If You Can Hear Me
Alana Springsteen grew up in a house where prayer was the answer to everything—including an eating disorder no one talked about out loud. In this conversation, the country artist opens up about her new album *I Hope This Helps* and the years of quiet work behind it: the breakup that broke her trust in herself, the chameleon habits she picked up as a kid, and the phone call from her 85-year-old pastor grandfather questioning why she'd see a psychiatrist instead of just praying about it. We talk about: - Moving to Nashville at 14 with no plan B - Writing "Love Me Anyway" as a letter to herself, her family, and God - The moment her mom asked, "Is that your story or mine?" - Why questions deepened her faith instead of dismantling it - What it looks like to ask for help in a community that calls it a lack of faith - Living in the messy middle of a healing journey with no finish line For anyone who's ever felt like the kid looking through the window at a party they weren't invited to—this one's for you. Listen to *I Hope This Helps* wherever you stream music. TIMESTAMPS 00:08 Meet Alana: from Pungo to Nashville 02:39 Has success changed her definition of why 04:36 Finding her "why" beyond fame 07:25 The relationship that shattered her trust 08:41 Writing "Love Me Anyway" as a confession 11:55 Growing up as the family caretaker 15:44 Playing "Note to Self" for her mom 20:29 Faith built on fear vs. transformed faith 26:14 The eating disorder no one talked about 28:42 Her grandfather's reaction to therapy 33:18 Why the album is titled "I Hope This Helps" 37:26 The loneliness of choosing a different path See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.
23 episoder
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