Nowadays, Pink is a busy mother-of-two. But the singer is now using her newest album to speak about the devastating miscarriage she endured at age 17.

Days after the release of her latest album Hurts 2B Human, the edgy songstress revealed that she used her past experience with miscarriage to inspire many of the songs. She was also inspired by the subsequent journey of anxiety and body-image issues her loss brought on at such young age.

While speaking with USA Today, Pink revealed that she’s always had a love-hate relationship with her body. Despite her body looking strong and tough, she reveals it let her down when she miscarried. “The reason I said [that] is because I’ve always had this very tomboy, very strong gymnast body, but actually at 17 I had a miscarriage,” the musician revealed. “And I was going to have that child.”

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She explained that one of the most personal songs on the album- titled ‘Happy’- specifically touches on this struggle. The powerful lyrics include the lines: “Since I was 17, I’ve always hated my body / and it feels like my body’s hated me.”

“But when that happens to a woman or a young girl, you feel like your body hates you and like your body is broken, and it’s not doing what it’s supposed to do,” Pink added. Unfortunately, the first miscarriage wasn’t the end of the singer’s struggles. She added that she’s experienced several losses of the same nature throughout her life, though she didn’t elaborate on the details.

With a five-year age gap between her kids, some fans have speculated the star had fertility issues in the past. Pink has been married to Carey Hart since 2006. Their first child, daughter Willow Sage, was born in 2011, while their son Jameson Moon was born in 2016.

Pink went on to add that therapy has greatly help her cope with her losses, despite describing it has “uncomfortable and painful” at times. “I believe in self-confrontation and just getting things out. What I love about therapy is that they’ll tell you what your blind spots are,” she continued. “Although that’s uncomfortable and painful, it gives you something to work with.”

She ended by saying that she hopes her openeness on the topic will work to end the taboo surrounding miscarriage, therapy, and mental health. “I’m hopeful that the taboo of it is all going away, because more and more people are talking about it,” she said. Us too, Pink!