Eminem found it therapeutic to rap about addiction battles

20 June 2022 Eminem has found it therapeutic to rap about his mental health and addiction battles. Eminem has found it therapeutic to rap about his mental health and addiction battles The 49-year-old made the admission speaking to Westside Boogie, 32, on Shade 45s Sway in the Morning radio show.

Eminem has found it therapeutic to rap about his mental health and addiction battles.

Eminem has found it therapeutic to rap about his mental health and addiction battles

Eminem has found it therapeutic to rap about his mental health and addiction battles

The 49-year-old made the admission speaking to Westside Boogie, 32, on Shade 45’s ‘Sway in the Morning’ radio show.

When it was mentioned he uses music to explore his “luggage”, Eminem replied: “Well, I think that’s, that’s one of the great things about rap music is that, you know, you could put so much of your life in it.

“I was just trying to figure out how to expand on that and I kinda got lost.”

Referring to 32-year-old Boogie’s new album, the rapper – born Marshall Bruce Mathers III – added: “It’s therapeutic and it’s, you know, that’s how it’s always been for me. But with this album, with this new Boogie album, the, the title, everything is f******, everything’s great.

“And it’s like, you know, watching him, watching him just keep getting better and better and better is incredible too. And he’s got so much of his life weaved in this album. You know what I’m saying? Like, I think that it’s like, it’s therapeutic.”

Dad-of-three Eminem has battled addictions to prescription drugs and was hours from dying when he was hospitalised in 2007 after a methadone overdose that doctors told him was the equivalent of ingesting four bags of heroin.

He has drawn parallels between himself and troubled Elvis on his new ‘The King and I’ track with CeeLo Green, 47, from the soundtrack for Baz Luhrmann’s new ‘Elvis’ film.

Co-produced by Dr Dre, 57, it sees Eminem rap: “I’m about to explain to you all the parallels between Elvis and me / It seems obvious: one, he’s pale as me/ Second, we both been hailed as kings/ He used to rock the Jailhouse, and I used to rock The Shelter.”

He adds: “I stole black music, yeah, true, perhaps used it / As a tool to combat school kids / Kids came back on some bathroom shit / Now I call a hater a bidet / ’Cause they mad that they can’t do s***.”

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