Celebrity Celebrity Family Celebrity Family Dynamics Sheryl Crow Opens Up About Her Decision to Adopt: 'Families Look Like All Different Things' On a new episode of the podcast Making Space with Hoda Kotb, Sheryl Crow says she "never didn't think I would have kids" By Georgia Slater Georgia Slater Georgia Slater is a staff editor on the Parents team at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2018. Her work has previously appeared in USA Today and Washington Life Magazine. People Editorial Guidelines Published on October 26, 2021 11:33AM EDT Photo: John Shearer/WireImage Sheryl Crow is sharing new details about her journey to motherhood. In a wide-ranging interview on the latest episode of the podcast Making Space with Hoda Kotb, the 59-year-old opened up about her decision to adopt her two sons Levi, 11, and Wyatt, 14, and shared how her family offered support during the process. "I had the gift of getting a lot of things out of my system before I had my kids, or before I got my kids. So there wasn't anything that I felt like I was missing," she explains. "If I stayed home and something was going on, I just didn't feel like I was missing anything, that I wanted to be anywhere else, and that's a gift." The Grammy winner says she "just never didn't think I would have kids" but it wasn't until her mother threw her a "life raft" of support to show her that she didn't have to be married to start a family. Subscribe to our new 12-episode weekly podcast, Me Becoming Mom, to hear celebrity moms open up exclusively to PEOPLE about their extraordinary roads to motherhood. Single Mom Sheryl Crow on How Adopting Sons Is Her Life's Biggest 'Blessing' - and Why She's Strict About Screen Time Crow recalls her mother being supportive of the idea of adoption, telling the singer, "You have a family around you who will stand at the altar with you at baptism and say, 'We are his community, or her community.' " "The story I was telling myself limited what I thought I could have, until somebody stepped in and said, 'Wait a minute, your story doesn't have to look like your mom and dad's story,' " she shares. "Families look like all different things." Sheryl Crow. Amy Harris/Invision/AP/Shutterstock Now, the musician says she is "honored" to be a mom of two — even if her kids tease her about not being a "cool mom anymore." Crow tells Kotb her kids think, "You just don't know Mom. You don't get it." Close