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Authors: Kelly Osbourne

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BOOK: Fierce
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T
HE
plan was that I was going to record the album in New York so Mum, Jack, Aimee and Melinda flew with me from Los Angeles to help me settle in.

We’d agreed to do a second season of
The Osbournes
following the success of the first one, so we had the MTV crew with us when we flew to New York. We’d got so used to the camera crew being around that we didn’t even notice they were there half the time.

We all arrived at the apartment in Trump Towers, where I was going to stay during the six weeks of recording. Mum and Melinda spent the day helping me settle in and buying groceries.

That evening we all had our own plans. I was going for dinner with Nicole Richie at the Japanese restaurant Nobu. Nicole and I had become friends after our initial introduction years earlier at The Standard Hotel on Sunset in LA.

I was sitting in the restaurant when my mobile started ringing. It was Jack and he was crying, saying, ‘Kelly, you have to come back to the hotel.’

I wasn’t in the mood for it, so I said, ‘Jack, if you just had a fight with Mum, I’m not coming back.’

He answered back, ‘No! We need you to come back.’

I really thought he was being dramatic and was screaming back in the middle of the crowded restaurant, ‘Come on, Jack. Stop messing me about here.’

He just sobbed, ‘Kelly, Mum’s got cancer.’

I mean, I just fucking lost it. I practically fell to the floor in the middle of the restaurant. Nicole had to pick me up. I was crying so
much. I’ve never cried like that before. She was holding me up and guiding me to a taxi waiting outside. My mascara was all over her white dress from my streaming black face. I was a mess. I was in pieces. She put me in the taxi and I flopped my head against the window and I just sobbed uncontrollably. It was about a block away, but I couldn’t get there quick enough. I really couldn’t. It felt like the longest journey ever.

I ran into the hotel and up to the room and found mum. She was sitting on the floor in one of the rooms with her legs crossed like she always does. She looked in shock. Really, really shocked. We all did. I just held her. I couldn’t hold her tight enough. That evening she’d received a call from at her office in LA. They had been faxed the results of a medical Mum had had recently. She had been diagnosed with colon cancer.

Straightaway, we all started grabbing our stuff and we literally fled the hotel. I think we had just a small bag each. We really weren’t thinking – we just wanted to get home to my dad. We wanted Mum to start her treatment straight away.

The office had organised a private jet for us so we could get straight back to LA. On the plane we were all clinging on to each other. None of us wanted to let go of Mum. I was holding on to her for dear life. I just couldn’t comprehend what was happening. We were all shit scared.

My dad and Uncle Tony met us from the plane in like a golf buggy. Mum had called Dad from New York. When we finally walked into the house he just broke down.

‘I ran into the hotel and up to the room and found mum. She was sitting on the floor in one of the rooms with her legs crossed like she always does. She looked in shock. Really, really shocked. We all did.’

W
HEN
my mum was diagnosed with cancer it was a terrible shock. I’m not going to lie to you. But there are so many different things you can do to help make the situation more comfortable.

Instead of looking at how difficult things are, look at what you do have – someone in your life who you love and who you should try and spend as much time with as possible. Little things like sitting together and watching a movie are so very important or just sitting quietly and enjoying each other’s company. Mum and I would sit and chat for hours about nothing in particular.

When someone is sick they don’t need someone telling them what to do or pandering to them. You need to make them laugh. They need someone who is normal around them who tries to take their mind off the fact that they’re ill.

S
ADLY
, cancer is something that will probably affect nearly all of us at some point in our lives whether it’s a family member, a friend, a colleague or if we suffer from the illness ourselves. But there are so many fantastic charities and organisations that do a great job of supporting cancer sufferers and their families and friends. One of those is Cancer Research UK. It is the leading funder of cancer research in the UK. You can call their specialist nurses Monday to Friday, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. You can also give something back and volunteer or even enter a Race for Life to help raise money for this amazing charity.

Cancer Research UK

PO Box 123

Lincoln’s Inn Fields

Freephone: 0808 800 4040

London

WC2A 3PX


(supporter Services) 020 7121 6699


(switchboard) 020 7242 0200

www.cancerresearch.org

Mum went straight into hospital for treatment. We all dealt with the news so differently. Jack went completely off the rails. He hardly ever visited Mum in hospital – he’s terrified of them. He just went out and got high. My dad lost it big time. He just drank and drank and drank and drank. I totally understand why he did. He thought the love of his life was going to die.

Aimee turned into a mother figure and was bossing us all around. She was doing what she thought was best, but sometimes she came across as too harsh.

I just didn’t want to let my mum out of my sight, so I moved into the hospital. She went into Cedars-Sinai for treatment. I put my plans to record the album on hold for a short while and stayed with her. I slept on the floor on a roll-up bed.

I was trying to be strong for my mum, so I was taking Vicodin to hide the pain. I didn’t want to leave her side for one minute. I also wanted to numb the terrible sadness I was feeling.

My friends would try and persuade me to go out with them but every time I did, I’d be sitting in The Roxy or The Standard Hotel wondering how my mum was and whether she would be OK. Or there would be other times when I would get completely wasted so I didn’t have to think about it. And then I would go home and not back to the hospital because I didn’t want my mum to see me in that state.

I’m not going to lie, it was a really terrible time. I’m embarrassed to admit it now, but in my head I often thought I’d kill myself if my mum didn’t make it. I thought, if Mum dies, that will be it. I wouldn’t be able to cope without Mum. She was, and is, the centre of our universe.

S
OMETHING
you’ll learn very quickly when a member of your family has cancer is who your real friends are. Some people are, sadly, only there for the good times. But you’ll find people who are always there for you too, which is so important. Elton John and his partner David Furnish were always there for us when my mum got cancer and there’ll be people in your life who’re there for you too.

You can also turn to Macmillan for emotional and practical support. You might find also find strength in talking to other people in similar situations, and sharing stories on the online forums. It really will help you feel better.

Macmillan also offer help if you are having financial problems as a result of cancer.

Macmillan Cancer Support

89 Albert Embankment

London

SE1 7UQ


020 7840 7840

www.macmillan.org.uk

I knew that Dad would kill himself if anything happened to Mum because he wouldn’t be able to take it. I couldn’t take it. But I had to be strong for Mum and not think of such stupid things like I would kill myself. Mum needed me.

I swear to God, Mum just carried on working while she was in hospital getting her treatment – she never stopped. She didn’t want to admit to herself that she was sick. I think that’s probably what got her through – it stopped her focussing on just how ill she was. My mum’s a fighter.

She insisted that the MTV crew continued filming the second series of the show because she wanted everything to be as normal as possible. She was putting on a brave face for us. I knew she was.

My mum is the person we all go to when we have a problem – my dad, me, my brother and sister – everyone. She’s always so strong. But who does my mum go to when she needs to talk to someone? That worried me so much. Of course she has friends – Lynn, who runs the UK
office, is her best friend and she could always talk to her. But Mum usually tries to stay strong for everyone.

I
ALWAYS
give my support to the Teenage Cancer Trust. This charity does a really great job of improving the lives of teenagers and young adults with cancer. They do all sorts of things to raise money and awareness and I’ve been involved in doing pictures for T-Shirts. But they do also have a whole bunch of great things going on like organising concerts and events.

Teenage Cancer Trust

3rd floor

93 Newman Street

London

W1T 3EZ


020 7612 0370


[email protected]

www.teenagecancertrust.org

Another organisation that is there for teenagers is TIC, Teen Info on Cancer. It is a brilliant resource that you can go to for support and advice in order to help you deal with the totally understandable fear of cancer.

It also provides a place for teenagers with cancer to go to, build a community and help each other.

www.click4tic.org.uk

There was a time when my mum started to lose her hair because of the chemotherapy she was having. That was really tough. My mum’s hair is her signature feature. It’s thick and lovely. That was when she thought she was going to die.

She wrote a wish list of all the things she wanted to do before she died and she put her make-up artist Jude in charge of the plans. One of them was that she wanted her and my dad to renew their wedding vows. The ceremony took place on New Year’s Eve, 2002 —
five months after she was first diagnosed with cancer – at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

I can’t even bear to look at that video now. I just can’t look at it. It makes me so sad. It was around this time we got Cher’s wig-maker to make my mum’s wigs. To cheer Mum up we used to put them on the dogs at home and take pictures. When she was asleep we’d frame them and leave them on the bedside table to make her laugh when she woke up.

Do you know just how cruel some people were when they heard my mum had cancer? One woman actually faxed my mum’s office in LA and accused her of pulling a publicity stunt. How fucked up is that? Someone else emailed and said, ‘Sharon, you’ve pulled some publicity stunts in your time, but this …’ I couldn’t believe it.

Our nanny Melinda was so fantastic around this time. She was instrumental in keeping our family together and for that I’ll always be really grateful. She looked out for all of us.

M
UM
was adamant that I continue with the album and so I started to go back into the recording studio. At first it felt like an adventure. I got to play around in the recording studio. But all of that changed very quickly. The novelty wore off. On top of worrying about my mum, I felt like a lot was being asked of me and I was too young to deal with it. I really cracked under all the responsibility and pressure. I felt like I was tied to the music and I just wasn’t passionate
enough about it to not care about the other things that were happening in my life at that time.

‘It was around this time we got Cher’s wig-maker to make my mum’s wigs. To cheer mum up we used to put them on the dogs at home and take pictures. When she was asleep we’d frame them and leave them on the bedside table to make her laugh when she woke up.’

I was so miserable. I was recording an album – it should have been one of the most fun things to do, but my mind wasn’t there. It was my mum’s idea to call my first album
Shut Up
. The second single was called that, too. I didn’t like the name and I didn’t want to call it that. Hearing that song in my head now makes me shudder and go, ‘Urgh!’

BOOK: Fierce
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