I think I first realized I wanted to be in country music and be an artist when I was 10. And I started dragging my parents to festivals, and fairs, and karaoke contests, and I did that for about a year before I came to Nashville for the first time. I was 11 and I had this demo CD of me singing Dixie Chicks and Leanne Rimes songs.
You have people come into your life shockingly and surprisingly. You have losses that you never thought you'd experience. You have rejection and you have learn how to deal with that and how to get up the next day and go on with it.
I would love to continue in music, with writing... but I am not the kind of person who will hang around if I start to become irrelevant. If that happens, I will bow down gracefully, raise my kids, and have a garden. And I am going to let my hair go gray when I am older. I don't need to be blonde when I'm 60!
I write songs that are like diary entries. I have to do it in order to feel sane.
I'm intimidated by the fear of being average.
I'm not afraid to write my feelings in songs.
I'm not the girl who always has a boyfriend. I'm the girl who rarely has a boyfriend.
If you cry over a guy, then your friends can't date him. It can't even be considered.
In a relationship each person should support the other; they should lift each other up.
In this business you have to develop a thick skin, but I'm always going to feel everything. It's my nature.
Love always ends differently and it always begins differently - especially with me.
My mom and I have always been really close. She's always been the friend that was always there. There were times when, in middle school and junior high, I didn't have a lot of friends. But my mom was always my friend. Always.
There are no rules when it comes to love.
When you're singing you can hear the echo of people in the audience singing every single word with you, and that was that big dream that I had for myself. It's happening.
I love it when people say things to me in public and want to meet me, because I want to meet them! Early on, my manager told me, 'If you want to sell 500,000 records, then go out there and meet 500,000 people.'