Singer Jang Jae-in confessed to the hidden pain.



Jang Jae-in said on his SNS on the 22nd, "To commemorate the completion of the recording of a very old album today, a memorial to the improvement of psychological therapy, which he steadily went to sleep like at night. It took 11 years to bring this story out." I confessed.



Jang Jae-in said, "My first seizure was when I was 17 years old, and at the age of 18, after an incident I didn't want to put in my mouth, extreme anxiety, seizures, shortness of breath, insomnia, anorexia, etc. started to catch up." It wasn't easy to find a doctor, and at that time, I couldn't treat it any more because I considered going to the hospital as a big fault.”



“I'm in my twenties like that until I was 24 to 29, and my wish was,'Please, I want to be a little bit happy.' That wasn't just because I made up my mind and acted. When this happens, it keeps collapsing," he explained.



"For such a long time, I grew up with the disease, and now it has become a part of me," said Jang Jae-in, who said that her symptoms have improved a lot now.

"First of all, I put down the word happiness, and I admitted that I had passed a life bound by low self-esteem, and above all, after taking the medicine for a year, many symptoms improved."



"When I was a child, I went through the same things as me or other painful things, and I stood up and stood up while watching the singers singing nicely. Like I did, if I could convey the courage I received at least a little, then the events I went through "Wouldn't it make sense?" He said that he wanted to give courage to others as he told his story through music that it seems that that thought held me in the worst situation and still, if it can, I would really like it. .



Next is Jang Jae-in's Instagram post



, commemorating the end of recording a very old album today, commemorating the improvement of psychological therapy, who steadily went to sleep like a night's sleep!

Leave a post.

It took 11 years to tell this story.



My first seizure was when I was 17 years old, and when I was 18, when I didn't want to put it in my mouth, I started to catch up with extreme anxiety, seizures, shortness of breath, insomnia, and anorexia.

(Probably, people who have gone through the same thing with this alone, I know what happened, I had a lot of hardships, really.)



He said that he

did

treatment, but it was not easy to find the right doctor, and at that time, going to the hospital was considered a big fault, so he treated more. Is not good.



In addition, the environment in which I lived would have contributed greatly to the symptoms.

(I'm sorry mom! But since I decided to sing, you know?)



I'm in my twenties, and I want to be really happy until I'm 24~29.

It wasn't that just because you made up your mind and acted.



Even if I only want to think about good thoughts, I want to live hard, but when my heart is sick, it keeps breaking down.



For such a long time nowadays I grew up with illness and now it has become a part of me.


1. First of all,


I

put down the word happiness.

2. I admitted that I had passed a life that was bound by low self-esteem.


3. Above all, after taking the medicine steadily for a year,


many symptoms improved.


(Before that, I had to take it for as long as three months because of my antipathy for the drug!) When I was



18, I decided to be honest with my stories while planning the album, because I was empowered by the people who did that.



When I was a child, I stood up after going through the same things as me or through other painful things, and endured by watching the singers singing wonderfully.



If I could convey the courage I received, just like I did, wouldn't the events I've been through make sense?

and.



I think that kind of thought caught me even in the worst situation, and even now, if I can, I would like to be happy.



I'm afraid and sorry that the first skein is longer than I thought it would be okay to read.

If you've come this far, thank you again.



The only thing I'm good at is stories, so I'll try to unravel these stories with the album little by little.



It's a very private story, but people's pain and anxiety seem more alike than I thought.



(SBS Entertainment News reporter Kang Seon-ae)