FOREVER MINE — THE LOVE SONG SHARON OSBOURNE WROTE FOR THE MAN SHE CAN’T STOP MISSING. Some songs are meant for the world… but this one was meant for Ozzy. In a moment that stunned fans everywhere, Sharon Osbourne has released Forever Mine — a song stitched together from the silence her husband left behind, a love letter turned elegy, a final promise she refused to let die with him. The video begins quietly: Sharon sitting alone by the lake in their Buckinghamshire garden — the place where Ozzy once escaped the noise of the world. Before her sits a piano, its keys glowing like scattered tears. Then her voice enters — fragile, trembling, painfully human. 💬 “You said love never dies,” she whispers, “so I’ll keep singing till I find you.” Behind her, the wind rustles through the branches of the crab apple tree — the very one planted over Ozzy’s resting place. And for a heartbeat, it feels as if he’s there: listening, smiling, humming along to the song he never got to hear. When the final note falls, Sharon closes her eyes — not in sorrow, but in devotion. One breath. One vow. One eternal love. Forever Mine

FOREVER MINE: The Love Song Sharon Osbourne Wrote for the Man She Can’t Stop Missing

Some songs are written for the world — to be shared, celebrated, replayed until the notes become part of collective memory.
But this song was different.
This one was written for one man. For one love. For Ozzy Osbourne.

In a moment that stunned fans across the globe, Sharon Osbourne has released “Forever Mine,” a song she composed in the quiet, aching weeks after Ozzy’s passing — a love letter turned elegy, stitched together from the silence he left behind. It is not a performance meant for applause. It is not a polished single crafted for charts. It is a final promise she refused to let die with him.

The official video opens with a stillness so intimate it feels like trespassing. Sharon sits alone beside the lake in their Buckinghamshire garden — the sanctuary where Ozzy once retreated whenever the world grew too heavy. The early morning light drapes softly across the water. Before her rests a piano, its keys catching the sunlight like scattered tears.

Then her voice enters.

Fragile.
Trembling.
Human in a way only grief can teach.

“You said love never dies,” she whispers into the microphone,
“so I’ll keep singing till I find you.”

The line is simple, but the weight behind it is devastating — a vow whispered from a heart that refuses to let go. It is not the voice of the television personality the world knows. It is Sharon, the wife, the widow, the woman still reaching in the dark for the man who steadied her through every storm.

Behind her, the wind stirs the branches of the crab apple tree — the same tree planted over Ozzy’s resting place. The leaves shift, shimmer, and fall in a slow cascade that almost feels intentional. For a brief heartbeat, the moment feels alive with something unseen — as if Ozzy himself is listening, smiling, humming along to the song he never got to hear.

Throughout the video, haunting images drift across the screen:
• Ozzy’s old armchair by the window
• His favorite guitar leaning gently against the wall
• The garden path they walked together countless times
• The small wooden box where he kept unfinished lyrics

Each one appears like a memory rising from water — soft, blurred, unbearably tender.

Sharon’s hands tremble slightly on the piano keys, but her voice stays steady, unwavering, fueled by something deeper than strength. It is devotion — the kind that doesn’t break, even when the world collapses.

The bridge of the song is almost whispered:
“If the night still knows your name,
I’ll follow it home.”

And in that instant, “Forever Mine” becomes more than music.
It becomes a conversation — between the living and the gone, between grief and hope, between a woman and the man she refuses to stop loving.

When the final note falls, Sharon closes her eyes. Not in sorrow. Not in despair.

But in devotion.

One breath.
One vow.
One eternal love.

“Forever Mine.”

Video

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