Health + Wellness

15 Moments Black Women Spoke Truth About Health On Camera – BlackDoctor


Black women

For too long, Black women have been expected to be superhuman—to endure pain without complaint, crisis without pause, and to carry the weight of the world while appearing unbreakable. But silence, we often find out the hard way, isn’t strength. These 15 moments capture Black women in the public eye choosing vulnerability over perfection, and in doing so, dismantling the dangerous myth that we don’t hurt, struggle, or need help. 

From Serena Williams advocating for herself in a life-threatening postpartum emergency to A’ja Wilson—a world-class athlete—losing control of her own body during an anxiety attack, these women didn’t just share their stories, they showed us what it looks like to privilege the truth over pretending to be okay. 

We share these moments, not because pain deserves to be elevated, but because it deserves to be acknowledged. These aren’t just celebrity confessions. They’re proof we are not alone.

RELATED: Serena Williams: “Being Heard Was The Difference Between Life or Death For Me”

Serena Williams On Postpartum Complications

“Listen, I need you to run a CAT scan with dye because I have a pulmonary embolism in my lungs. I know it. I’ve had this before. I know my body.”

Timestamp: 1:38

Simone Biles on Loneliness and Pressure 

“It was a lot of silent nights where I would cry because I didn’t want anyone to see me as a sign of weakness. I didn’t want anybody to ever see me cry.”

Timestamp: 21:04

A’ja Wilson on Anxiety and Body Control

“We’d literally just got out the bubble and I went on a family vacation and that’s when I had my first anxiety attack. And it was something that I felt very uncomfortable with because you know just as an athlete and as a person when you can’t control what you’re doing, your body, it’s like going into shock mentally.”

Timestamp: 13:54

RELATED: Gabrielle Union Reveals Infertility Struggle: “I’ve Had 8 or 9 Miscarriages”

Gabrielle Union on Infertility and Miscarriage 

“There are so many women hiding in plain sight, suffering in silence. Nobody wants the world to think that you’re defective or less than a perfect woman. There’s so much shame and guilt that surrounds fertility issues.”

Black women
Credit: Arturo Holmes / Staff (Getty Images)

Timestamp: 1:44

TARAJI P. HENSON on Depression 

“It freed me from the shame of not being okay. It’s something about how we think we’re the only ones suffering. It’s too many people on this planet to feel alone.”

Black women
Credit: Jamie McCarthy / Staff (Getty Images)

Timestamp 1:46

Mary J. Blige on Not Wanting To Be Here

“I was just bouncing, trying to survive. Singing for my life literally trying to get all of this stuff out of me and hoping it got out of me. Sometimes I was just depressed and didn’t want to live.” 

Timestamp: 0:49

Missy Elliott on Living with Graves Disease

“I look back over my life, I was sick, I couldn’t even hold a pen to write, and it was so much saying give up, but as I stand here with all of you, I thank you.” 

Timestamp: 3:20

RELATED: 10 Inspiring Quotes from Powerful Black Women

Viola Davis on Becoming L’Oreal Ambassador

“That pleased young Viola who always felt ugly and the reason why she did is because every single person told me – anyone who had the opportunity to tell me that I was ugly and that I was always going to stay ugly –  they took that opportunity.  It introduced me to the cruelty of the world, but looking back on it, it also introduced me to my legacy.”

Timestamp: 4:06

Nina Simone on Being Fully Seen 

“It is only normal to be wanted, normal to want acceptance from one’s own country for one’s gifts that God has given. I’m tired of of begging for it.  It took me 20 years of of playing in clubs and night clubs and on concert stages, doing all these records, to get a decent, real accurate review of of my gifts by the

New York Times. I’m too old to keep asking for love from the industry.”

Timestamp: 1:05

Fantasia on Suicide Attempt

“I think I was just overloaded with everything, with carrying six years of so much – you know I always take a licking and keep on ticking. And you know everybody feels like I’m so strong, she’s tough, she’s got it, and it just became heavy for me to the point where I just wanted to be away from the noise.”

Timestamp: 2:48

Doja Cat on Therapy and Hard Realizations

“The hardest lesson I learned in this life is that I am a grown woman with a child on the inside, and that I need to mitigate that child..I don’t mean this in any sort of like harsh diagnosis, I don’t have a condition. It’s just the reality is that I am now an adult, but there is a younger girl who’s taking care of an even younger girl.” 

Timestamp 19:36

Tracee Ellis Ross on Loneliness and Society’s Expectations 

“It’s something that comes up on a regular basis…particularly when you’re confronted by what life’s expectation of me is, and what is the reality of my life and my experiences.  How do I not let other people’s idea of me or cultures idea of what I should have accomplished or done – had a baby and a husband – and I keep having to on a daily basis reconcile and remind myself that what other people think of me is none of my business, and more than  that that I get to define my own happiness and my own life.”

Timestamp: 4:30

Jenifer Lewis on Living With Bipolar Disorder

“Rage. Rage comes with the mania. Drama comes with the mania. There are warning signals. I had to learn how to predict that I was having a manic episode. You know, I wasn’t in my skin that night. It was dark. I was depressed. Those are not the kind of things you share. But I have always believed we are as sick as our secrets.”

Timestamp 4:34

Black women
Credit: Carol Lee Rose / Stringer (Getty Images)

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Toni Braxton on Heart Attack Scare

“Really scary moment. My sister had just passed. I thought that I was just sad, and I kept reading about broken heart syndrome…all of a sudden my jaw was hurting. I remember this so clearly when they were talking and he said they can’t get it through, this is bypass. I will never forget that. I had to go through cardiac rehab for about 6 months, but it was a very scary moment in my life.”

Timestamp: 12:49

Amanda Seales on Neurodivergence

“And so I recently was diagnosed as someone who has autism spectrum disorder which is very difficult to identify in Black women because of racism. What it simply means is that your brain functions in a different way. So, you’re neurodivergent and you also have certain tendencies that are considered outside of what the neurotypical way of things is. And a lot of times that can have you present in a manner that people misrepresent, which is the story of my f! life. Okay.”

Timestamp: 3:38



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