Ever since her breakup with Justin Bieber three years ago, Selena Gomez has been solo.
The stunning woman, whose new EP in Spanish, Revelacion, drops this week, has revealed on Vogue’s April cover that she finds it difficult to trust people.
Dating is difficult for her because of her popularity, the 28-year-old said. “I can’t meet someone and know if they like me for me.” Honestly, all I want is to start anew. Everything needs to be brand-new. She continued, “I want someone to love me like I’m brand-new.”
He surprised fans in 2018 by getting married to Hailey Bieber after divorcing Selena a few months earlier.
Gomez also discussed her new bipolar disorder diagnosis, saying that “it was less scary once the information was there.”
She uses social media less as one strategy for maintaining her health.
“Like everyone else, I looked at Instagram when I woke up one morning and decided to stop,” she revealed. I had had enough of reading awful stuff. I was sick of observing the lives of other people. Following that choice, freedom arrived immediately. I was living my life, and I couldn’t be happier about it, even though it was in front of me. However, Selena insists that she, not a management, is responsible for her posts.
The stunning woman, who was seen on camera by Nadine Ijewere, also explained how difficult lockdown has been for her.
I try not to watch CNN too much since I have a very sensitive side and will cry over anything. She remarked, “I cried a lot during quarantine, just for everyone else’s suffering.”
She also expressed her belief that “so many pointless deaths” have been caused by the Trump administration.
Regarding the demonstrations for Black Lives Matter, she stated: “I thought, Who am I to talk? Will I share a photo and declare, “This is important”? No, I have to study; I have to understand why people hurt.
She gave Alicia Garza and KimberlΓ© Crenshaw access to her Instagram account and conducted an interview with Stacey Abrams for the website She Se Puede.
Selena “expressed an honest disengagement with traditional politics while also showing a hunger for solving real, painful problems,” according to Abrams, who described his first encounter with her as “revolutionary.” “In doing so, she personified the most influential voterβsomeone who participates because she is aware that doing better is both feasible and within her rights.”