Lady Gaga has not been shy about sharing her love life and relationship with new boyfriend, Michael Polansky. She posted a Valentine’s Day tribute to the tech CEO, calling him her ‘Stupid Love,’ a reference to her single of the same name. During a Friday appearance on MSNBC’s Morning Joe to talk about staying grounded and mental health care during the coronavirus pandemic, she mentioned Polansky as “the love of [her] life.”
“With Born This Way Foundation, my mother, Cynthia Germanotta, and our co-founder Maya [Enista Smith], who I love so very much—they are working with my, the love of my life on something for mental health,” Gaga told Morning Joe co-hosts, Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski, while explaining that she is working with Polansky to develop an app.
Polansky first showed up on Gaga’s Instagram grid following the Super Bowl in Miami in early February. “We had so much fun in Miami. Love to all my little monsters and fans, you’re the best! ❤️,” she wrote then. That was ten weeks ago, but after the spring we’ve had so far, ten weeks truly feels like a year. Polansky was the mystery man with whom Gaga welcomed in 2020 on New Year’s Eve, which really feels like ages ago.
Tonight, One World Concert: Together at Home, produced by Global Citizen and curated by Gaga, can be accessed on all NBC networks, ABC, ViacomCBS Networks, The CW and iHeartMedia channels. In addition to promoting the show, Gaga spoke with Scarborough and Brzezinski about dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) and her experience and success with it.
“I think that there’s been a stigma around mental health for a long time, because it’s invisible in a lot of ways. It seems less accessible to people. You know, if you break your arm and you can see a bone sticking out, it’s very clear to say, ‘I broke my arm; I need help.’ If there’s something happening in the brain or perhaps you’re having what I have, which is a neuropathic response, where my brain feels stress or is experiencing post-traumatic response from a previous trauma, I have a neuropathic reaction that then is a chain effect in my body.” She went on to say that DBT was part of saving her life and that she thinks the therapy should be looked into during this difficult time.
“There is going to be a wave of shock and trauma that people are experiencing all over the world,” she added. “And it’s just natural, because this is very scary, and the truth is, it’s much scarier for people that have less, for people that are living in poverty, for people that are living in violent situations, for people who are living hungry. But it’s also shocking for people that also have, so we have to create this bridge, where we all say, ‘OK, we’re all in a different fight right now, but how can we be kind to each other and spread a kind message?'”
Источник: www.elle.com