spent his whole life like working really hard
to support his family.
And then, you know, I kind of come in and I'm like still a kid to him and I take that
role.
I imagine that's probably just like conflicting.
Yeah, like an existential level.
And it definitely showed up in our relationship.
And so it's like affected it since, yeah.
I can imagine that was very confusing for both of you.
Like also you coming in being like,
I don't know what the fuck to do either.
Like this is, and when you do look back,
what is your earliest childhood memory that comes to mind?
It's so hard.
I'm like one of those people that doesn't remember
like a lot of their childhood.
I had a really hectic childhood.
My parents were young when they had me.
They dropped out of college.
They met at Fairleigh Dickinson in Jersey.
And then they were like 19 or 20 when they got pregnant.
They'd only known each other for a couple months.
And they both dropped out and started their family with me.
We moved all the time, every year we moved.
I wasn't out of school, until high school,
I wasn't out of school longer than two years.
And I was always starting over in a new place.
We were just trying to go where there was cheaper apartments,
better jobs, and parents working multiple jobs.
And my experience felt so irrelevant
to what they were going through.
You know what I mean?
It was like my, I think that when I look back
on my childhood, my experience was very much
to just not get in the way, because of how hard it was.
And I failed at that miserably.
I was getting in the way all of the time.
You know what I mean?
And then I feel like that has probably attributed
to why I am in the line of work that I'm in.
Cause it's like, you know, we're all looking to satisfy
some sort of like, I don't want to say need for attention.
Cause I feel like that's like derogatory,
but like maybe like we're looking for our voice
and our experience to matter, you know?
But don't you feel like even hearing you say that when you're like, I was always in the way,
I'm like, yeah, but I feel like
that's what kids are supposed to do.
Totally.
And like, I imagine you though,
like under those circumstances of your parents
constantly having to move,
you were like hyper aware of just like, stay over here,
like don't do anything, don't like get in the way,
like I'm not that important right now.
Do you remember like what you felt about
when you would view your parents' romantic relationship?
My parents were really,
I guess, kind of volatile.
They were either super in love and cuddled on the couch,
laid the fuck up, going on you know, going on dates,
like obsessed with each other like kids,
or they were like at each other's throats.
There was like no, no in between.
And you know, like,
I've actually never really talked about this before,
but my household was like pretty,
my household was pretty volatile.
You know what I mean?
There was a lot of aggression, you know what I mean?
And aggression just thrown in every direction.
And I think that it's so funny
because it's so obvious that you witness that,
you form that as your perception of,
not necessarily of what love is,
but what's acceptable in love, you know?
And then that you apply that,
when I look on past relationships of mine,
I'm like, okay, I'm like,
literally this is two plus two equals four.
Like, it's so simple, you know what I mean?
It's fucked. Yeah, and then- You're like, oh, that two plus two equals four. Like it's so simple, you know what I mean? It's fucked.
Yeah, and then-
You're like, oh, that was, that is why I went for this.
But it seemed so simple, but it's like not also.
Cause you don't catch yourself immediately doing it.
And then when it's like a pattern, then you're like, whoa.
I know.
And then it's funny cause you think you do the work
and then like a different trauma sneaks up on you
where it's like, okay, so you're like, all right,
I'm gonna tolerate violence or aggression
or whatever it is because I experienced it,
but now I'm gonna unlearn that so it never happens again.
And then you get into another relationship
and you're like, this one's better
because it's not the last one.
And then a different thing sneaks in,
you know what I mean, where the person's putting you down
or they're gaslighting you or whatever. And you're like, I don't know, like gaslighting you or like whatever.
And you're like, is this a whole other thing?
This is a whole other thing.
Is it all just my childhood again?
No, it's like, no, literally it's like whack-a-mole
because you're like, oh, maybe it's not like physical
this time, but it's like emotional this time,
but it's all under the same fucking umbrella.
Totally.
First of all, thank you for sharing that.
Cause I feel like you're someone that like your,
when you write in your songs, like it's so fucking powerful. And I think a lot of people, thank you for sharing that. Cause I feel like you're someone that like your, when you write in your songs, like it's so powerful.
And I think a lot of people connect to you
on how real you are in your lyrics,
especially this new album coming out.
When I was listening to it, I was like,
I need, I feel like I need to pull over.
Like this is, this is like, it's very heavy and emotional.
And I feel for you, but I think a lot of people
can sadly relate to what you're going through. When you were in those moments with your parents and it was volatile, like were you someone that
would just like be alone and not tell anyone? How would you like basically get through it?
I think I kind of coped in that way. We were just like waited for it to be over. You know what I
mean? Also like it changes hands when you're in a household
like that, like it usually starts and it's like,
you can kind of feel it happening to your mom.
And I'm the only daughter and the oldest.
Okay, wow.
So there was definitely a point where like,
the target kind of changed to me.
And you feel, I think really alone
in that sort of situation.
I definitely just mostly coped by writing.
I've always been a writer, like my whole life.
And I used to keep journals and keep diaries
and stuff like that.
And I read a lot and I was someone who kind of like,
I was into escapism for sure.
You know what I mean?
Like novels and like just putting myself
into like other worlds that just felt like
different than mine.
Yeah.
Would you ever talk to your mom like about it since she-
I have.
Okay.
Yeah, no, I have.
My mom and I are super close.
Okay.
Yeah.
She's like, my mom is like my best friend.
And you know, we have talked about it.
And like, I think there's
a couple stages of it right because then there's the first part where you have to
be like hey why didn't you stand up for me and then there's a second part where
you have to be like also I forgive you you were going through a lot and then
there's like the third part of it which is like there's still stuff you do today
that pisses me the fuck off but I understand why now because you know
you've been conditioned you know
I mean in a certain way like you have to have just like so much grace and
understanding and like at a certain point you have to just decide you have
to decide what's forgivable right and some things are and some things aren't
like I don't stand by the thing with people where it's like oh like they're
your parents like whatever it is it's not that serious.
You have to just make sure you keep the relationship.
I don't agree with that at all.
But then at the same time, I also don't agree
with the idea of we should punish our parents forever
for what they did to us.
It's like some things you forgive, some you don't,
and that's up to you to decide.
That's a good point.
And it takes so much fucking time.
Because the resentment, I feel feel like goes in and out.
Like depending at where you're at in life,
like you can be like, okay, we're feeling good now.
And then like something like triggers you
and reminds you of something they did when you were younger.
And you're like, oh my fucking God,
actually we're not done with this conversation.
Totally.
There's more shit I just remembered.
And it's like an endless cycle, but I agree.
Like it doesn't, it can't just be black and white where you forgive
or it's like all perfect.
Like there's gonna be conversations
that keep having to happen.
I think also something interesting
that you were talking about was like going
to all these different schools.
Like when we are young, a huge part also
of like what forms our personality and our tendencies
is like our relationship with our friends and our peers.
You going to new schools constantly,
like how did you approach a new school?
I was definitely like, this is an opportunity.
I was always like, if there's something I wanna try out
or someone I wanna be, like I can do it here
because no one knows me.
Oh, interesting.
You know, like when I was growing up,
I was like Ashley with a Y.
I was like Ashley with two E's.
Oh.
There was like one school I was at for like a Y. I was like Ashley with two E's. There was like one school I was at
for like a really short period of time
where I was like, I'm Ashley, but everyone calls me Sky.
It's like not true, I made that up.
I was just like nine.
And then like, it was like years later,
I was like in a bar in New York
and someone came up to me and they were like, Sky.
And I was like, what?
And they were like, Sky, like we went to school together.
And I was like, bitch, I'm,
I don't even remember being that person.
Which is ironic now,
because if you know anything about me as an artist,
you're like that tracks,
you constantly look and seem and act different.
But that's kind of fun and tough as a kid.
You're constantly not having to have this stable foundation
around you of like, I went to the same fucking school
from like kindergarten to eighth grade.
So like we all knew each other's parents
and we all knew each other's shit,
which has its pros and cons, but like constantly moving.
I feel like you can, yes, reinvent yourself,
but you also, I feel like aren't really seen then.
No, definitely not.
Yeah, you're just, there's like fragments of you
out in the world, just like these little whispers of a person
who's barely even formed.
My manager, Anthony, has a tattoo on his arm,
and it's a tattoo of his childhood home.
And he was like,
yeah, it's like a drawing of my childhood home.
And I was like, bitch, if you asked me
what my childhood home was, I can't think of one,
because I had so many.
I can't picture a childhood home.
I lived in eight houses, like apartments.
Like, you know what I mean?
You couldn't even like draw something.
I mean, I would have to, if I had to pick one
that was like my childhood home,
like maybe the house I lived in when I was in high school,
but that's not really childhood.
No, no.
You know what I mean?
It was like, I lived in so many different apartments.
I lived in like Florham Park, I lived in Lyndon,
I lived in Clark, I lived in so many different apartments. I lived in like Florham Park, I lived in Linden, I lived in Clark, I lived in like Sussex,
I lived in, I just lived in so many different places
and all these like little apartments
and they're all just kind of this like,
this like amorphous goo of like a bedroom
and I'm like in there with my little brother
and then there's like the kitchen
and then like, you know, like the apartment complexes.
They all like blend into like one,
like when I picture it kind of.
I'm interested to get your take on this.
Like, what do you think is the difference
between like hyper-independence versus loneliness?
I think it's whether it's forced or it's a choice.
You know what I mean?
I think that's kind of the difference. I think like, if you're choosing to be hyper independent
because it's like, it's better for you and like you function, you know, better in that way versus
if you're forced into hyper independence because you're, you put a lot of pressure on yourself
to succeed or to accomplish.
That's kind of that like loneliness, like that solitude.
Would you say you were lonely as a kid?
Oh my God, yeah.
I was so lonely.
I'm still lonely.
I'm like, you know, loneliness is like
when it affects you on, you know, I feel like there's like clinical
loneliness, you know, it's like, there's like, there's being sad
because something happened. And then there's like, obviously,
like depression, which is like, you know, it's clinical. I think
there's a version of that with loneliness, you know, it's like
you're lonely, because people aren't around and you have no one to hang out with, you're lonely because you're
going through something singular, and there's like deep like carnal loneliness. And I think that I've
definitely felt that way for like a lot of my life. And it's hard to fix, you know?
It's like, it's hard to get around that,
especially if you become comfortable in it, you know?
Well, and I feel like what you're sharing too
about your life, which I appreciate you sharing all of this
just to pause for a second.
I feel like I'm being so dark.
No, you're not.
This was supposed to be a fun podcast.
I was lonely as a kid. Let me just say's like it being so dark. No, you're not. It's supposed to be a fun podcast.
I was lonely as a kid.
Let me just say like, this is the shit that I think like,
when we now like listen to your music,
it even adds like more context.
And like, in my opinion, like I feel, not in a creepy way,
but like I feel closer to you now,
cause I'm like, oh fuck, like so many people are like, preach, yes, same, same, fuck.
You talking about your childhood,
I think that when people are listening to your music,
it is kind of helpful to know,
no wonder you are lonely,
because you came from this household environment
that you had to become lonely,
because you constantly were just like surviving alone.
And like, I think that happens a lot of times
when there are volatile or abusive situations at home.
Like if there's multiple people getting abused,
you can't even connect in the moment over it
cause you're just surviving.
And then you talking with your mom later on down the line,
like of course you wish you guys could have bonded over
or talked about it when you were that young,
but you couldn't cause you didn't have the tools either of you to
be like, this is happening. Sometimes a lot of times it takes getting out to be able to
talk about shit.
And it's generational. You know what I mean? Like I always say it's like our like our a
lot of for a lot of us, our parents were in the generation of survival. We're the first
with the luxury of existential thought. You know what I mean? Like they didn't have the luxury to like be
like putting thought into, you know, their existence
or like the roles and dynamics at play or like, you know
the reasons why they're doing something.
Like it was mostly just like surviving, you know.
I'm really interested to talk about this high school glow up
that you had because I could not relate more to
something. I know that you've mentioned in the past you were kind of like insecure and unnoticed
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Going into sophomore year of high school,
you had this glow up.
Can you talk to me about that time of your life?
I was like really underdeveloped.
Okay.
You know what I mean? I was like really skinny. I like didn't hit puberty until like a lot later
and I was like super nerdy at the glasses and like, you know, I was like, yeah, I was just a geek.
And then, you know, I hit puberty and like I came back and all of a sudden I had like huge tits and like, you know
I got contacts and like I
I also kind of like that was where I sort of entered my like I kind of entered my villain era
I was like 15 where I was like tired of being nerdy and geeky and I was like fuck you guys
Like I actually have really cool interests and I hang out with adults, like, which is not good.
That's like a whole other separate bad thing.
But like, yeah, but I felt very like, you know,
I felt very like emboldened by that.
And it was just like at school, like, I don't know,
my coping mechanism of like not getting along
with the kids I went to school with,
they're not like really fitting in
and having a friend group was by telling myself
it didn't matter because I had like cooler more interesting friends and people I knew most of whom were just
like online like didn't really hang out with them in real life and I was like you know we're talking
about like you know intellectual things and like whatever else but yeah I definitely um
I feel like everything really changed really fast for me.
And I went from someone who was like,
who looked like a nerdy 10 year old when I was 15
to like someone who was getting like tons of unwanted
like sexual attention.
And I was like, what the fuck?
How did having like,
cause I experienced a similar thing of like overnight
going through puberty and being like, no, no, no, no, no.
Like the same guy that's like bullying the fucking shit
out of me is now like wanting to like take me on a date.
And I'm like, hold on pause you fucking piece of shit.
Like nothing changed except my looks.
And yet now you're into me.
Like how did that impact the way that you like felt about yourself?
Um, I think it did in like a lot of different ways.
The first was I had to like differentiate, you know, between what attention was like
kindness and what wasn't.
Because my first instinct is I was like, Oh, people are being really nice to me now.
And I just missed the agenda completely.
And like that was really hard to navigate because I didn't have a lot of experience with that.
And it took me a long time to learn, like if someone is like giving you that kind of attention,
you are not obligated to return it.
I was really afraid of like making people mad or making people not like me and like, you know
On on like the simplest level. It's like a guy will be like an asshole to you if you are kind of
If you reject him, and then on the worst version of it, there's violence, you know what I mean? So it was kind of like it's I had to learn how to navigate like I am not obligated to
Concede or to give in to the sexual pursuit of me just because it's happening.
But it's hard because when you go
from not experiencing any of it,
that like a lot of your peers are experiencing,
and then all of a sudden all this validation comes,
like I remember when that happened to me,
I felt at first so excited,
like kind of like you're talking about,
there's that like excitement of validation
But underneath it I think when I was alone I had some like anger because I was like
What like is it it's so surface level like I've been the same person the whole time
But you guys like didn't give me any fucking attention until I had tits and an ass and like that's when you have to start
Doing the would you have been nice to me before?
And if the answer is no, then bye.
Bye.
It's really confusing.
Yeah.
You said once that you thought your sexiness
was a superpower, kind of like we're talking about.
Yeah.
And made it so no one could hurt you
and you would enter these rooms.
Oh, for sure.
Just like feeling that confidence.
Yeah, I definitely wielded sexual power as like a, you know,
I don't know, like as a tool of acquisition, you know,
like I definitely used it in certain circumstances
because it was kind of all that I had.
Can you give me an example?
Well, like, you know, if you're in a room full of people,
especially men, you know, and in this business,
as I was starting my business
and I was learning how to navigate the industry,
it's not just like, I write songs
and like, I have to build a business.
You're in a room full of people
who are more experienced than you,
they're older than you, they're richer than you,
they're very often men, white men.
And at the time I started out by trying to be like,
look how smart I am and look how much I know
and it was kind of like, okay.
And I was like, well, that's not working not working okay and then at a certain time I think
in the beginning I kind of figured out like I can make all of these like really
smart men dumb instantly if I'm just hot you know like it's so crazy how fast
they become stupid like there's so they have so much power over you in the
moment where you're like all all the experience, the money,
the power, the whatever.
And then you have this one little magic trick in your pocket
where you can just be like, really?
And all of a sudden that guy is like, um,
and you're like, oh God, that was so easy.
It's like, why wouldn't you use it if you have it then?
And I think so many people can relate to this.
Like I do think, yes, like women can relate to using
that part of us that is so sexualized
and leaning into it, you can feel this like great,
great energy from it.
And it's like-
Until it becomes, feels gross though,
until it gets gross.
And it feels gross pretty fast.
I feel like and I think like a lot of conversation
I always see online like I know Emily Ratajkowski has like
talked a lot about it of like there's this weird fucking
thing where you know you can use it to an advantage
but then you also have to like have some ability to like
navigate for yourself what you're comfortable with
and what you're not comfortable with.
When do you think if you have a memory that you were like,
oh, I'm taking it too far, this actually is like,
I'm not feeling chill about this?
I mean, there's been a couple of times.
There's definitely some times where I was out
with some collaborators and it was late.
Someone was just like, we were kind of playfully flirting
in a way that seemed really harmless.
And then they got really drunk
and they just started kind of touching me in public
and I was like, whoa.
But at the time, and I was like whoa but at the time you know
it's like I was younger then but it was like you don't want to cause a scene you
don't want to like you know there's other people there you don't want them
them to see you freak out and then they don't want to work with you because they
think you're a drama queen and like whatever else and you know and these
are all like I said younger minded belief systems of mine that have obviously
since changed now that I'm older but but like, it was those kind of things
where I was like, this is not worth it, you know?
It's becoming unsafe and I don't want, you know,
I don't want this to seem like I'm signing a,
I'm signing some sort of invisible contract
where I'm promising something to someone, you know?
And I think the concept of being a young person
in a situation where there's a power dynamic,
it's such this hard thing to explain
until you're in those situations
where you referenced it earlier of like,
I didn't want to make this person upset
and I didn't want it to escalate
where it could literally get to the point
where it goes like violence.
So you kind of just like appease the situation.
And I think that is where it can get really scary
and you keep just like, we just can appease people
and like make it be like, oh no, no, no,
everything's fine, everything's fine.
And it's like, but then you go home
and you feel like gross and shitty.
Yeah, I took that with you.
I had like a really strange situation a couple years ago.
I mean, I guess it was quite a long time ago.
But I was out and I was with this executive, like this really powerful executive who works
in music in some capacity.
And I'd been going out and like hanging out with him and like some other people at the
company and like, you know, we were working together and like, everything with him and like some other people at the company and like,
you know, we were working together and like, everything was like really fine. Like it was
very just like celebratory and like there was a lot of like industry talk. I didn't
feel weird about it at all. And I like had like my two managers with me who were kind
of like older guys and like I never felt like unsafe or anything. We were out one night
and like he was like,
oh, I wanna send a photo to my niece of us together
or something like that.
And I was like, okay.
And I took out my phone, I took a selfie of the two of us
and I handed him my phone and I was like,
text it to yourself, I have to pee.
And then I went to the bathroom and when I came back,
he handed me my phone like this
and I saw he was going through my nudes on my phone.
What is wrong with people?
And I sat down and I was like,
I actually didn't even know what to do.
I was just frozen.
I was like, did I just imagine that?
Was that an accident?
Did the phone scroll?
Like what the heck just happened?
And then I was like, did he text them to himself
and then delete the messages? I don't even know where these are now. I was? And then I was like, did he text them to himself and then delete the messages?
Like, I don't even know where these are now.
Like, I was just like, I was like frozen.
And I was like, that's so crazy that like,
I'm in this situation where like, I have so much power.
I have a bodyguard.
Like, I have a bodyguard.
And I have, you know, all the leverage in the world.
And I'm in this like exclusive space, in this like VIP,
like, you know, I've reached the ranks of like,
oh, I am protected or like whatever else it may be.
And then this invasive thing just happens like on a whim.
And I was like,
oh my God, I was, it made me feel,
I felt like it regressed me so much.
Like it made me feel, I went from being like,
yeah, I'm like fucking hot shit
and I'm one of the big players and then I sat down
and when that happened in that moment,
I was like, you're nothing, you're nothing, you'll always be nothing.
You're still just like that fucking girl
who's like getting, you know, taken advantage of
or like men are talking about you behind your back
or you're some sort of like collateral.
I was like, you're nothing.
It was so demoralizing.
It's so.
And so many worse things have happened to me than that,
but that one stuck out for some reason
because it was so nonchalant.
Right, no, that's what I think it's so,
I appreciate you sharing the details,
even of like, you're where you at,
you're in your career, you have a fucking bodyguard.
Yeah.
I think, and you technically,
like we revert to that like little child
of like men
ruling the world and us just having to appease them
like we were just talking about and you in that moment,
like no, of course, and people would be like,
why didn't you just say something?
It's like, you don't get it until you're fucking
in those moments where it's like,
there is kind of nothing to say,
but even if you said something,
then you're the crazy bitch that it's like,
oh, and then someone calls you a slut.
Cause then what do you mean?
What are you talking about?
You're nudes, you take nudes.
Like they can turn it so fucking fast on you.
Also it's like, are you like a bad bitch business woman?
That's the other thing is like at one point,
where's the line between like,
I am a powerful woman so I have to stand up to myself
and the line between that and I'm a powerful woman
so I have to not let certain things bother me
so that I can outplay these men in the long game.
There's so much to think about in that moment.
You know what I mean?
It's like, am I gonna let this bother me?
This like pathetic, squirmy little worm action of this man
when like I could just let it go
and then I'll get the last laugh
because I'm building my business
and I'm looking out for my life and whatever. Or like, do I have a responsibility as a woman
in a position of power to stand up for myself in that moment? I don't know which is what
is expected of me.
I don't think anyone in your position or anyone really in those moments knows what to do.
Even like the highest of powered people. Like, And I think that's why this is a really interesting
conversation because it's like, you're so fucking right.
Had you said something and made a scene,
then you're just like, oh, she's like the crazy bitch.
Like no one work with her anymore.
She like makes stuff up and she like uses her like sexual
being parts of herself as like a way
to like get people in trouble.
We don't touch her anymore.
Like no one go near her.
She's like a black widow. She'll flirt with you and then she'll like screw you over later. I to like get people in trouble. We don't touch her anymore. Like no, go near. Oh, she's like a black widow.
She'll flirt with you and then she'll like screw you
over later.
I'm like, well, okay.
And men don't have that experience
where they're never being like overly sexualized
in those moments.
So like, oh, I can't relate, gotta go.
Ew, she's crazy bitch.
Yeah, yeah, get off of me.
Whatever, totally.
It's not only is it the best interview
because you're fabulous.
It's also like, I have been wanting to have
these type of conversations with someone
that gets it and can talk about it,
but also is not like above it where you're like,
you are in it and you've experienced it.
And I think so many young people are gonna be like,
fuck, thank you for just talking about something that
we don't have the answer to any of this.
No, also I think people look to us and they're like,
so what do you do in those situations?
Cause they're like, oh, thank you for sharing. So what's the solution? And you're like, I don't know, I'm people look to us and they're like, so what do you do in those situations? Cause they're like, oh, thank you for sharing.
So what's the solution?
And you're like, I don't know.
I'm still figuring that out.
I don't know.
You know what I mean?
Like I'm still figuring out so many things.
Like I, even now, like, you know, I like,
where are the lines, you know?
Like sometimes it's just like,
if someone's being like a little overly friendly, it's hard sometimes to be like, okay, is just like, if someone's being a little overly friendly,
it's hard sometimes to be like,
okay, is it because they're excited to talk to me,
or is it because they don't understand social cues?
Or what is it?
Or is this worth being like, yo, chill?
Yeah.
And I think I had a situation
that happened to me
this past year and I feel like odd because my show,
you would expect me to immediately like run
and sit in front of the camera and talk about it
for all of the young people listening to me.
I'm still trying to figure out like how to talk
about that situation because it is a work situation.
And I'm like, I may see this person again.
And it's a situation where it's like, wow,
like I don't think anyone would expect me
to not say something.
And I didn't say something in that moment.
And I was so uncomfortable.
And it's like, I think the point is two people
in seemingly positions of power
are sitting here acknowledging today to young people
that experienced this.
Like there is no answer, but I do think through a show like this and through your music, like by us are sitting here acknowledging today to young people that experience this.
Like there is no answer,
but I do think through a show like this
and through your music,
like by us just talking about it,
writing about it, singing about it,
it just starts to like normalize more of the conversation
so people don't feel so ashamed
to talk to even a fucking friend.
You don't have to report something immediately.
Like it doesn't have to go to the highest level,
just like acknowledging it,
I feel like is the first step to making some progress.
Absolutely, it's an ongoing conversation.
Also people don't like it when rules change.
That's like the other thing is like,
people also don't like it when you have like nuanced rules.
You know, like for example, like I'm topless
on my album cover for my fourth record.
And it's like, my nipple was in target, like it's everywhere.
But like people sometimes will just like walk into my dressing room and I'd like my nipple was in target like it's everywhere but like
people sometimes will just like walk into my dressing room and I'll be like yo the door
and it's like the expectation is like what are you showing everyone your tits and I'm
like okay well I'm revoking that right in this moment like I'm allowed to decide I don't
want you to see me naked right now just because you've seen me naked before like I'm allowed
to change my mind or like someone's like oh like, you know I saw you in this one interview with like this person and you were like so touchy-feely and like so comfortable
It's like why are you being so standoffish to me?
I'm like I've it like you don't know my relationship with that person separate of that interview or like you don't know
This or like, you know, I'm I've is I reserve the right to change what I'm comfortable with, but people don't like that.
Cause then they go, oh, she's so wishy washy.
They're always changing their mind.
Like pick one.
Like what is it?
And it's like, I'm allowed to change my mind.
Not only are you allowed to change your mind,
like there are different boundaries per situations
you're in in life of like,
you may have been having a really rough morning.
And so like, yeah, I'm not in the mood for this.
And like, no matter what the fuck you're in the mood for,
that's okay.
And people that make you feel uncomfortable
or like you're being unreasonable,
that is a red fucking flag.
Like if someone is constantly coming at you
and making you feel like you're over dramatic
or you're being high maintenance and you're, pause.
Or like you took away the blanket consent
that I thought you gave to all of us.
And like I wanted that too.
And like the reason they're reacting that way
is because what they believe you've given them
is with this like hypothetical blanket consent
is like they see an opportunity
that they wanna leverage that for their own personal gain
or their own whatever.
And when you take it away, they're offended.
It's like you've taken something from me
and it's access to you.
They feel like ownership over you in a way.
Like that example of your nipple being in Target.
You made a decision the day of your photo shoot
to do something creative and artistic
that you were comfortable with that day.
That does not mean that everyone in the fucking world
when you're walking down the street can be like,
show me your-
I'm just gonna pull out my hair.
Nipple free for everyone to see.
It's wild that they, people feel entitled.
The entitlement to our bodies in moments, it's crazy.
I wanna talk about romantic relationships
because we kind of started about your childhood
and I feel like, again, what we've been kind of talking about
is like, they're all fucking connected. Did you tend to fall in love easily when you were younger? Not when I was
younger actually. When I was younger like when I was a young adult definitely. When I was a teenager
not so much. I wasn't like super trusting you know what I mean? When I was, I think honestly, once I became famous, I think I fell in love faster.
Because I was so desperate for stability and partnership and I just wanted to be seen and
I wanted a constant.
So I think that I, a lot of the time, would sort of project that onto people.
Like, you've ignored a lot of red flags,
like that kind of thing.
And like, not even like,
some of them super insidious red flags,
but some of them just like more harmless ones.
Like, we're just not really compatible in that way.
You know what I mean?
You have talked about a relationship you had
when you were 17.
The guy was 24. Yeah.
And he was a pretty big drug addict and was into drugs.
What drew you to that person initially?
I'm a fixer.
I am a fixer.
I'm like, I can fix you, I can fix you.
Like, you know, I am, it's funny.
I felt like becoming a mom was so natural
to me, I struggle with it in the same way
that every mom does, but at the end of the day,
I think I had so much blanket patience
because of how much time I spent trying to like fix
and mother people up until that point where like,
my like patience for someone not growing the way you want them to or as fast as you want them
to or like whatever was like already so established. But I'm a mother way before my child. Yeah,
seriously. I've been mothering these friends for a long time. No, that makes sense. And I think
it's again, like interesting to hear you talk about a dynamic that can be like someone struggling so much
with an addiction.
Like I had a relationship with someone that struggled a lot
with addiction and I was very young and he was older than me.
And I remember the power and balance was like so ever
present and I would feel so insecure.
And I would want to like, I think when you're the person
that's not in the position of power,
you find yourself like doing things
to try to like even the playing field
and really it's like kind of you appeasing them
and doing what they want you to do
so you feel closer to them.
Absolutely.
Did you experience that with this relationship?
Yeah, I mean, I dated a lot of addicts.
Like that was a kind of a reoccurring theme for me
until I was just like, okay, no, you know?
And like, I think that, you know, part of the problem,
I think when you're romantically involved with someone
who is in active addiction is that there's no logic, right?
So you try to reason with them and you try to go like,
okay, well, can't you see that if you do this, then it hurts me and then I feel this way or like, you did that I watched you do it.
And it's like, they live in a completely different reality that they've constructed to, you know, as a survival mechanism to not think about the fact that they're an active addiction.
You know what I mean? So it's like you're arguing with someone or you're reasoning with someone based
on reality and like that's not their reality. So there's no... you can't like reason with someone
who's not living in a world of reason. And then it turns into like this cognitive dissonance,
like thought spiral, where you start to feel like you're crazy.
You start to go insane because there's no growth.
It feels like growth when they're-
Just a loop.
Right, they're not on drugs.
So then you're getting closer and you feel like,
oh, we're so back.
And then it happens again.
And then you're like, wait, no.
But then the progress that feels like progress,
it's just, you're just getting a little bit back
to like normal. Totally. It's like, it's just you're just getting a little bit back to like normal.
It's like, it's a really, really difficult spiral
that I like empathize with anyone going through it right now
that's listening of like, you're not crazy.
And I do agree that a lot of people in those positions
want to fix things.
You can't fix someone that's going through that.
And I think a lot of times we feel like we can, you can't.
And I know it's easier said than done,
but once you get out of those moments,
you obviously have clarity.
But when you're in it, I just have empathy
for friends going through it, or people listening.
It's fucking hard.
And again, there is no solution that we're providing today.
I think it's just talking about the real shit
that you go through.
I needed someone to tell me at that time,
you're not a bad person if you leave someone
who's hurting you, you know what I mean?
Because I was always making excuses for those things
and being like, oh, but what kind of person am I
if I leave someone who's in this grate of need?
And I really needed someone to be like,
baby, that is not your responsibility,
you know what I mean?
Especially because I was just so young. And also, I had to be like, baby, that is not your responsibility. You know what I mean? Especially because I was just so young.
And also, I had to unlearn this thing that I was going through at that time where I was like,
I've spent so long in just like misery wanting to fix this person.
What if they get better one day and then someone else gets to have the better version of them that I worked so hard to build?
And it's like that is what kept me in it, was being like, well, no, one day they're
going to get better and then someone else is going to get to have the version of them
that I always dreamed would exist.
And all I got was just like the suffering.
And then what am I?
I'm just like the lesson.
I'm the martyr.
I'm the catalyst.
I exist in their life just so that they could go be better
for someone else.
And I was determined to not have that
because also it felt like losing.
I had to also deconstruct that too,
that thing of winning and losing.
I was like, no, baby, this is your life.
It's not about winning or losing.
I don't know, sorry.
It was like intense.
No, no, no, I'm more just speechless
because I don't think I've ever heard someone
like articulate it so perfectly
that I can imagine everyone listening right now
is like maybe like pulling over to the side of the road.
Just like have a pause because it's so fucking real
of like most of those relationships,
you go to the very possible end to the point
that like you even are at risk of your own life when you go that far down with someone.
So to leave feels like, but what was this all for?
And it's like, it's just gonna keep going.
Yeah, it feels like giving up, but it's not,
it's like making, you're making like a,
it's like, it is a hard choice.
I think that I started learning like in a way
you really do become someone
when you're spending that amount of time with them
and you're connecting with them
on an energetic level that much.
Where now, if I look at my partner
and I wouldn't wanna be them,
if I wouldn't wanna be just like them,
then I probably shouldn't be with them.
You should kind of really only be spending
that amount of time and putting that much love
and connection
and vulnerability into a person if like, you know,
if you would be okay becoming them as a result.
Yeah. You know?
You're preaching right now.
I'm like, keep going.
You're giving us a Ted talk. In one of your poems you wrote, I won't love a man unless he is angry because of my father.
How did normalizing anger in these relationships that you were having make you more willing to put up with
the things that they were doing? I think that I well first of all I had to change the way that
I talk to myself you know what I mean like I had a therapist once who was like um
was like I was I was talking to them about a partner
and I was like, they just like constantly tell me
or make me feel like I'm not special or like, you know,
I'm like, I'm embarrassing or like I'm weak
or I'm like, I don't know, just like all these things
and the person was like, okay, we'll ask you a question.
Like, do you think you're special?
And I was like, no.
I was like, I'm no, I don't like what?
Like I'm better than everybody else?
No, I don't think that she was,
I was like, I'm gonna ask you, ask you,
do you think you're special?
And I was like, no.
And she's like, and what do you tell yourself?
Like in those situations, like how do you talk to yourself?
And I was like, well, I just try to remind myself,
like, you know, like you have to be and like, you're not better than everybody else. And like,
you're not special. And like, you know, and she was like, okay, she was like, so if that's how you
talk to yourself, then when someone else talks to you the same way, you're not going to notice that
that's out of the norm. You know what I mean? Like that's if you're if
you're if you're communicating with yourself in that way like if you believe those things,
you know, I was like, yeah, but it's one thing for me to humble myself, but I want my partner
to build me up. And they were like, no, you have to build yourself up. That's not you
can't depend on another person to do that. Which was a really interesting conversation
because I feel like sometimes we go into therapy so often when we're struggling with relationships
and we're like, what's wrong with all these people?
And then there comes a part
where you have to take responsibility.
One of the things I had to take responsibility for
to end up in a healthy relationship
was sort of this toxic empathy
and this sort of toxic,
not like people pleasing,
but I was like, I was realizing that if I don't set clear boundaries for myself and people repeatedly
cross those boundaries, it's my fault
because I'm not giving them, I'm not communicating
with them or giving them a chance to learn
that that's a boundary.
And then also it's building up, building up,
building up, building up, and then I'm blowing up
out of resentment, but they're confused
because I never told them that that boundary
was being crossed.
And so, you know, that was a moment of where I was like,
oh God, like I have to also take responsibility, you know,
or like, cause I had went through a phase, I think,
where I was really like, I don't even,
like I don't even ask my partner for anything.
Like I take care of all my own stuff.
I don't bring myself into the relationship.
Like I'm not asking them to like support me
or emotionally whatever.
Like I literally just like, I take care of all my own shit
and I take care of them.
And like still they can't even like be there for me
in the 5% I'm actually asking them to.
And she was like, well, you're not showing up honestly.
She was like, you're not being yourself.
She was like, you think that they're being like dishonest
or they're being disingenuous, like bitch, so are you.
And just because you think it's in a nice way
doesn't mean that it's okay.
Like you're not like, you're this like self-sacrificing act
or whatever is actually you showing up and lying to them.
And that shook me.
Cause when she first said it, I was like, well, no,
I didn't do anything
wrong I was like why are you telling me I did something wrong and then I had to look at that
and I had to be like damn okay you're right you're right I'm fine showing up dishonestly even if it's
well-intending right I'm just as bad as them them you know you have a great therapist I know who is
this therapist we all need this person, it's so fucking true,
like not communicating something to your partner
that you're like, something is like festering inside of you
and you're watching it all the time being so upset
and they have no fucking idea you're upset about it.
It's like, how would they know you're upset
if you don't tell them you're upset?
In one of your new songs, Panic Attack,
I was listening to it and I was like,
this is the most relatable thing I've ever fucking heard.
And so many people when they hear the song
are gonna be like, yes, thank you, Walsey.
I have too been there.
You talk about struggling essentially to differentiate.
Like, am I having these panic attack feelings
or am I falling in love?
And like, what is the fucking difference?
Can you talk about from your experience,
like how those two are kind of similar
in the beginning phase of a relationship?
Yeah, I think like, you know,
if you are like anxiously attached,
like you kind of get those feelings of like nervousness,
like, and it's really easy to misinterpret those.
I said this a long time ago.
I have like a song from like a couple of years ago
from an album, Manic, a song called Graveyard.
Where in the bridge I say,
it's funny how the warning signs
can feel like butterflies.
And so I've kind of touched on this before.
Panic Attack is a more expanded version of it,
which is like, there is that moment kind of of like,
your heart's freaking beating out of its chest
when their name pops up on your phone.
What's that about?
Is it because you're now entering this like dopamine cycle
of like, you know, you actually aren't sure.
Like if you're not sure they're gonna answer you
and then it excites you and they do,
I don't think that's love.
I don't think so.
You shouldn't be putting that level of energy into a person
if you're not sure that they're gonna have the decency
to respond to your message.
It's so confusing.
And I love that you brought up graveyard
because I was like gonna reference that.
And I'm like, no, but we have like a new and improved version.
Yeah, they're like sisters.
And I feel like those butterfly warning signs
are so easily misconstrued in the beginning phase.
And I empathize a lot because it's hard until you start to just have your life experiences
and go through multiple relationships.
And it's that again, us not giving you guys the answer,
but knowing like the more you experience,
the easier it is to kind of be like, oh, no, no, no,
I've felt that way before.
And I know how this goes down.
Like I need to pump the brakes,
but the beginning of relationships
can be very hard to discern.
Is this excitement or is this because this person
is essentially like love bombing me
or whatever the fuck is going on
or is it like slightly mentally abusive,
but I'm seeing it as like,
he finally is giving me attention.
Oh my God, I'm amazing.
There's the validation.
Also toxicity in relationships is addictive.
It is, it's absolutely addictive.
It's just like a cycle of norepinephrine,
that's like an adrenaline chemical,
you know what I mean?
And dopamine, and you start to build patterns
and neural pathways to the ups and downs
of feeling that rejection, validation,
rejection, validation, rejection, validation, rejection, validation.
And I remember when I kind of like,
when I had like some distance from like
my most toxic relationship and I was in relationships
that were like a little bit more content,
I do remember at times being kind of like,
and I don't wanna say this as any kind of like
diss to the people who might hear themselves
in this conversation because you know this isn't a diss but I did find myself kind of
bored.
And like not bored with them but bored with the lack of intensity and the lack of the
up and down and kind of just like wondering if,
because I had experienced such highs and lows in a toxic relationship,
if every other form of love was gonna feel
like less than satisfactory to me.
So real.
Yeah.
Like that's so fucking real.
It's not true because I'm very much in love now
and I'm getting all. We're getting getting all, yeah, I mean all the-
I see that ring girl.
I will say to anyone listening, that's not true.
But I do think there's a period of time
where like safety comes, where you just kind of feel like
it just doesn't hit the same.
And like, you can't go back.
I definitely was like, oh, I wonder if I'm just gonna be,
like, what is it for me?
Is it contentment?
Is it settling?
Is it settling for safety?
Do I get to have that same intensity
without all of the danger, you know?
And I feel like something I had to learn along the way,
and everyone has to like take their time with it,
is like, you're right. The toxicity is addicting, but there's such a difference
between like safe and boring or just not the same thing.
And it can take you a really long time,
but understandably if you're on this fucking
roller coaster ride and then you're slowly just like
sitting in the little, the like the game that you're just
like riding around and it's slow.
You're like, this isn't fucking fun.
I want to be screaming my head off
and I wanna have my hair all over the place.
It's like, what if we told you
that 10 people died on that ride last week?
And you're like, well, it was fun though.
You know what I mean?
We keep going back and it's like,
why do we do this to ourselves?
Because I was gonna ask you about,
you have written about these volatile relationships
that you've been in and when you do get out of them,
I guess you just answered it of like,
what do you learn about yourself then
when you get into new relationships that aren't as volatile?
And it's like, I guess your answer was like,
kind of learning to be okay with peace a little bit more?
Yes and no.
Okay.
Because then what happened was, is I was like,
okay, I guess this is it.
I guess I'm just settling for contentment.
And then I realized that that wasn't true either.
That was me putting safety before my happiness.
You know what I mean?
Because I was gonna say like,
if you have any advice to maybe someone
that's watching this right now,
that is like fully in that cycle of
whether it's with an abusive partner or a toxic partner
and they just can't get out of it and they're like,
but I'll never find something that makes me feel this.
Oh, you will.
You will, you have to heal first.
When you get out, it's not gonna feel that way right away
because you need to heal.
And then like that new healed version of you
is gonna like, you know, I don't know.
It's kind of like when you get a wound
and then, you know, the wound hurts and it hurts
and it hurts, but at least you're feeling something.
And then it scars and the scar is numb.
And you're like, I don't have no feeling here.
But then eventually new skin grows
and you get to feel again, but it's not,
it doesn't hurt.
You know what I mean?
No, it's so hard to tell people when they're in it.
We're like, I'm promising you.
If you leave and you get out of it and you heal,
it's going to get better.
I want to ask you like as an artist,
cause I feel like a lot of people have these moments
where they collaborate with someone
they were in a relationship with
and you've done that in the past.
And you have this like very famous song
with someone that you have like talked about
like not having a good relationship with.
Can you describe the feeling of like having a piece of art
tied to a very like hurtful
and not like positive experience?
I think the one thing I've been really smart about
is they're never my songs.
I'm always on their songs.
And I'm like, that's your problem, not mine.
I get to do my whole catalog
and I don't have to deal with you.
So sorry that some of your biggest songs have me on them.
I don't know what to tell you.
But I tend to be
sort of the gatekeeper about my art for that same reason where I'm like, yeah, I'll get on your thing,
but like, not mine, you know, like, this needs to this I need to preserve this for for myself.
You know, I think whether I'm on a record with someone and the relationship changes or not, or I
just wrote a song about them, songs just carry so much cellular energy.
But the good thing about them is that they do evolve.
I've gotten on stage and sang the same song over.
I've been singing without me for fucking years.
Every time I sing it, it feels different.
It feels like it's about a different thing.
I have so many songs that are about so many different times in my life or like experiences and like I don't know I think that
I think that I'll never shy away from being honest you know it's like and if you have to
deal with the consequences of that later then so be be it. But like, I would rather regret,
I would rather regret being honest
and being reflective of where I was in my life at that time
than regret not saying something
or doing something that I wish that I had.
I don't know.
I just.
It's a great fucking answer.
Yeah, no features on this album though.
Just me.
Nobody else getting in the way of my narrative.
Period.
There is a ring on your finger.
We've gone through childhood.
We've gone through your previous relationships
and going through the mud to get to,
congratulations, you're engaged.
Thanks.
I am like-
You're fucking married.
I know.
It's crazy.
It's insane.
I have to get all the tea from you.
No, I have to tell you everything.
It's insane and it still feels weird to say
like I have a husband.
I love that.
Like what is happening?
You're a fiance.
I know.
This is exciting.
How did the proposal happen?
Can you tell me?
It was really sweet.
Tell me.
So he proposed in Barcelona.
It's kind of like where we first started hanging out.
So it's like really special to us
because we had this like kind of this like these few days
where we were like, we were hanging out a bunch
and it was very like not, you know,
I wasn't sure that I was ready.
And so it was kind of like, you know
but I was also kind of like you're literally the
like most amazing like
Smartest hottest nicest person I've ever met in my life. So also like please don't go anywhere
I'm gonna I'm trying to figure it out. Like, you know what I mean?
Yeah, and you know, so he proposed in Barcelona. It was really sweet and
Immediately afterwards left to go shoot a show for like six months in Canada. I was like, okay, bye
Yeah, so we we haven't really had like the chance to be like engaged right, you know what I mean?
but he's coming home and you know, just the time for me to go
start like all the album promo or whatever. And you know, I think we're gonna get to have like our
time then but I never wanted to be married. Interesting. Never. Never? What changed?
Avon. Yeah, I don't know. I never thought that I would ever want to be married and then like,
I just knew I wanted to marry him and I couldn't explain why because I would deconstruct marriage
like from such a logical perspective beforehand. Like I was so like practical, survival, like you
know, like fiscal like about it. Like you know the way that I was, I always broke down marriage and
like I couldn't really understand the point of marrying
just from like an emotional point of view.
It was like, well, if you love each other,
then just be together while you have to get married.
I didn't understand it.
And then, I don't know, it was just something with him
where I just knew I wanted to marry him.
And like, I can't even explain why, you know what I mean?
Cause I do, I love him in such a way that I feel like
we would be just as fine if we didn't.
But something about that makes me wanna do it more.
I relate a lot to what you're saying
because I was very vocal.
Even when I met Matt, I was like,
I don't wanna get married, I never wanna get married.
I thought it would threaten my independence.
I felt the same way, like, why do we need a piece of paper?
And then I just knew he was the person
if I was gonna do it.
And I think that's so beautiful
that it was just something within you
is like, I know this is right.
Yeah, I just knew.
And that's like, how did you guys meet?
We met kind of just floating around.
He was floating around Europe and so was I.
We were both doing some fashion week stuff
and I was playing some festivals.
And we'd been aware of each other. fashion week stuff and some like, I was playing some festivals and like, you know, we, I'd,
we'd been like aware of each other. Like we followed each other on Instagram. You know
what I mean? But it was like, and we, neither of us can really remember if we had like met
in passing before that. I think I would remember. So I don't think we have, you know what I
mean? But, um, I always, I had like, I always had like a weird feeling about him.
And then I got pregnant and I was with my son's father and then I didn't have any feelings
about anyone because I was super committed to making my family work and this new life
is like a mom with my son.
And so I wasn't really thinking about any of that kind of stuff. And then I became a single mom and I was like,
I am never dating anyone ever again.
And it's gonna be, I had so much to figure out.
I was like, it's just me and my son.
And like, you know, and I was also really sick.
I was really sick in like a life changing way.
I was like not thinking about dating at all.
Yeah, and so then we met, we like met up for a drink
one night. And I just remember walking into this bar, this like hotel bar and he was like
sitting in this like little beer garden at the hotel. And I walked in and I saw him and
the only way I can explain it was is like, you know, like a vampire movie when the vampire
like glamors you, like they do that thing and that makes you like yes. Yeah
I feel like that was happening to me. Like I walked in all like I walked in and I was like, hey
And he was like hi and I was like hi
Okay, he Edward Cullen do you know he straight up like mine tricked me like and he wasn't doing it on purpose
He just is very charming. I mean
tricked me like, and he wasn't doing it on purpose, he just is very charming, you know what I mean?
I love you.
Yeah, and I was just like, whoa,
there was just like this like, this warmth
and this like light just like emanating off of him.
It was so compelling, it was so alluring.
I just like sitting at the table,
just wanted to lean over the table, sit closer to him.
Like I was so just like drawn to him.
Like I don't know how to explain it.
It was so, it was different than like when you meet someone
and you're like, I could see this working
and I'm like planning in my head
and I'm like doing the calculation
of like how this would work out and like,
okay, you're like that and I'm like this
and this would be good.
It was just like, I was like, whoa.
I was head empty.
I was not head full of, I'm gonna get in math.
I was head empty. I was just head full of, I'm gonna get in math. I was head empty.
I was just like, hi.
Oh my God.
It was crazy, yeah.
I don't know.
We're all just like swooning in here like, whoa.
Keep going.
No, that is like, that's when you know
there's something special.
What if you had to say,
what do you love the most about him?
That's hard.
I mean, he's so like freakishly like adjusted isn't the right word, but like
there's nothing I could ever bring up that would freak him out. There's like no conversation
we can't have like in like a call like he's so solution oriented like everything between the two of us is always like
it's always with the the goal of solution and bettering and like you know we're never like
locked into like who's gonna win this or who's gonna whatever also he's just like
i remember when I first,
when I first started seeing him,
I was like, what's it gonna be?
I was like, you are like super successful,
you've been in this business for like a really long time,
you're smoking hot and everyone on the planet knows it.
I was like, what's wrong with you?
And he was so nice. And he was so family oriented. And like, I was like,
oh, you're about to be the biggest psychopath. You're
about to be the final boss. Like you can't be like this. I
was like, there's gonna be what like, whatever's wrong with you
is gonna be like, FBI is most wanted. Like you're gonna be
secretly like have bodies in your basement, like something,
you have to have the worst thing
ever wrong with you.
And then it was like, I was kind of like unsure
for like a while.
And then like, you know, as time went on,
well, first I met his parents and they're fucking lovely.
And so that's where I was kind of like,
oh, maybe this is real.
Maybe he is just that great because he's great parents,
like raised him really well.
And then, you know, he has got,
he has a relationship with my son now.
You know, I'm just like watching the way
that he shows up for my son in like such a authentic way.
I was like, okay, you really are just like the best person.
And then came the panic of me being like,
well, I don't deserve someone that great.
And so I had to kind of like, it was short-lived,
but I had that little process of like, whoa, my God,
if he really is that great,
then like, what the hell is he doing with me?
You know, and then I had to kind of like,
I had to start seeing myself,
I had to value myself more, you know what I mean?
Where I had to be like, well, I'm also really ambitious
and I'm a really good mom.
And like, I create like a really welcoming
and like safe environment.
I'm a really good mom. And I create a really welcoming and safe environment. I'm really patient.
I'm really communicative and I'm rational
and I am supportive and proactive.
And I gotta start seeing myself in that way
to have peace and to not enter a cycle of insecurity.
Dude, that must've been so refreshing
because I think when you are met by a healthy,
good partner who, we all have our own shit,
but like someone that's genuinely trying to be like,
no, I really want to make this work.
And I don't wanna fuck you up
and I don't wanna be fucked up
and I wanna do this together.
Like you just start to raise your standard for yourself
of like how you are going to show up.
And like you said, it's so beautiful.
Like with your child,
knowing how you care for a whole ass human being
and how you show up for your child to see a partner
like come into your life and be able to not only
like embrace you guys, but also add value to the dynamic.
Like that's so fucking refreshing and probably nice for you.
Yeah, it also forced me to do everything
really, really in the right way.
You know what I mean?
It's amazing.
Becoming a single mom was a real grownup wake up call
for me.
That was a good moment where I was like,
I can't just like,
like, skirt past this.
This has changed the entire dynamic of my life.
It's changed everything about my own feelings of hurt and wanting to act on those
versus like what's right for my child. And like, you know, I had to,
I had to like, I had already like speed run grown up when I became a mom, but then I had to like
I had already like speed run grown up when I became a mom, but then I had to like secondary like speed run grow up
where like I grew out of that not wanting to be
inconvenient or not wanting to be a problem
or not wanting to be clingy or not wanting to be extra.
Like I had to grow out of that to date again
as a single mom where it's like I wasn't in a situation
where like, you know, if you're like,
I couldn't be in a situation where I'm like texting a guy
or like a girl, like talking to whoever.
And I'm like, hey, so like,
do you wanna make plans for next week?
And they're like, oh, I'm not really like big into plans.
I'll go see you when I see you.
Like, I couldn't be like, okay, like how do you pick?
I'm a mom.
I have a schedule.
Do you wanna see me or not?
And if you don't, then like, bye.
You know what I mean?
And so it was like, I, it just like,
it forced me out of being able to like accidentally,
like people please, I guess, or like make myself smaller
because I was like, I can't, right?
So like, what's up?
You know?
That is like so beautiful to hear.
And I'm so happy for you
in like everything you've shared today.
I feel like that has beautifully led you
to where you're at now, where you are engaged,
you are a mother, you are so successful,
you have this new album coming out,
which we have to talk about.
Like I said, I was listening to it,
and there is a lot in this album,
and it's called The Great Impersonator.
What is the meaning behind the title?
["The Great Impersonator"] What is the meaning behind the title?
What is the meaning behind the title?
I think it's, you know, it's sort of, it's like a double entendre.
Okay.
You know, like on the one hand, I think it kind of touches on some of what we've talked
about this time was just me figuring out that Hal think it kind of touches on some of what we've talked about this time,
which is me figuring out that Halsey's kind of serving as more of an alter ego than like just a stage name.
And like kind of admitting that and like coming forward and being like,
I've built a career off of being really honest and authentic and maybe I haven't been as honest and authentic as I thought
the past couple years. Maybe I have more to say.
And what forced me into that was obviously getting
so sick that I thought I was gonna die. You know, like when you think you're gonna die,
you have an existential crisis that is just like indescribable to your former self. Like,
you kind of have to like live through it to understand it. And like, I just started looking
at myself and being like, okay, if you do die, is this, you're happy with this? This is how
everyone's gonna remember you? It's like the last thing you did, last thing you said, like,
have, you know, we tell ourselves a lot of time we have more time and like we do but like nothing
is promised to us. So there's times where I was like, like example, like the song about my dad,
I told you I was like, I was like, I'll do it on the next album. I'll do it on the next album. Because I was too scared. And with
this one, I was like, might not be an X album, bitch. Put it out. Speak your truth. There might
not be an X album. You know, and so kind of like forced me into the situation where I was like,
I have to just act and do and be as truthful as I possibly can. But I started thinking about fate a
lot. I started thinking like, okay, does everything happen for a reason, right?
Like I'm born in 1994.
Is that how I end up Halsey?
Is because like I'm born at the right time,
at the right moment.
Like if I'm born 10 years earlier, five years later,
do I end up famous?
Do I end up an art teacher?
Do I end up like in jail?
Like what am I, you know?
And then so I was like, what if I debuted in the 70s?
Like what if I debuted in the 80s, the 90s?
Like, I started exploring all these different, like,
versions of me making music in, like, different decades.
So in a sense, I'm kind of, like, impersonating
other, you know, stars of that time
and kind of doing an exploration
or, like, a thought experiment on that.
Because it's like, the big thing that kept coming up
when I got sick was a lot of people,
like in the medical field were pretty adamant with me,
like you're sick because of your job.
Interesting.
Some said it just directly in some,
in not so many words, just kind of like,
well like stress and like lack of sleep and traveling and jet lag, you know, in not so many words, just kind of like, well, like stress
and like lack of sleep and traveling and jet lag, poor nutrition, putting strain on your
body. Like these things can trigger autoimmune diseases and the particular autoimmune disease
that have lupus can trigger, you know, it can can trigger leukemia, lymphoma, like a
lot of, a lot of of blood cancers and like lymph cancers
are more common in people who have chronic,
you know what I mean, conditions.
And so they all kind of just trickle down to this,
like you're stressed out all the time kind of thing.
So that led me to be like, you know, becoming Halsey
was like the craziest thing that's ever happened to me
in my life, but like, is this a consequence of that?
You know, and like, does it go this way? No matter what, if I become Halsey's me in my life, but is this a consequence of that? Does it go this way?
No matter what, if I become Halsey's,
is how my life goes?
Am I a single mom?
Am I sick?
Am I like, is there any way to beat that fate
or beat that destiny?
Can I ask, how are you feeling today?
Pretty good, yeah.
I came back from New York, I was there for the VMAs,
and I noticed I was
kind of starting to have a flare like a lupus flare okay um and I haven't had
one in a little while because you know my disease has been like you know in
remission and I was kind of like thinking about it I was thinking about
like a lot of my fans or a lot of my audience that's also dealing with chronic illness. They say to me all the
time like I don't know how you do that like you must be so much stronger than
me like I can really get out of bed or I can really go to school and I'm like
whoa whoa whoa whoa whoa I don't want you thinking that I'm stronger than you
or like you can't accomplish as much as me like I went and did the VMAs I worked
really hard that whole week and
then I had a flare as a consequence of that. That's reality. That's the risk. And you guys,
the fans, you're the reward. And I have to kind of balance that every time I do something. It's
just knowing that that's a possibility and kind of adapting to that new normal. And so what happens
then is I have to rest or I have to go get treatment or I have to like, you know, I have to change certain things, but it's by no means because
like I'm built differently than anyone else.
It's like, I'm also in a significant position of privilege compared to most people who are
dealing with chronic illness, you know, in terms of like, you know, the treatments I
can get the access that I can get, like, um, and so I'm just using all of those things
to kind of,
to mitigate what is my new normal.
I definitely had a situation like a couple,
a couple like weeks ago.
And that's why I'm kind of like chuckling to myself
about this flair because I did the thing where I was like,
I'm feeling so good, I don't know if I need treatment anymore.
And so I was like, I'm gonna stop treatment.
Like I don't wanna put this stuff in my body.
Like I'm gonna be fine.
It's like, I was like, bitch, you didn't learn your lesson
and you did that with antidepressants.
Like first of all, but then like, you know,
I was like, I'm feeling really good.
Like I don't think I need to do it anymore.
And like, you know, I'm putting all this,
these medicines in my body and like,
maybe I can just do it with like diet and like with whatever.
And I stopped for like a little bit.
I like skipped a treatment, immediate flare.
I was like on the flight home
and like one of the first signs of a lupus flare
is you get this butterfly shaped rash across your cheeks.
I got up, I was like, go use the restroom on the plane.
I looked in the mirror and I was like, fuck,
you've gotta be fucking kidding me. No.
And I kind of like had to like,
I like walk ashamed back to my seat and like sat down
and was like, damn.
That was a sad moment for me,
cause I was like, I had felt so good.
Like, you know, it was like on TV and on the carpet
and I was like, I'm doing it again.
I'm great and everything's good.
And like, it made me like kind of emotional
cause I was kind of like, I'm still sick.
That's still reality.
Like this is forever now.
And that was hard.
I couldn't just be like, well, that was crazy.
Those two years, ha ha ha, moving on.
Like I had to be like, no, this is still, this is forever.
I'm still like coming to terms with that
like little by little.
I can only imagine how hard that is.
And like, I think in different capacities,
everyone can find a way to relate to that feeling of like,
oh, no, no, no, I don't need this anymore.
I'm gonna be fine.
And then you go back to not being fine
and you're like, this is so emotionally heavy to deal with.
But I do think that it's incredible that you have been open
as much as you want to be about that.
Because I do, again, believe it helps other people realize
someone that is as successful as you also is just not living
this perfect fairy tale life and everything's fucking fine.
Like everything you're writing about in this album
is so fucking real.
Like what is the hardest song that like you wrote to write?
The Life of the Spider.
Really?
Yeah, that was like the hardest.
It's like, just like me and a piano kind of sounds like a voice note like a little bit
And every time I hear it I cry
Just like hearing my voice like in that state
And I wrote that song
About being sick and about just like feeling like such a burden
And also just feeling disgusting
I felt so gross and so terrible about myself when I was sick. It's like you know, I was just feeling disgusting. I felt so gross and so terrible about myself
when I was sick.
It's like, you know, I was like,
I was really gaunt and like my face changed
and my face had just, my face and body had just changed
because I just had a baby.
You know, I was pregnant and like,
I went through all those changes
and then it changed again like this
when I got sick so fast, you know, and um,
I was like vomiting but then like
You know, I was like brushing my teeth made me scared because I was scared it was gonna induce more vomiting and like I was
I was I was just so sick and so gross and like I felt revolting like I didn't feel good about myself at all and like you know I I felt I felt you know kind of trapped in like
this cycle of feeling resentment from people close to me you know um some real some imagined you know think both um and
just kind of this feeling of like
everyone had depended on me for so long and i i kind of like it was a hell of my own design
because i told everybody for so long like i I don't need help, I can take care of myself.
And then I needed help and everybody was like,
what do you mean?
You conditioned us to believe
that you take care of yourselves
and now you're getting mad at us
because we're not helping but we don't know how to
because you've never let us before.
You know, and so that was really, really hard.
But also just kind of feeling like,
God, how dare I inconvenience you so much by being dying.
I was gonna say, like, but again,
going back to everything you've shared today,
like you're used to being the one that's taking care of
and fixing everyone.
So like to ask for help must feel just so unnatural to you.
But like you need help from people, you need support,
you need people to be there for you.
But it's hard to ask when you're someone
that is not used to asking.
A big thing for me was like a lot of my relationships
I felt like because I'm traveling all the time
and because I'm gone and because I am really like insulated
and self-sufficient in that way where it's like, you know, I feel like when you're in the public eye or like
you are like, you know, you're financially secure in the way that like you are in the
business, it changes your friendships, right?
It's like I'm moving, right?
I don't have to ask my friends to come help me move because I'm just going to move like
at the moving company and do the thing or like I need someone to pick me up from a surgery
or like take me to the dentist or like, you know, whatever.
And it's like, I'll get a driver.
It's like, you lose that kind of like village community.
We look out for each other kind of thing.
But then on the flip side,
I'm always taking care of stuff for other people.
You know what I mean?
So it changes the dynamics of the relationship.
I'm also a spiritual person,
so I also believe sometimes that like,
you will end up in situations where if you're like
spirit guide or your guardian angel
or whatever it is that you believe,
knows that you won't make a hard decision for yourself,
they'll kind of put you in a position
where the other person does it for you,
but it's for you, you know what I mean?
Yes, like you can feel it when it's happening. Yeah.
This whole album is incredible.
I'm so excited for you.
Last two questions, I promise.
One, what are you most excited to perform?
What song?
Okay, there's two for two different reasons.
I really can't wait to play Panic Attack
because it's just like such a musical song.
Like it's got like the piano,
the piano's so warm and the guitar is so great
and the drums are so like,
I just imagine I'm gonna get on stage and feel like I'm a part of like a big band,
like a 70s big band, you know what I mean? And like with all the musicians on stage just like
twirling around like, it's very Laurel Canyon, like you know, it's got that like Fleetwood Mac
vibe so I can't wait to do that because I just feel like it's gonna be so like classic.
But then definitely the Only living girl in LA.
It's a six minute song.
So like, I don't know how I'm gonna play it live,
but I think there's so many fun moments for the fans
to like join in on like ad libs and stuff.
But it's gonna feel like we're performing it together.
And I love when a song feels like you and the audience
are doing it together,
not like you're doing it at them, you know?
It's so sad and beautiful and listening to it,
I was like, Halsey, I wanted to like give you a hug.
I was like, this is so fucking sad,
but it's so, it's really an incredible song.
I mean, every single song is incredible
and you're such an incredible writer,
but I'm just so happy for you
because you are clearly so talented
and everything that you have gone through in your career and your personal life to see this new
work of art that you've put together is truly incredible.
And I wouldn't say that if I didn't feel that way,
like listening to it in my car,
I also chose to listen to it in the car.
Cause I was like, I need this in the car.
That's the best place to listen.
And I, I'm so happy I got to meet you because your energy
and your spirit and just who you are as a
person, like it does change my fandom over you even more. Like I feel like an even bigger fan
after getting to speak with you today. Thank you for like taking the time today because it was,
I think the daddy gang is going to freak out over this and I know your fans will, but thank you for
giving me the time. Oh my gosh, of course. Also you have to teach me how to plan a wedding. I don't know what I'm doing.
Trust me.
I have no idea.
I'm really overwhelmed.
No, trust me, I've got you because I was like,
I didn't even know what I would want to wear.
I was like the antithesis of a bride when I first started
and like I figured it out.
Well, I told you, I never wanted to be married.
So when I'm talking and people are like,
when you were a little girl, what did you dream about?
Like nothing.
And I was like, I didn't, I have no idea.
Right, like being successful.
I'm just obsessed with my fiance.
And I just like fucking, like wanna,
like I wanna crawl inside his skin and be like a part of him.
And like, I need a wedding where like,
I can either do that and it's not weird,
or like if there's something in place
that prevents me from trying to do it, you know?
Halsey, I could not relate more to you
and I will give you all of the wedding tips that you need.
Thank you for coming on Caller Daddy.
It was an honor. Thank you.
Thank you. Thanks for having me. Thanks to Lieb by Yves Saint Laurent for sponsoring today's episode.
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