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Originally posted by ForeverJLO
yea but thats whats coming to her in the coming weeks. If she doesn't get passed it people aren't going to get passed it. she needs to break the ice so that things can fully return to normal and she won't get nervous for interviews, appearances and performances. if not everythings just going to be awkward.
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And that's exactly what she's doing...baby steps. The documentary is the tell-it-all that we have all been waiting for. And it hasn't been long enough when she was sick. Of course that's alot of pressure on her. I don't expect her to deal with it that easily yet. People need to give her space, she didn't hide from it. After all, she's in for the music, not to talk about her life.
And speaking of that...
PEOPLE: Britney's Manager Says She's Ready for a Comeback
Although Britney Spears admits in a new film that she "totally lost my way, lost focus, lost myself," that won't stand in the way of her comeback, says her manager.
"She's definitely ready," Larry Rudolph tells PEOPLE, following a sneak peek of Spears's riveting MTV documentary, Britney: For the Record, airing Nov. 30, in Santa Monica, Calif.
"She loves to work," he says. "She's a very strong person. Everybody goes through setbacks in their lives. [But] every day, I see her getting happier and stronger."
One of her biggest victories this year? Regaining visitation with Preston, 3, and Jayden, 2, her sons with ex-husband Kevin Federline.
So while her musical comeback is important, Spears has made it clear that motherhood comes first, says Rudolph.
"Her kids and balancing her life with her kids is an incredible priority – the No. 1 priority in terms of how I operate with her," he says.
Spears's boys can be seen in the film, which follows the pop star over three months as she records her upcoming album Circus, wins big at September's MTV Video Music Awards, and speaks frankly about her problems – including her failed relationships with Federline and Justin Timberlake.
The idea for the candid documentary sprung up during a conversation Spears and Rudolph had over dinner several months ago.
"It evolved and became a question of, What will she do? What will she say? How will she say it?" he says. "How will people view her after what she's been through and after all that they've seen in the tabloids over the past year or two?"
Adds Rudolph: "This became sort of a great way for her to say what she needs to say on her terms."