Katy Perry said she doesn't "really identify with any labels" surrounding sobriety.
The "Teenage Dream" singer, who took a three-month sober "pact" with fiancé Orlando Bloom in March, is "indulging" in drinking again.
"For me, it was an opportunity to reset. We reset after President's Day, and it was a great opportunity to just let my body bounce back a little bit," Perry told People Wednesday.
"I've had a pretty good relationship with just finding balance."
The "American Idol" judge, 38, noted that she's "not really drinking" on weeknights in solidarity with the "Pirates of the Caribbean" actor, 46.
However, "I'll indulge a little bit" on weekends, she explained.
"We did this because he's shooting a movie in London right now that's taking every ounce of his focus, and so I wanted that opportunity to be supportive," Perry went on.
"It's really hard to do anything, whether that's doing a cleanse or a reset, unless your partner's doing it. So, doing it together makes it so much easier."
Although she doesn't "really identify with any labels as far as sober or whatever," she loves to have her "reset moments."
"Especially being 38, balancing the intensity of my career and having a toddler who loves to run," the "Part Of Me" singer said.
Bloom and Perry have been together since 2016. The couple, who got engaged in 2019, share one child together: daughter Daisy Dove, 2.
The actor also shares son Flynn, 12, with his ex-wife, Miranda Kerr, whom he was married to from 2010 to 2013.
Perry, for her part, was previously married to comedian Russell Brand from 2010 to 2012.
Back in February, Bloom admitted that his relationship can be "challenging."
"We're in two very different pools. Her pool is not a pool that I necessarily understand, and I think my pool is not a pool that she necessarily understands," he explained.
"Sometimes things are really, really, really, challenging. I won't lie," he added.
Nevertheless, the notoriously private star said there was "never a dull moment" with Perry and their baby girl.
"We definitely battle with our emotions and creativity. [But] I think we're both aware of how blessed we are to have uniquely connected in the way that we did at the time that we did, and there's definitely never a dull moment," he gushed.