Superstar Cher has always believed in spiritualism and speaking with loved ones from beyond the grave, and now insiders tell the National Enquirer that the “Believe” belter has reached out to her dead mom, Georgia Holt, in a desperate bid to keep her son Elijah Blue Allman from plummeting into a final abyss.
Since the 79-year-old Witches of Eastwick star’s mother died in 2022, sources reveal that not a day goes by that the diva doesn’t reach out to Georgia for help and guidance.
“She misses her mom more than anything now that her relationship with Elijah’s in such a horrible state. She’s climbing the walls with worry, barely eating and hardly sleeping a wink,” says an insider.
The heart-wrenching pain was clearly too much to bear on June 9, which would have been Georgia’s 99th birthday, when Cher scribbled on X: “Sometimes I Talk 2 U, Need 2 Ask U a Question, Or I FORGET, & THINK, OH … GOTTA CALL MOM.”
“We Both Know U Could Be a Little Off The Wall Sometimes, BUT MOM, I AM WHO I AM … BECAUSE OF U.”
An insider notes that “Cher could really use her mom right now. She’s tearing her hair out over Elijah.”
As the Enquirer reported, the “Strong Enough” singer has been beside herself fretting over Elijah’s recent overdose and hospitalization amid his continuing battle with addiction.
“If her mom were alive, Cher knows she’d make it better,” says the insider.
“In the years since Georgia died, connecting to her through mediums is the best Cher can do, and it’s giving her some measure of comfort.”
According to the source: “Cher feels Georgia’s presence and knows her mom is there with her.
“Cher doesn’t care if people think she’s crazy. She talks to her mom every day and can feel her mom’s empathy and understanding from the world beyond.”
Meanwhile, the “I Got You Babe” singer has turned to mediums before — using one to contact her late ex-husband Sonny Bono following his tragic 1998 ski-accident death at Heavenly Ski Resort near South Lake Tahoe.
“He told me things only Sonny could have known,” Cher insisted to TV Guide in May 1998.