November 4, 2022, 4:40 PM
November 4, 2022, 4:40 PM
to their 30 years, Selena Gomez he lived longer than imaginable and not precisely because of fame and money. Far from revealing all that her talent gave her, the American singer reveals what his life is like with lupus and bipolarity in the new documentary AppleTV+ My mind & me.
In the documentary, it all starts in 2016, a year after the release of the album Revival (Renaissance), when Selena Gómez was in the middle of a promotional tour and had to suspend it because of lupus, chronic autoimmune disease which later brought him serious complications.
That was the beginning of the toughest tests, then they were added psychological disorders such as depression and anxiety that ultimately led to a mental health crisis and subsequent diagnosis of bipolarity.
Back then it came to pass bedridden for months and hearing voices that took her to the hospital in a “state of paranoia”.
However, as part of the message, the famous shares that she sought help, received it and after finding the best medication, today she can live fully.
The singer and actress hopes that her testimony will allow at least one person sits accompanied in moments of pain. “I am grateful to be alive,” says the artist in a fragment of the official trailer for the documentary.
“I remind myself that I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for the psychotic break, if it wasn’t for my lupus, if it wasn’t for my diagnosis. I think it would probably be another annoying entity that just wants to wear nice clothes all the time. I’m depressed thinking about who it would be. Sometimes I like to get in the car and blast that song where Adele sings ‘I hope to learn to improve myself’. And I say, ‘Yes, real life is happening. Real life is happening,'” she told Rolling Stone magazine.
Selena Gomez Premieres Documentary on Apple TV+