Paris Jackson says she feels dad Michael Jackson “with me all the time”

Paris Jackson has been a superstar her entire life despite being only 24 years old and the second child of the iconic musician Michael Jackson.

Paris has experienced several difficulties since the death of her father. But, the gifted young lady is currently pursuing her own singing career.

Despite the ups and downs in her life, she has now made the decision to talk about her upbringing with her father, known as the “King of Pop.” Few, if any, individuals are unaware of Michael Jackson’s existence.

Michael Jackson – “King of Pop”

You know, you’re not referred to as “The King of Pop” for nothing, do you? Even while we like the late singer’s music, his life wasn’t always easy.

Michael had domestic issues from the beginning, when he performed with his siblings in the Jackson Five, which were made worse by a strict father who was quick to discipline his children if they disobeyed.

Michael Jackson may be considered a product, someone who was created from an early age to be an entertainer and vocalist. That won’t change the fact that his music, dance, and songwriting are all absolute masterpieces.

When Michael Jackson passed away in 2009, the whole world mourned the singer. He had been chased by paparazzis’ and tabloid newspapers for pretty much his entire life, but not even when he was laid to rest for the last time was he spared.

Paris Jackson – Michael’s daughter

Several media helicopters followed the helicopters delivering his body from the hospital in Los Angeles. News about Michael Jackson and his family is still reported on all around the world today.

Nowadays, his family members receive the majority of the attention. His kids in particular have come under attack since the Jackson family is a popular target for paparazzi.

Paris Jackson, the second child of Jackson, has grown up in the public eye. She is now making every effort to distinguish herself from Michael Jackson’s child and become her own person.

She has been suffering from mental illness for a number of years, yet she is actually doing extremely well.

Paris Jackson – early life

On April 3, 1998, in California, Paris Jackson was born. She is Michael Jackson’s only daughter and his second kid.

She and her brother were both homeschooled up until the sixth grade, which made her early years quite private. The kids were carefully protected from the public because Michael Jackson was keen on allowing them to maintain their seclusion. The children in Michael’s family were either wearing costumes or having their heads wrapped in scarves to conceal their faces in early photographs.

As a result, life on the Neverland Ranch was extremely constrained for Paris and her siblings. No one can deny that they were immensely wealthy, but it must have also been difficult.

Speaking with supermodel Naomi Campbell, Paris Jackson opened up about her father, and what her upbringing was like.

She said that Michael Jackson made sure that they were “cultured”.

“My dad was really good about making sure we were cultured, making sure we were educated, and not just showing us like the glitz and glam, like hotel hopping, five-star places,” Paris said.

“It was also like, we saw everything. We saw third world countries. We saw every part of the spectrum.”

Speaks out on her childhood

Paris Jackson lived all over the world during her childhood days, as her father toured across the globe to play in front of hundreds of thousands of people.

She claims to have been quite appreciative of her “rich” upbringing. Paris also discovered early on that she should not feel entitled. Her father made sure that the kids understood the idea of working hard to attain what they want.

“Even growing up it was about earning stuff,” Paris said. “If we wanted five toys from FAO Schwarz or Toys ‘R’ Us, we had to read five books.

“It’s earning it, not just being entitled to certain things or thinking ‘oh I got this’,” she added. “It’s like working for it, working hard for it, it’s something else entirely, it’s an accomplishment.”

Paris was only 11 years old when her father passed away

Tragic passing of Michael Jackson

On June 25, 2009, “The King of Pop” experienced a heart arrest at home and soon after being taken to a neighboring hospital, he passed suddenly. According to Michael Jackson’s will, Paris and her brothers were placed in Katherine Jackson’s legal custody.

Paris, then 11 years old, spoke briefly about her father in front of the entire world during the funeral service that was broadcast on television.

“Ever since I was born, daddy has been the best father you could ever imagine,” she said. “And I just wanted to say I love him so much.”

Paris and her brothers, Prince Michael, 12, and Prince Michael II, 7, were all in attendance during the televised memorial service. In fact, that was pretty much the first time the world caught more than just a glimpse of Jackson’s children.

Then, in January 2010, they were once again were seen in public while accepting a posthumous Lifetime Achievement Award for their father at the 2010 Grammy

Paris Jackson – life after Neverland

In November the same year, Paris appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show to speak about her father, saying that he was amazing.

“I kind of felt like no one understood what a good father he was, he was the best cook ever,” she told Winfrey. “He was just a normal dad.”

“He made the best French toast in the world,” Paris added.

When Michael Jackson passed away, Paris Jackson moved into a mansion in Calabasas, California, with her grandmother Katherine Jackson, as well as other members of her family.

When she turned 19, she decided to move into Michael Jackson’s private studio at the family compound, which she transformed into a dorm-style bedroom.

Losing your father is hard as it is. But for Paris, it was much more than that. All of a sudden, she was expected to carry on her father’s legacy.

“I tried to grow up too fast”

Upon starting seventh grade, Paris decided to attend a private school. At this point, the only ones accepting her for who she was were the older kids, and it didn’t turn out perfect.

“I was doing a lot of things that 13-, 14-, 15-year-olds shouldn’t do. I tried to grow up too fast, and I wasn’t really that nice of a person,” she tells us.

Around the same time, social media had become a thing, and Paris faced cyberbullying.

“The whole freedom-of-speech thing is great,” she explained. “But I don’t think that our Founding Fathers predicted social media when they created all of these amendments and stuff.”

Paris went through a lot of trauma as a teenager. She even tried taking her own life following a very serious incident, but that was also somewhat of a turning point.

She spent her sophomore year, as well as half her junior year, at a therapeutic school in Utah, which was great for her.

“I’m a completely different person,” she said. “I was crazy. I was actually crazy, I was going through a lot of, like, teen angst. And I was also dealing with my depression and my anxiety without any help.”

Paris Jackson – career

Paris graduated high school in 2015 – one year early – but by this point, she had a lot on her mind. She was one of the heirs of Michel Jackson’s billion-dollar heritage, and everyone saw her as a celebrity, even though she actually hadn’t done anything.

Now, though, Jackson is heading in the same direction as her father: the entertainment business. She’s taken her father’s advice seriously: if you want something, you have to put in work to get it. During the Naomi Campbell interview, Paris stated that she was a “full believer” that she should earn her own success.

For someone born into ridiculous wealth, as the child of one of the most famous people in modern history, this is something we truly adore Paris for. No matter what has happened in her past or who her father is, she wants to do her own thing.

She grew up around only adults except for her siblings. When she left Neverland to go to a real school, it was a big change for her. She grew up as the child of Michael Jackson, but for her, the world was more than that. And in the beginning, it sure was hard.

“Once I got introduced into the real world, I was shocked. It blew me away,” Paris explained. “Not just because it was sexist, but misogynist and racist and cruel. It was scary as hell. And it still is really scary.”

Modeling and music

So what did Paris do? Well, she went her own way, starting out working as a model. And she has a real talent for it!

In recent years, she’s been on the covers of some of the world’s most influential magazines, including Rolling Stone, Vogue and Narcisse to name a few.

For Paris, modeling is a very therapeutic and natural thing. Many were shocked when her father transformed via his many plastic surgeries. But in this age of social media and cyberbullying, Paris understands his choice.

“I’ve had self-esteem issues for a really, really long time,” she said. “Plenty of people think I’m ugly, and plenty of people don’t. But there’s a moment when I’m modeling where I forget about my self-esteem issues and focus on what the photographer’s telling me – and I feel pretty. And in that sense, it’s selfish.”

Through her Instagram page, Paris’s followers can see her life as she seems to like spending time with her friends, doing all the things in life she couldn’t really experience at a younger age.

Released her first album

She released her debut album Wilted in 2020, following in her father’s musical footsteps. Paris Jackson is doing music, but her CD is indie folk rather than the R&B and pop style for which her father was famous.

“It’s mainly just a story of heartbreak and love, in general, and the thoughts and feelings that come after it doesn’t work out,” she remarked.

Paris Jackson grew up with her father’s music, and she says she knows all the words to his songs. At the same time as she created her own sound, it’s inevitable that Michael Jackson’s taste in music influenced her.

“He loved classical music and jazz and Hip Hop and R&B and obviously the Motown stuff,” she says.

Paris Jackson has paid tribute to her father on her body, acquiring more than 50 tattoos. Nine of them are devoted to Michael Jackson.

She has learned to cope with the devastating loss of her father rather than believing that time will make everything better.

She remembers Michael Jackson visiting her in her dreams, so she knows he will always be there with her.

“I live life with the mentality of ‘OK, I lost the only thing that has ever been important to me.’” she mentioned. “So going forward, anything bad that happens can’t be nearly as bad as what happened before. So I can handle it.

“I feel him with me all the time.”

People who have experienced parental loss may undoubtedly relate to Paris and the pain she is going through. Nobody, however, has had the same level of experience growing up as Paris Jackson had.

We’re ecstatic that she may now go about her business without being followed everywhere she goes by paparazzi. Paris, good luck!

Please, share this article with friends and family if you also think Paris Jackson is a brave woman!

I Nearly Froze to Death at 8 Years Old Until a Homeless Man Saved Me—Today, I Accidentally Met Him Again

I never thought I’d see him again. Not after all these years. Not after he saved my life that night in the snowstorm and vanished without a trace. But there he was, sitting in the subway station with his hands outstretched for change. The man who once saved me was now the one who needed saving.

For a moment, I just stood there, staring.

It reminded me of that very day. Of the biting cold, of my tiny, frozen fingers, and of the warmth of his rough hands guiding me to safety.

A little girl standing in forest | Source: Midjourney

A little girl standing in forest | Source: Midjourney

I had spent years wondering who he was, where he had gone, and if he was even still alive.

And now, fate had placed him right in front of me again. But could I truly help him the way he once helped me?

***

I don’t have many memories of my parents, but I do remember their faces.

I clearly remember the warmth in my mother’s smile and the strength in my father’s arms. I also remember the night it all changed.

The night I learned they weren’t coming back.

A girl standing by a window | Source: Midjourney

A girl standing by a window | Source: Midjourney

I was only five years old when they died in a car accident, and back then, I didn’t even fully understand what death meant. I waited by the window for days, convinced they would walk through the door at any moment. But they never did.

Soon, the foster system became my reality.

I bounced from shelters to group homes to temporary families, never truly belonging anywhere.

Some foster parents were kind, others were indifferent, and a few were downright cruel. But no matter where I ended up, one thing remained the same.

I was alone.

An upset girl | Source: Midjourney

An upset girl | Source: Midjourney

Back then, school was my only escape.

I buried myself in my books, determined to build a future for myself. I worked harder than anyone else, pushing past the loneliness and the uncertainty. And it paid off.

I earned a grant for college, then clawed my way through medical school, eventually becoming a surgeon.

Now, at 38, I have the life I fought for. I spend long hours at the hospital, performing life-saving operations, and barely stopping to catch my breath.

It’s exhausting, but I love it.

Surgeons in an operation theatre | Source: Pexels

Surgeons in an operation theatre | Source: Pexels

Some nights, when I walk through my sleek apartment, I think about how proud my parents would be. I wish they could see me now, standing in an operating room, making a difference.

But there’s one memory from my childhood that never fades.

I was eight years old when I got lost in the woods.

It was a terrible snowstorm, the kind that blinds you, the kind that makes every direction look the same. I had wandered too far from the shelter I was staying in.

And before I knew it, I was completely alone.

A girl standing in the woods during a snowstorm | Source: Midjourney

A girl standing in the woods during a snowstorm | Source: Midjourney

I remember screaming for help. My tiny hands were stiff with cold, and my coat was too thin to protect me. I was terrified.

And then… he appeared.

I saw a man wrapped in layers of tattered clothing. His beard was dusted with snow, and his blue eyes were filled with concern.

A man standing in the woods | Source: Midjourney

A man standing in the woods | Source: Midjourney

When he found me shivering and terrified, he immediately scooped me up in his arms.

I remember how he carried me through the storm, shielding me from the worst of the wind. How he used his last few dollars to buy me hot tea and a sandwich at a roadside café. How he called the cops and made sure I was safe before slipping away into the night, never waiting for a thank you.

That was 30 years ago.

I never saw him again.

Until today.

People at a train station | Source: Pexels

People at a train station | Source: Pexels

The subway was packed with the usual chaos.

People were rushing to work while the street musician did his thing in the corner. I was exhausted after a long shift, lost in thought, when my eyes landed on him.

At first, I wasn’t sure why he looked familiar. His face was hidden beneath a scruffy gray beard, and he was wearing tattered clothes. His shoulders were slumped forward as if life had worn him down.

As I walked toward him, my gaze landed on something very familiar.

A tattoo on his forearm.

An anchor tattoo | Source: Midjourney

An anchor tattoo | Source: Midjourney

It was a small, faded anchor that immediately reminded me of the day I got lost in the woods.

I looked at the tattoo then back at the man’s face, trying my best to remember if it was really him. The only way I could confirm it was by talking to him. And that’s what I did.

“Is it really you? Mark?”

He looked up at me, trying to study my face. I knew he wouldn’t recognize me because I was just a child the last time he saw me.

A man sitting at a subway station | Source: Midjourney

A man sitting at a subway station | Source: Midjourney

I swallowed hard, trying to keep my emotions in check. “You saved me. Thirty years ago. I was eight years old, lost in the snow. You carried me to safety.”

That’s when his eyes widened in recognition.

“The little girl…” he said. “In the storm?”

I nodded. “Yes. That was me.”

Mark let out a soft chuckle, shaking his head. “Didn’t think I’d ever see you again.”

A man smiling | Source: Midjourney

A man smiling | Source: Midjourney

I sat down next to him on the cold subway bench.

“I never forgot what you did for me.” I hesitated before asking, “Have you been… living like this all these years?”

He didn’t answer right away. Instead, he scratched his beard and looked away. “Life has a way of kicking you down. Some people get back up. Some don’t.”

At that point, my heart broke for him. I knew I couldn’t just walk away.

“Come with me,” I said. “Let me buy you a meal. Please.”

He hesitated, his pride keeping him from accepting, but I wouldn’t take no for an answer.

Eventually, he nodded.

A man talking to a woman | Source: Midjourney

A man talking to a woman | Source: Midjourney

We went to a small pizza place nearby, and the way he ate told me he hadn’t had a good meal in years. I blinked back tears as I watched him. No one should have to live like this, especially not someone who once gave everything to help a lost little girl.

After dinner, I took him to a clothing store and bought him warm clothes. He protested at first, but I insisted.

“This is the least I can do for you,” I told him.

He finally accepted, running a hand over the coat as if he had forgotten what warmth felt like.

A rack with coats and jackets | Source: Pexels

A rack with coats and jackets | Source: Pexels

But I wasn’t done helping him yet.

I took him to a small motel on the outskirts of the city and rented a room for him.

“Just for a while,” I assured him when he hesitated. “You deserve a warm bed and a hot shower, Mark.”

He looked at me with something in his eyes that I couldn’t quite comprehend. I think it was gratitude. Or maybe disbelief.

“You don’t have to do all this, kid,” he said.

“I know,” I said softly. “But I want to.”

The next morning, I met Mark outside the motel.

A motel sign | Source: Pexels

A motel sign | Source: Pexels

His hair was still damp from the shower, and he looked like a different man in his new clothes.

“I want to help you get back on your feet,” I said. “We can renew your documents, get you a place to stay long-term. I can help.”

Mark smiled, but there was sadness in his eyes. “I appreciate that, kid. I really do. But I don’t have much time left.”

I frowned. “What do you mean?”

He exhaled slowly, looking out toward the street. “Doctors say my heart’s giving out. Not much they can do. I feel it, too. I won’t be around much longer.”

A man talking to a woman | Source: Midjourney

A man talking to a woman | Source: Midjourney

“No. There has to be something—”

He shook his head. “I’ve made peace with it.”

Then he gave me a small smile. “There’s just one thing I’d love to do before I go. I want to see the ocean one last time.”

“Alright,” I managed to say. “I’ll take you. We’ll go tomorrow, okay?”

The ocean was about 350 miles away, so I had to take a day off from the hospital. I asked Mark to come over to my place the next day so we could drive there together, and he did.

But just as we were about to leave, my phone rang.

A woman using her phone | Source: Pexels

A woman using her phone | Source: Pexels

It was the hospital.

“Sophia, we need you,” my colleague said urgently. “A young girl just came in. Severe internal bleeding. We don’t have another available surgeon.”

I looked at Mark as I ended the call.

“I—” My voice caught. “I have to go.”

Mark gave me a knowing nod. “Of course you do. Go save that girl. That’s what you were meant to do.”

“I’m sorry,” I said. “But we’ll still go, I promise.”

He smiled. “I know, kid.”

A man smiling while talking to a woman | Source: Midjourney

A man smiling while talking to a woman | Source: Midjourney

I rushed to the hospital. The surgery was long and grueling, but it was successful. The girl survived. I should have felt relieved, but all I could think about was Mark.

As soon as I was done, I drove straight back to the motel. My hands trembled as I knocked on his door.

No answer.

I knocked again.

Still nothing.

A sinking feeling settled in my stomach as I asked the motel clerk to unlock the door.

When it opened, my heart shattered.

A doorknob | Source: Pexels

A doorknob | Source: Pexels

Mark was lying on the bed, his eyes closed, his face peaceful. He was gone.

I stood there, unable to move. I couldn’t believe he was gone.

I had promised to take him to the ocean. I had promised.

But I was too late.

“I’m so sorry,” I whispered as tears streamed down my cheeks. “I’m so sorry for being late…”

***

I never got to take Mark to the ocean, but I ensured he was buried by the shore.

Waves on the shore at sunset time | Source: Pexels

Waves on the shore at sunset time | Source: Pexels

He’s gone from my life forever, but one thing he has taught me is to be kind. His kindness saved my life 30 years ago, and now, I carry it forward.

In every patient I heal, every stranger I help, and every problem I try to solve, I carry Mark’s kindness with me, hoping to give others the same compassion he once showed me.

This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

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