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Britney Spears' top confessions: cheating, pregnancy, 'soul-crushing' childhood

Britney Spears shares new details about being a Disney child star, her difficult relationship with her father and her conservatorship in her upcoming memoir, "The Woman in Me."

Britney Spears is sharing all her secrets in her upcoming memoir, "The Woman in Me."

In the book, set to release later this month, the 41-year-old pop star opens up about drug use, cheating, an abortion and the reason she shaved her head.

Excerpts shared by People and The New York Times cover several areas of Spears' life, from her child star days on Disney's "The All New Mickey Mouse Club" through the dissolution of her controversial conservatorship.

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Spears had brushes with fame early in her life, including a notable turn on "Star Search" when she was 10, but her first big break came when she was cast on the "Mickey Mouse Club" revival on the Disney Channel in 1992.

In the book, she discussed being a Mouseketeer on the show from 1989 to 1995. She appeared alongside stars like Christina Aguilera, Ryan Gosling and fellow pop star and former flame Justin Timberlake.

"Being in the show was boot camp for the entertainment industry: extensive dance rehearsals, singing lessons, acting classes, time in the recording studio, and school in between," she recalled. "The Mouseketeers quickly split into our own cliques, divided by the dressing rooms that we shared: Christina Aguilera and I were the younger kids, and we shared a dressing room. We looked up to the older kids — Keri Russell, Ryan Gosling, and Tony Lucca, who I thought was so handsome. And I quickly connected with a boy named Justin Timberlake."

She called the gig "a kid's dream" and "unbelievably fun," but noted that "it was also exceptionally hard work: we would run choreography thirty times in a day, trying to get every step perfect."

It wasn't all work with the child stars though. Spears also mentioned a game of truth or dare when someone dared Timberlake to kiss her. She remembered a Janet Jackson song playing in the room as he followed through on the dare.

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"The All New Mickey Mouse Club" was filmed in a studio in Orlando, Florida, and when the show was over, Spears made the decision to return to her hometown of Kentwood, Louisiana.

"Already within me was a push-pull: part of me wanted to keep building toward the dream; the other part wanted me to live a normal life in Louisiana," she wrote. "For a minute, I had to let normalcy win."

For a while, she was able to lead a "normal teenage life." Part of this, she recalled, included traveling to Biloxi, Mississippi, with her mother and drinking daiquiris when she was in eighth grade.

"I loved that I was able to drink with my mom every now and the," she shared. "The way we drank was nothing like how my father did it. When he drank, he grew more depressed and shut down. We became happier, more alive and adventurous."

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She remembered this "beautifully normal" period of her life fondly but admitted she "missed performing." A lawyer that she and her mother knew, a man named Larry, suggested she record a demo. He was even able to supply a song for her, a track that had been cut from a Toni Braxton record.

"Larry took me around [New York City]," she wrote, "and I went into rooms full of executives and sang Whitney Houston’s ‘I Have Nothing.’ Gazing out at the rooms full of men in suits looking me up and down in my small dress and high heels, I sang loud."

After signing a record deal at 15, she threw herself firmly into recording.

"I worked for hours straight," she wrote. "My work ethic was strong. If you knew me then, you wouldn’t hear from me for days. I would stay in the studio as long as I could. If anyone wanted to leave, I’d say, 'I wasn’t perfect.'"

By the time she was 20, Spears had already released three successful albums, and she'd filmed her first movie, "Crossroads." Released in 2002, it became an instant classic for many fans, but she had some difficult feelings attached to it.

"The experience wasn’t easy for me," she wrote of the filming process. "My problem wasn’t with anyone involved in the production but with what acting did to my mind. I think I started Method acting — only I didn’t know how to break out of my character. I really became this other person. Some people do Method acting, but they’re usually aware of the fact that they’re doing it. But I didn’t have any separation at all.

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"I ended up walking differently, carrying myself differently, talking differently. I was someone else for months while I filmed ‘Crossroads.’ Still to this day, I bet the girls I shot that movie with think, She’s a little…quirky. If they thought that, they were right," she speculated of co-stars Zoe Saldana and Taryn Manning.

She called the movie "pretty much the beginning and end of my acting career," something that made her feel "relieved." Spears later appeared in single episodes of shows like "How I Met Your Mother" and "Will and Grace," but nothing nearly as involved as starring in her own movie.

She did note that she almost got another opportunity to take a crack at Hollywood. She came close to getting the lead role in 2004's "The Notebook" that went to Rachel McAdams.

In the excerpts shared by People, Spears noted that "even though it would have been fun to reconnect with Ryan Gosling after our time on the ‘Mickey Mouse Club,’ I’m glad I didn’t do it. If I had, instead of working on my album 'In the Zone' I’d have been acting like a 1940s heiress day and night."

On acting, she wrote, "I hope I never get close to that occupational hazard again. Living that way, being half yourself and half a fictional character, is messed up. After a while you don’t know what’s real anymore."

While she was becoming a pop icon, Spears was also busy in her personal life. In 1999, she reunited with Timberlake, and the two began a relationship that lasted until 2002.

While they were together, fans gushed over their love story, but behind the scenes, things may not have been as cute as they appeared.

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Spears claims in her book she became pregnant at one point during their relationship, and the pregnancy ended with an abortion that she alleged was at Timberlake's insistence.

"It was a surprise, but for me, it wasn’t a tragedy," Spears wrote about conceiving. "I loved Justin so much. I always expected us to have a family together one day. This would just be much earlier than I’d anticipated.

"But Justin definitely wasn’t happy about the pregnancy. He said we weren’t ready to have a baby in our lives, that we were way too young.

"I’m sure people will hate me for this, but I agreed not to have the baby. I don’t know if that was the right decision. If it had been left up to me alone, I never would have done it. And yet Justin was so sure that he didn’t want to be a father.

"To this day, it’s one of the most agonizing things I have ever experienced in my life."

Reps for Justin Timberlake did not respond to Fox News Digital's requests for comment.

Elsewhere in the book, in quotes shared by the New York Times, Spears wrote about infidelity within the relationship. She claimed Justin had cheated on her, and she kissed choreographer Wade Robson in retaliation.

When Timberlake broke up with her, she said, he did it through a text. The singer wrote that she was "devastated" by the split and even considered leaving the music industry altogether.

She also discussed her reaction to "Cry Me a River," Timberlake's breakout solo song after he left boy band NSYNC. In the video, she described "a woman who looks like me cheats on him and he wanders around sad in the rain."

So many of his fans believed that she'd broken his heart, but Britney says she was "comatose in Louisiana, and he was happily running around Hollywood."

In the excerpts shared by The New York Times, Spears describes some of the moments that led to her conservatorship, which began in 2008.

While the need to help control her erratic behavior was the reason given for the conservatorship, Spears says her partying during this time "was never as wild as the press made it out to be."

She said she didn't take hard drugs and she "never had a drinking problem," although she did note the prescription medication Adderall was her "drug of choice." She explained it "made me high, yes, but what I found far more appealing was that it gave me a few hours of feeling less depressed."

It wasn't partying, she wrote, that caused her concerning behavior. Spears says that when she walked into a salon and buzzed her hair as paparazzi watched and when she went after photographers with an umbrella, she did it because she was "out of my mind with grief."

"I am willing to admit that in the throes of severe postpartum depression, abandonment by my husband, the torture of being separated from my two babies, the death of my adored aunt Sandra, and the constant drumbeat of pressure from paparazzi, I’d begin to think in some ways like a child," she wrote of this difficult time.

"With my head shaved, everyone was scared of me, even my mom. Flailing those weeks without my children, I lost it, over and over again. I didn’t even really know how to take care of myself."

In November 2006, Spears filed for divorce from husband Kevin Federline, citing irreconcilable differences. Three months later, she buzzed off hair, and, days later, she entered rehab. Federline was eventually given custody of their two sons, Sean and Jayden.

"I’d been eyeballed so much growing up. I’d been looked up and down, had people telling me what they thought of my body, since I was a teenager. Shaving my head and acting out were my ways of pushing back," she wrote in an excerpt shared with People.

"But under the conservatorship," she continued, "I was made to understand that those days were now over. I had to grow my hair out and get back into shape. I had to go to bed early and take whatever medication they told me to take.

"If I thought getting criticized about my body in the press was bad, it hurt even more from my own father. He repeatedly told me I looked fat and that I was going to have to do something about it," she added.

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"Feeling like you’re never good enough is a soul-crushing state of being for a child. He’d drummed that message into me as a girl, and even after I’d accomplished so much, he was continuing to do that to me. I became a robot. But not just a robot — a sort of child-robot. I had been so infantilized that I was losing pieces of what made me feel like myself."

Spears' father, Jamie, acted as her conservator from the time it was put in place in 2008 until it was dissolved in 2021. It was originally put into place when Spears was apparently struggling with her mental health. But, over the years, the details of its inner workings were mostly kept secret.

The singer wrote, "The conservatorship stripped me of my womanhood, made me into a child. I became more of an entity than a person onstage. I had always felt music in my bones and my blood; they stole that from me.

"I know I had been acting wild, but there was nothing I’d done that justified their treating me like I was a bank robber," an excerpt from The New York Times states. "Nothing that justified upending my entire life. … Too sick to choose my own boyfriend and yet somehow healthy enough to appear on sitcoms and morning shows, and to perform for thousands of people in a different part of the world every week."

Of her father, she wrote, "I began to think that he saw me as put on the earth for no other reason than to help their cash flow." She also remembered an occasion on which he said, "I’m Britney Spears now."

Now that she's in control of her life again, Spears admitted to still struggling with what happened during the conservatorship.

"Migraines are just one part of the physical and emotional damage I have now that I’m out of the conservatorship," she revealed. "I don’t think my family understands the real damage that they did."

A rep for Jamie Spears said the family will not be commenting when reached by Fox News Digital.

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