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Now, sitting in front of the camera, he was ready
He spoke calmly.
Not defensively.
Not dramatically.
Just truthfully.
He explained the diagnosis—not sensational, not shocking, just human. A health condition that millions of people quietly cope with. Something that required treatment and boundaries.
He didn’t describe it for sympathy but for clarity. For honesty.
“What hurts most,” he continued, “is not the diagnosis. It’s that the world took half a sentence and wrote the rest for me. We have to stop treating people’s lives like entertainment.”
The camera stayed steady as he spoke, his voice cracking occasionally, but never shattering.