I was...

Brad Pitt talked about how he handled his difficult, prolonged divorce by Angelina Jolie. Pitt has been in a vortex of public division with other actress Angelina Jolie for nearly a decade, and the couple finalised their divorce on the last day of 2024. Yet, during the year, Pete has [...]
Brad Pitt talked about how he handled his difficult, prolonged divorce by Angelina Jolie.
Pitt has been in a vortex of public division with other actress Angelina Jolie for nearly a decade, and the couple finalised their divorce on the last day of 2024.
During the year, however, Pitt has remained quite silent about the consequences of the relationship. Jolie, on the other hand, has been more open and previously accused the actor of being abusive to her and their six children. The court documents referred to a suspected incident on a flight to France in 2016 the same year the couple announced their divorce.
The documents claimed that Jolie was attacked by her former husband, with one of their children allegedly also attacked on the flight in question -- an accusation Pete denied. The FBI also investigated the prosecution and Pitt was charged with nothing, reports Cut.al, broadcast Periscope.
In a recent episode of podcast Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard, Pitt spoke of his steps to become clear and how this helped him to spend a difficult time in his life during his breakup.
Pitt said: “E know, I was almost on my knees and I was really open. I was trying everything and everyone, everything I was all over.
It was a difficult time. I needed a restart. I needed to wake up in some ways. And that meant a lot to me. ”
Pitt also talked about opening his AA meetings and how he was eventually helped back on track.
He added: “somehow gives you permission to continue, okay, I'll go out on this end and see what happens.
And then I really want it. ”
Pitt also noted that his earlier comments, being so open about the Anonymous Alcoholists, had in fact berated little because of the process aimed at being strictly anonymous.
Speaking of an earlier interview he gave in 2019, he continued: “I went to an interview for the New York Times and what a wonderful thing this experience was for me.
There was a group of men, there were AA, it was when I was getting clear for the first time. I just thought it was simply incredible, men who shared their experiences, their weaknesses, their wrong steps, their desires, their pain and a lot of humor with it.
I thought it was a really special experience coming from the Ozarks where we're like, everything is great.
And so I did this interview and I said that and I got reproof from somebody higher by saying, it's anonymous. ”
Despite his mild reproof, Pete said that he deeply appreciated his experience.












