Miley Cyrus hails house fire as 'biggest blessing'

Miley Cyrus found "a lot of [her] relationships burned down" when she lost her home in a fire but still thinks the blaze was the "biggest blessing" she's ever had.

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Miley Cyrus' biggest blessing was losing her home
Miley Cyrus' biggest blessing was losing her home

Miley Cyrus found "a lot of [her] relationships burned down" when she lost her home in a fire.

The 32-year-old singer and her former spouse Liam Hemsworth lost their Malibu house in 2018 and she now believes it was the "biggest blessing" to ever happen to her because it allowed her to rebuild her life with "purpose".

Speaking at a Spotify screening of her upcoming visual album 'Something Beautiful', People magazine reports she said: "When my house burned down, that was the biggest blessing I've ever had in my life, actually.

"Losing everything and being able to rebuild, and to be able to be purposeful and choose every piece that I'm gonna collect or also just about the people in my life.

"And I guess for me, when my house burned down, a lot of my relationships also burned down, and that again just led me to such magic and to have so much gratitude."

The 'Flowers' hitmaker has learned to "appreciate" the low points in her life because things can only get better.

He said: "I think what I would have told my younger self is to appreciate those darker times because, like I said, they are only leading you into the light."

Miley is grateful to have maintained a strong fanbase over the years and thinks their shared "strange" ways has contributed to the close bond she feels they have.

She said: "People say we grew up together, and we really did.

"And it's definitely what makes, I think, this film so magical and so potent is that all of us have kind of created it together, and it's cool to be in a room full of people I've never met, you know, or strangers, and, you know, you're not that strange.

"We're all a little strange, but that's what I think has made all of us really, kind of hold on to the relationship that we have.

"It’s cool to be able to go into a room with people I haven't met and be like, 'Remember when my house burned down?' And you guys are like, 'Yeah.' 'Remember when my fish died?' 'Yeah.'

"It’s like, all these things that were really little, most people don’t care. They don't have millions of people that are like, 'Sorry about your fish,' but it's so nice that I have millions of people that are like, “Damn, Pablow, you know, like, RIP.' "