While Megan Thee Stallion has had some kind of dizzying highs, she’s also had some pretty rough times in the past few years. While her EP make it hot (2017), Tina Snow (2018) and Suga (2020) followed by album Good news (2020) and now Traumazina (2022) made it popular, the 27-year-old rapper suffered the death of her mother from a brain tumor in 2019. In July 2020, rapper Tory Lanez (Daystar Peterson) shot her multiple times in the foot, before attempting to cover up the case and launch a campaign to discredit it, in order to prevent possible legal repercussions. In short, Megan Thee Stallion has had a lot to manage in recent years, and in particular she confides in it the title “Anxiety” from his new album: ” Even bad whores have bad days “.
Having become a mantra for many fans of the artist, this phrase is now established as the name of Megan Thee Stallion’s new site for better mental health care.
Megan Thee Stallion creates a site dedicated to better mental health care
Just launched, BadBitchesHaveBadDaysToo.com brings together many useful links: platforms to find a shrink near you or online, listening platforms in case of psychological distress, suicidal thoughts, addictions, drug use and even platforms specialized in the treatment of blacks, LGBTI + or not.

The mental health of young people, particularly weakened by Covid
Indeed, structurally, blacks in the United States count as the population group most at risk of premature deatha fortiori men, as indicated in particular by these graphs of New York Times. Even when it has the means, it is a population less cared for by health services, including psychiatric ones, particularly due to long-studied racist prejudices (cf. Stifling revolt: psychiatry against civil rights, a history of social controlby Jonathan M. Metzl).
In France, the National Suicide Observatory just reported seeing a decline in suicides, sure, but mental health severely weakened by Covid-19. So much so that the Defender of Rights openly challenges Elisabeth Borne’s government to obtain the implementation of an emergency plan for the mental health of young people.
Through this site, which therefore collects many useful resources, Megan Jovon Ruth Pete, whose real name is, is thus establishing herself in favor of better mental health care in the United States, well beyond the (already numerous) circle of her fans.
Front page photo credit: YouTube screenshot.
Source: Madmoizelle

Ashley Root is an author and celebrity journalist who writes for The Fashion Vibes. With a keen eye for all things celebrity, Ashley is always up-to-date on the latest gossip and trends in the world of entertainment.