Véronique Sanson talks about her moments of sadness when she withdraws into herself

Véronique Sanson talks about her moments of sadness when she withdraws into herself
Véronique Sanson talks about her moments of sadness when she withdraws into herself

This Wednesday, September 25, Véronique Sanson was the guest of Léa Salamé on Inter. The singer spoke about the moments she experiences when she is sad.

At 75, Véronique Sanson is not ready to end her career. Her concert Hasta Luego hits theaters on Thursday, September 26. It’s an opportunity for her to remind us how much the stage is her reason for living. To talk about this news, Véronique Sanson answered Léa Salamé’s questions on her morning show, broadcast on France Inter. And like everyone else, she sometimes experiences complicated times – the loss of a loved one, for example – or simply, she’s not in good spirits. And for that, Pierre Palmade’s ex has her own way of handling the situation.

Véronique Sanson withdraws into herself when she is feeling down: “Nothing makes me feel good when I’m sad”

Véronique Sanson confides that no song can ease her pain when she is not feeling well.Nothing does me any good when I’m sad. I lock myself away, I’m in my bubble, I don’t answer the phone, I don’t want to give up as if I were being sucked into my bed“, she explains on the airwaves of France Inter. So much so that the Covid-19 crisis really didn’t bother her, she who is a homebody and who has a “legendary laziness” : “There is nothing I have loved more than confinement“.

Véronique Sanson evokes “a depression” : “We don’t want to see the pain so we anesthetize ourselves.”

When Véronique Sanson is not smiling, she admits to putting herself in “a bubble of nothingness” : “The idea of ​​going to the bottom of the garden is for me like getting ready to take a rocket to go to Mars. Everything seems hard“. However, this has nothing to do with “negative thoughts“, but simply she doesn’t have “no thoughts at all” : “We don’t want to see the pain so we numb ourselves. I don’t want to talk to anyone. Sadness, depression, because that’s what it’s called…“Until she finally got it.”the trigger” and she tells herself that everything is not so bad. You should never despair, it doesn’t last. It passes!confides Véronique Sanson who, today, admits to being very happy.

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