Britney Spears is sending multiple cryptic messages.
“If you’re one of those mean girls pointing and laughing and looking at your phone in the audience just look up today… River sends you guys a message!!!!!!!!” Spears, 44, captioned a Friday, May 29, Instagram post.
In a separate Instagram shared the same day, Spears filmed herself dancing in front of a pool with a body of water visible in the distance.
“When I moved out of the country for a while I changed my name for some reason and the mean girls stopped laughing!!!!! Damn I miss it there,” she wrote.
It is unclear who the “mean girls” are Spears is referring to. In a third upload, Spears reflected on feeling “too much chatter” that’s “going on behind your back.”
“When you get that awkward, weird feeling you can actually start to feel perhaps too much chatter is going on behind your back… it actually effects [sic] people… I still send them love but most importantly…” she wrote via Instagram on Tuesday, May 26.
She continued, “I hope they feel my smile… the media has been a bit much in my opinion and I hope they can respect my unbelievable and miraculous spiritual journey… I’m so excited to embrace my journey and hope they stop showing embarrassing things from my past 🙄🙄🙄 I just bought the most adorable high heeled sandals 👡 for summer… its the little things you know… god bless.”
Spears’ posts come months after she was taken into police custody on March 4 after an anonymous caller reported that she had been “traveling at high speeds and swerving.” After her arrest, Spears was taken to a local hospital to get her blood drawn, which was registered under the legal limit.
“This was an unfortunate incident that is completely inexcusable,” a spokesperson for Spears told Us Weekly in March. “Britney is going to take the right steps and comply with the law, and hopefully this can be the first step in long overdue change that needs to occur in Britney’s life. Hopefully, she can get the help and support she needs during this difficult time.”
The next month, Spears was charged with driving under the influencer while in a treatment facility. She accepted a plea deal on May 4 and was sentenced to 12 months of probation and one daily in jail, which was credited with time served. She was also ordered to complete a DUI class and pay $571 in state-mandated fees and see a psychologist once a week and a psychiatrist twice a month.









