Trending News|June 17, 2015 12:59 EDT
Miley Cyrus News: Pop Stars Talks Dating and the Differences Between Men & Women
As singer Miley Cyrus continues to slowly open up about her gender preferences and the likes, Cyrus also recently spoke of dating and how hard it is to find someone who you can really talk to in her recent interview with Time magazine, not holding anything back for her fans.
Cyrus has her ways of sharing something new to the public not only with music but also with her personal life and now, Cyrus had a tell-all interview with Time which she revealed how she had a pretty hard time dating men and women and finding real companionship.
Indeed there were times where Cyrus was struggling with finding the right one to date, men or women speaking out about how it didn't feel comfortable dating either. Cyrus shared how it is dating a guy."That made me feel like I had to be a femme-bot, which I'm not. And then when I was with a girl, I felt like, 'Oh s--t, she's going to need someone to protect her, so I'm going to need to have this macho energy.' And that didn't feel right either," she shared.
Cyrus also bluntly shared how easy it is for her to find someone whom she can have a physical relationship with but it is a different story when it comes to finding someone she can talk to. "We want to find someone we can talk to. And be ourselves with. That's fairly slim pickings," she continued.
The young pop star also revealed some of her thoughts on dating recalling the experience she had on Valentine's day while looking at other couples. "All the women in the restaurant were with these older, fat men that had just let themselves go. They were just being drunk bastards. And then the women were sitting there, trying so hard just to look good. And they're ignoring them the whole time. And I thought, 'I'm not living like this,'" she said.
All those revelations are apparently Cyrus' way of encouraging some young people struggling like her in finding themselves and discouraging them not to be like her in how she coped with her struggle. "I hope more kids don't do what I did and sit in their room and cry, thinking 'I just don't know what I'm supposed to be,'" she said. "But when I tell kids sometimes, 'Just be yourself,' I feel like, 'I hope you can do that. Can you really do that?'"
"Maybe if you're finally getting to be yourself, it's more of a celebration," she added.