Current:Home > StocksMiley Cyrus, Tish and Noah family feud rumors swirl: How to cope with family drama -Horizon Finance Path
Miley Cyrus, Tish and Noah family feud rumors swirl: How to cope with family drama
View
Date:2025-04-19 16:09:30
Rumors about a Miley Cyrus family feud, reportedly between her sister Noah Cyrus and their mother Tish Cyrus, have been swirling since last summer.
Multiple anonymous sources have come forward with details about Tish’s wedding and relationship with Dominic Purcell. While none of the claims have been confirmed by members of the Cyrus family, many people can identify with the difficulty of dealing with familial rifts that, in one way or another, can leave lasting impacts on mental health.
"Research suggests that the same parts of the brain that process physical pain also process emotional pain,” psychotherapist Chelsey Cole previously told USA TODAY, “so being cut off, isolated, betrayed, rejected or disowned by your family physically hurts.”
Cole estimated that over half of her therapy clients have experienced a break in their families.
The consequences can be dire. Isolation and loneliness brought on by family estrangement, or other types of relationship strain, can increase risks of anxiety, depression, heart disease and cognitive decline, Cole added.
The mental health toll of family drama
Family drama, regardless of the cause, can hurt for countless unique reasons, one of them being a shattering of one’s sense of self and worth.
"A lot of our identity is tied up into our family: 'Who are my parents? What kind of family do I come from? What do we believe?'” Cole said. "When there is this discord or disconnection or fracture in the family, it affects people to their core."
Gregorio Lozano III, a therapist in Texas, says that the pain of family abandonment is a primal one.
"When we experienced a rejection from the tribe, that meant a life or death situation," Lozano said. "Now, we don't have that aspect, but we still have the emotional trauma that can result from that."
How to heal from a fractured family
To a certain extent, family drama is normal, but a time may arrive when the issues become too complicated to ignore.
“It’s time to get help when the conflict is pervasive, occurring more days than not and interfering with family functioning," Laura Petiford, a licensed marriage and family therapist, previously told USA TODAY.
If you're struggling with the pain of family drama, therapists offer the following advice:
- Seek therapy: Family fractures can bring on several mental health concerns that are best treated by professionals.
- Feel your feelings: Allowing yourself to acknowledge a feeling can be healthier than repressing it, Lozano said."It's more of what we do with those feelings that matters."
- Build an identity outside your family: Finding passions, hobbies, community and values outside of family can help build self-worth and self-efficacy, Cole said.
- Reflect on how your family fracture may be affecting other relationships: It's important to take stock of how feelings brought on by a fractured familial relationship may be impacting your other relationships, said psychiatrist Dr. Dion Metzger. "When there's an issue within our family and we feel estranged, it does affect how we approach our relationships, our romantic relationships and our friendships," she said.
- Find healthy relationships: For people with fractured families, Cole stressed the importance of "finding other healthy relationships where you do feel seen or you feel appreciated and supported and connected."
Charles Trepany and David Oliver contributed to this report.
veryGood! (35124)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Barbie Leads the Critics Choice Awards 2024 Film Nominations: See the Fantastic Full List
- Mega Millions winning numbers for December 12 drawing: Jackpot at $20 million after big win
- NFL owners award Super Bowl 61, played in 2027, to Los Angeles and SoFi Stadium
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- After mistrial, feds move to retry ex-Louisville cop who fired shots in Breonna Taylor raid
- Bear killed after biting man and engaging in standoff with his dog in Northern California
- The Supreme Court rejects an appeal over bans on conversion therapy for LGBTQ+ children
- Small twin
- A game of integrity? Golf has a long tradition of cheating and sandbagging
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Lawsuits target Maine referendum aimed at curbing foreign influence in local elections
- Myanmar overtakes Afghanistan as the world's biggest opium producer, U.N. says
- Inflation is pinching Hungary’s popular Christmas markets. $23 sausage dog, anyone?
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Coming home, staying home: ‘Apollo 13' and ‘Home Alone’ among 25 films picked for national registry
- A common abortion pill will come before the US Supreme Court. Here’s how mifepristone works
- Taylor Swift donates $1 million to Tennessee for tornado relief
Recommendation
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Minnie Driver recalls being 'devastated' by Matt Damon breakup at 1998 Oscars
Tropical Cyclone Jasper weakens while still lashing northeastern Australia with flooding rain
How to Keep Your Hair Healthy All Year-Round, According to Dua Lipa's Stylist Jesus Guerrero
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Israel-Hamas war tensions roil campuses; Brown protesters are arrested, Haverford building occupied
Pirates find regional network landing spot, sign on to become joint owners of Pittsburgh SportsNet
Is a soft landing in sight? What the Fed funds rate and mortgage rates are hinting at