6 min read
She didn’t seek advice; she absorbed wisdom.
Noah Cyrus, now 25, witnessed her sister Miley’s rise from childhood, Hannah Montana, Bangerz, and the shock-value stunts, and it shaped her awareness from the very beginning. “By the time she was done with Hannah Montana, I wasn’t even driving a car yet, I didn’t even drive when she was doing Bangerz, so that puts it into perspective.”
This was not mentorship by intent, but by osmosis. Noah saw Miley navigating the glare of fame and the pitfalls of the music industry before she even had a voice of her own.
These early observations became invaluable lessons she subconsciously held on to, on how to handle fame, set boundaries, and avoid exploitation. “There are situations that you experience, and you’re like, ‘Okay, I will keep that in mind for the future… If that happens to me, how do I handle it?’ So I’ve had a great role model for how it all works.”
Noah’s journey illustrates the quiet power of watching and learning. Instead of formal advice, she gained a real-world education in strength, poise, and self-preservation, all observed firsthand as Miley blazed the trail.
Sometimes the best guidance comes not with words, but with lived experience.
Family fame came with both lessons learned and shadows to outrun.
Growing up as part of the Cyrus family meant Noah’s life was public from the start, walking red carpets, voicing Ponyo, and guesting on Hannah Montana. Even before writing her first song, she felt the weight of the spotlight.
That early exposure gave her perspective, but also instilled the importance of carving her own identity. Noah shared candidly how it was hard not to feel overshadowed and to trust in her own voice, saying, “It was hard for me as a kid to trust in myself and my own identity and feel like that was enough… but it is something… You grow with confidence.”
Her debut single, “Make Me (Cry)”, released at just 16, was her first real step into her own artistry. But behind the scenes, she leaned on what she’d learned from Miley’s journey: the importance of thick skin, resilience, and staying true to oneself, regardless of external pressures.
Shining your brightest often means stepping out of someone else’s spotlight.

Her sister’s highs and lows became her guideposts.
Noah didn’t just observe Miley; she learned how to navigate an industry that can chew up and spit out its stars. As she reflected, there were moments in Miley’s career, creative shifts, tough decisions, exploitative scenarios, that taught her what to emulate and what to avoid.
These were lessons of discernment: knowing when to speak up, when to cut ties, and how to protect one’s values in an unpredictable arena. “I think there were just a lot of lessons that just came with it because of our age gap,” she said.
Calling Miley “a great role model” isn’t just about admiration; it’s about being spared from making some of the same missteps, because Noah could see them happen first. That’s powerful.
Sometimes the greatest teacher is living proof of what not to repeat, or what to reinvent.
Family songs became healing songs.
Noah’s new album, I Want My Loved Ones to Go With Me, is steeped in family legacy and emotional truth. She co-produced it, and it features contributions from four generations of her family: from a hymn her great-grandfather wrote, to a song her dad penned, to her brother Braison’s track inspired by her.
This deeply personal project came on the heels of intense personal struggles, including Xanax addiction, depression, and identity pressures. But instead of shying away, she leaned into music as therapy. Creating this album helped her piece together her history, embracing the messy, beautiful family bond as a source of strength and healing.
It’s more than music; it’s emotional architecture, built with every note and lyric drawn from bloodlines, heartbreak, and resilience.
When the lyrics are inherited, healing can feel like home.

Public drama fades when love is louder.
Despite tabloid chatter about family rifts, divorces, remarriages, and rumors about hurt, notably, Noah has been clear: love endures. She said, “Everybody’s great and loves each other… this is a family, and that’s really it: just going through normal family stuff.”
Even amid headlines and personal pain, Noah has kept her focus on unity, calling music “the one thing that’s connected us with the entire world.” Moreover, performing with her dad recently onstage affirmed their bond; she sang “With You,” a song he wrote, showing healing through shared art.
Music isn’t just her inheritance; it’s the glue. It’s how they speak when silent strength falters, how they show up when words fall short.
When noise fades, music and love speak.
She’s learning to live for herself, not legacy.
Noah’s journey is forward-moving and intentional. She’s engaged to Pinkus, says she feels “the happiest and most secure I’ve felt in a long time,” and even harbors a clear desire to become a mother. Recovery, love, and clarity have made her more present and more empowered.
She starts her tour in September 2025 and has an entire new chapter unfolding that’s hers, not inherited, but earned. Her life lessons, drawn from Miley’s rise, the family’s chaos, and her own struggles, have given her a foundation to build on. Now, she’s choosing how to thrive on her own terms.
When your foundation is lived experience, your future can sing with possibility.
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This article was made with AI assistance and human editing.
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