David Bowie’s daughter has spoken out for the first time about a deeply traumatic chapter of her life — revealing how she was forcibly removed from her family home in the United States and sent to a series of controversial teen treatment centres, a decision that ultimately meant she was not present during her father’s final days.
Alexandria “Lexi” Jones, now 25, shared an emotional and unflinching video on Instagram this week, detailing the years she spent in residential programmes while battling depression, an eating disorder, and substance abuse — struggles that intensified after her father was diagnosed with cancer.
Her father, legendary musician David Bowie, died in January 2016 at the age of 69, just two days after releasing his final album Blackstar.
A Childhood Lived in the Shadow of Fame
Lexi, the only child Bowie shared with supermodel Iman, described growing up feeling more like an “idea” than a real person — constantly viewed through the lens of her parents’ fame.

“Adults spoke to me differently,” she explained. “Some of them weren’t interested in me at all — only in what I represented.”

She revealed that she began therapy before the age of ten after teachers and her parents noticed something was wrong. Anxiety attacks, depression, learning disabilities and severe body image issues soon followed.
By the age of 12, Lexi said she had developed bulimia. At 11, she began self-harming.
“I felt stupid. Unworthy. Unlovable,” she admitted. “And having successful parents somehow made it worse. I felt like I could never live up to them.”
Cancer, Grief — and a Breaking Point

When Bowie was diagnosed with liver cancer in 2014, Lexi says she reached her breaking point.
While peers experimented casually with alcohol and drugs, Lexi says her substance use became a form of escape.
“I wasn’t partying,” she said. “I was running from something.”

Her behaviour grew increasingly erratic and destructive — until an intervention took place that she describes as one of the most terrifying moments of her life.
“I’m Sorry We Have to Do This”





Fans and famous friends including Cara Delevingne were quick to show their support in the comments
Lexi recalled her father reading her a letter before she was taken away.
“I don’t remember much of it,” she said. “But I remember the last line. He said, ‘I’m sorry we have to do this.’”
Moments later, two men — “well over six feet tall” — entered the house.
“They told me I could go the easy way or the hard way,” she recalled. “I chose the hard way.”
Lexi said she resisted, screamed, and clung to furniture as she was physically pulled from her home and placed into a black SUV.
“My parents were already gone,” she said. “I was alone.”
Inside ‘Wilderness Therapy’
Lexi spent 91 days in a wilderness therapy programme, living outdoors in winter conditions with minimal privacy. She described being strip-searched, showering once a week, and being required to count aloud every time she used a makeshift toilet so staff could monitor her movements.
“We slept under tarps on yoga mats,” she said. “We cooked over fires. We dug holes for bathrooms.”
The practice, widely criticised by mental health advocates, has faced growing scrutiny in recent years. Socialite Paris Hilton has previously spoken out about alleged abuse at similar facilities and successfully campaigned for the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act, passed in 2024.
The Call She Never Expected
After three months, Lexi was transferred directly to a residential treatment centre in Utah, where she remained for more than a year.
It was there she learned of her father’s death.
“I spoke to him two days before,” she said. “On his birthday. We told each other we loved each other. We both knew.”
Then she saw the public announcement stating Bowie had died “surrounded by his whole family.”
“It made me physically sick,” Lexi said. “Because everyone was there. Except me.”
Grief — Structured and Monitored
Lexi revealed that even her mourning was regulated.
“They created a ‘Grief and Loss Phase’ for me,” she said. “They structured my grief. Assigned milestones.”
At the time, she believed this was normal.
“I didn’t know how grief was supposed to work.”
The Aftermath
After returning home shortly before turning 16, Lexi said she slipped back into old patterns and was sent away again — creating a cycle that left her feeling like “a problem being passed off.”
Despite the trauma, Lexi says the experiences shaped her into someone deeply introspective and emotionally aware — though not without lasting scars.
“I still flinch when things feel too controlled,” she admitted. “I still scan rooms for rules I haven’t been told yet.”
Finding Her Voice
In April 2025, Lexi released her debut album Xandri, which she wrote, produced and performed independently.
She says sharing her story now is about visibility — not blame.
“This happened to me,” she said. “And it happened to a lot of other kids who deserved better.”
Support poured in from fans and public figures, including Cara Delevingne, who left heart emojis on Lexi’s post.
A Story Long Kept Quiet
David Bowie and Iman married in 1992 and remained together until his death. Lexi has a half-brother, film director Duncan Jones, from Bowie’s previous marriage.
Lexi says she no longer carries the story in silence.
“The point is to talk about what no one talks about,” she said.
“The parts of yourself you lose while being ‘fixed’.”



