Erika Jayne at The Bravos in November 2023 in Las Vegas.Photo:Ralph Bavaro/Bravo via Getty

Ralph Bavaro/Bravo via Getty
Erika Jayneis used to being in the hot seat. After all, since joiningThe Real Housewives of Beverly Hills’sixth season in 2015, the chart-topping recording artist has had to defend herself from a slew of criticism.
That’s not even taking into account what came Erika’s way when shefiled for divorce in November 2020shortly before Tom’slegal troubles began making headlines.
As she faced her own lawsuits to determine if she held responsibility to reimburse Tom’s victims, the court of public opinion quickly put her on trial — and her fellowHousewivesfollowed suit. She was asked how much she knew and when. Criticized for her own tears.Why wasn’t she turning over her assets? Did she haveany empathy at all?Nothing Erika could say (including her insistence she was in the dark) nor her legal victories seemed to stop the ire from coming her way.
Erika Jayne visits SiriusXM at SiriusXM Studios on Jan. 7 in New York City.Theo Wargo/Getty

Theo Wargo/Getty
“Isn’t it nice?” the 53-year-old star tells PEOPLE. “I’ve always been on the defense, or trying to [continue] holding up the walls of some bad situation. And this season, the audience and the women are finally seeing me how my friends off the show know me, because I didn’t feel like I had to be on guard as much.”
Part of that is because the drama finally turned from Erika to her costars, specificallyKyle RichardsandDorit Kemsley, both of whomseparated from their respective husbands back to back. But another part of it is because Erika’s life has finally stabilized from years of chaos.
Last year, she returned to the stage with a hit Vegas residency. New music has followed, as have new opportunities (like aDiamonds in the Roughpodcast with pal and former costarTeddi Mellencamp Arroyave). She’s even coming back to Broadway foranother run inChicagothat kicks off Jan. 20.
Erika Jayne performs during the grand opening of her Las Vegas residency, Bet It All On Blonde, at House of Blues Las Vegas at Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino on August 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada.Denise Truscello/Getty

Denise Truscello/Getty
Healing those wounds is still a work in progress, Erika notes, and one that has come slowly. “It really is one day at a time,” she shares. “I know it sounds cliché, but you can’t focus on more than this moment right here right now.”
Therapy has helped, as has leaning on the close people in her circle, including her son, Tommy, and her mom, Renee. But ultimately, no one could help Erika do the thing she needed to do the most: learn to love herself.

Amanda Edwards/Getty
That, it turns out, came with time and reflection. “You have to accept the situation you’re in and the person you’ve become, and that doesn’t happen overnight,” she says. “You have to give yourself time to almost recognize yourself again, and realize that certain things are really gone and that you must be willing to let them go. And then you have to say to yourself, ‘Okay, let me make peace with the present moment and make peace with who I am in the present moment.'”
“It’s not easy to do; it’s just not easy to do,” she admits. “I’ve had a hard time with moving on. I’m very nostalgic, probably much more so than people think. But I had to do it. I had to let go of a life, of a partner, of all the things that went with that — the homes, the furniture, the money, all of it. And then I had to let the dust settle where it did, which was not in a good place, and I had to say, ‘Okay, let’s work with this.’ That was hard!”
In fact, part of being present means Erika allows herself to feel the pain again now and then.
“There are times when it’s just like, ‘This sucks. I don’t like this. I don’t like this. I didn’t plan for this. This isn’t what I had signed up for. I don’t know what this is and I don’t like it!'” she says. “You just can’t lie to yourself that it’s so great! And oftentimes, it is not easy to look at the more positive side than the negative side. But you try; you try because you deserve to be happy.”
Erika Jaye strikes a pose at ‘The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills’ season 14 photoshoot.Phylicia J. L. Munn/Bravo via Getty

Phylicia J. L. Munn/Bravo via Getty
Happiness is something fans appear to be embracing on Erika these days, with the onslaught of social media negativity subsiding in favor of praise.
Erika takes it all in stride. “Hey, it’s nice to hear nice things — and it certainly is better than the other way, I’ll tell you that. But as grateful as I am that people are happy for me, and how much I feel that love, I also know I can’t buy into it,” she says. “Because all of that adulation? All that s– is false. Just like all the negativity was false too.”
“So I have to block out. At the end of the day, this is my life and I need to show up for me — not for them,” Erika continues. “I can’t let social media dictate my future. That cannot write the end of my story.”
Erika Jayne on ‘Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen’ in January 2025.Charles Sykes/Bravo via Getty

Charles Sykes/Bravo via Getty
Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
As for the next chapter in Erika’s story, fans will have to continue to watch things play out onRHOBH. And whether or not things continue to go smoothly, there is one thing those bumps have taught her: she’s going to survive it.
“I’ve always known I’m a pretty strong person, but I feel unstoppable now,” Erika says.
The Real Housewives of Beverly Hillsairs Tuesdays at 8 p.m. ET on Bravo. Episodes stream the next day on Peacock.
source: people.com