After opening up about the "unhealthy dynamic" in her seven-year marriage to singer/songwriter Ryan Adams, Mandy Moore is making one thing clear: She's put her painful relationship past behind her.

Moore told Michigan Avenue Magazine she "was not apprehensive at all" to start a relationship with Dawes lead singer Taylor Goldsmith after her 2016 split from Adams.

“It was inevitable – it was always what was going to happen,” she said of her romance with Goldsmith. “I was like, ‘Oh, this is what it’s supposed to be like. This is how life is supposed to unfold.’”

Moore and Goldsmith went public with their relationship soon after she finalized her divorce. They got married on November 18, 2018.

In February, the "This Is Us" actress spoke out in a New York Times article the detailed allegations of harassment against Adams. Moore told The Times that Adams used music as a "point of control" as she was trying to make strides in the industry.

Moore always knew she would find love, she told Michigan Avenue Magazine.

"I knew that past situations didn’t define me and didn’t even define what love or marriage or relationships or any of that had to be," she said. "My experiences in the past were singular to that. I knew, even before I met Taylor, I would love again, and I would get married again, and I would have a family. And all the things I always hoped for and wanted, I still believed were out there and possible."

She continued: "Not to say that I didn’t have my own grief and pain and trauma to tend to, deal with, overcome and heal from, but it never affected how I feel about love.”

Following the New York Times article in February, Moore elaborated to Marc Maron she felt like she was "drowning" in her relationship with Adams and had "no sense of self."

“I was living my life for him," she said on Maron's WTF podcast. “I felt like I was drowning. It was so untenable and unsustainable and it was so lonely. I was so sad. I was lonely with him.”

Moore also said she passed on bigger acting jobs while married to Adams, fearing the way he would react if she was gone from home for too long.

“I would do little jobs. It’s not like I completely stopped working. I would do things here or there, but it became abundantly clear while I was working, things would completely fall apart at home,” she said. “I couldn’t do my job because there was just a constant stream of trying to pay attention to this person who needed me and wouldn’t let me do anything else.”

Contributing: Erin Jensen and Susan Haas

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