It’s not every day that a psychic warns you about your coffee intake, and Meghan Trainer can speak to that.
In an interview with People magazine, which was published Nov. 29, the pop star revealed she decided to quit coffee after her husband Daryl Sabara visited a psychic. “The psychic never met me,” Trainer told the outlet. “My husband was gifted a session with her and she said, ‘Your wife is using coffee like speed. She’s non-stop and it’s not helping her and she’s just crashing out.'”
“I was like, ‘How does she know that?’ And he came home and told me, and I immediately stopped,” she said. “Cold turkey just stopped because I was drinking it all day to just survive and be steady and then I would crash and be buzzing at night to sleep.”

More than that, the singer said she realized her “adrenals were shot” and that her hormone levels were off balance, which caused her not to feel her best. “I wasn’t feeling great. And I was like, ‘I don’t understand. I eat so healthy, I work out. Why do I feel like this?’ And I realized I was overworking myself,” she said.
Quitting coffee cold turkey wasn’t easy, but it was life-changing, the “Made You Look” singer said.
Trainor spoke to People magazine about her upcoming Get in Girl Tour, which kicks off in June 2026, and her new single “Still Don’t Care.” Trainor also reflected on balancing motherhood with her two sons, Riley and Barry.
“No sleep, power through and thrive,” is how Trainor said she navigates tour life. “I will do the show. We get up at 7 a.m. … and then we go find an amusement park or a museum … then we eat lunch together, I do a soundcheck, we have early dinner so that I don’t burp on stage,” Trainor quipped.
During her first tour in eight years, USA TODAY spoke with Trainor in 2024 about touring with her kids. “We have an incredible nanny, and she and Daryl give (the kids) a bath in my green room and we put them in their PJs and cuddle (before I go on stage),” she said at the time. “Then Daryl and the nanny put them on the bus to sleep while I’m performing. We’re making notes so if we do this again we know what else we need – like even more hands on deck.”

















