Miley Cyrus
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Miley Cyrus Opens Up About the Potential End of Her Music Career

Miley Cyrus started working on “Hannah Montana” when she was still young. Nowadays, she has a successful music career that has earned her multiple awards and countless fans. However, during a chat with fellow star Pamela Anderson for CR Fashion Book published on Monday, September 22, Cyrus revealed that she might want to walk away from her career at some point.

“I actually had this moment the other night where I was lying in bed thinking, ‘Wow, I really jumped on a train when I was 11 years old, and I’ve never gotten off,'” Cyrus told Anderson. “I made a decision at 11, and I’ve never stopped.”

She added, “I made this deep commitment, and I never questioned it or reexamined it.”


Cyrus Still Wants Her Music Career — But that Might Change

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Miley Cyrus

Cyrus may have spent the bulk of her career not questioning whether or not it was what she wanted at the time, however, that eventually changed.

“It wasn’t until my late 20s and early 30s that I started reevaluating: ‘Is this still what I want?’ So far, the answer has been yes, but I’m not afraid of the day it’s no,” she said while talking to Anderson for CR Fashion Book.

Granted, she admitted, “I don’t know if that day will come — when this no longer has my heart the way it does now.”

However, she knows that she might not always feel the same way. “Like you said, there could be a season where all of this no longer interests me, and that’s okay,” she added.

Anderson responded by telling Cyrus: “You’ll always be creative — even if it’s in a garden, you’ll never get rid of that. It’s just a matter of if you get off the crazy train.”


Cyrus No Longer Wants to Go Out on Tour

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Miley Cyrus

Cyrus may still be interested in making music and performing on stage, however, she longer wants to do one major part of her career: tour.

“I do have the physical ability,” she noted during an interview on Good Morning America that took place on July 15. “I have the opportunities to tour, I wish I had the desire, but I don’t.”

“I also don’t think that there’s an infrastructure that supports artists,” she added. “It’s really hard to maintain sobriety when you’re on the road, which is kind of a pillar of stability in my life. It’s really hard to keep mental wellness.”

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