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Ashley Judd talks about mental health after her mother’s death

Nashville, Tennessee (AP) – Ashley Judd encouraged people to seek help for their mental health and told about the grief process after the loss of her mother, country star Naomi Judd.

In an interview with Good Morning America on Thursday, the movie star said she wanted to address her mother’s struggle with depression. Judd said she was with her mother at her home in Tennessee the day Naomi died on April 30.

Judd also encouraged anyone with thoughts of harming themselves to contact the National Suicide Prevention Line at 1-800-273-8255.

Naomi Judd died at the age of 76, the day before she was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame with her duet partner and daughter Winona Judd. In a statement to the Associated Press, the family said it had lost it to “mental illness.”

“When we talk about mental illness, it’s very important to be clear and to tell the difference between our loved one and the illness,” Judd said in an interview. “She is lying. This is savage. And, you know, my mother, our mother, couldn’t stay until she was inducted into the Hall of Fame by her peers. I mean, this is the level of catastrophe of what was going on inside her, because the barrier between the relationship in which she was being held could not penetrate her heart. And the lie the disease told her was so convincing.

Ashley Judd said her mother shot herself with a gun, but asked for privacy for other details of the death. Naomi Judd wrote openly about her depression and anxiety in her memoir, The River of Time, and daughter Ashley said that’s why she appreciates every moment she spends with her mother.

“I really accepted the love my mother could give me because I knew she was fragile,” Judd said. So when I walked around the back of their house and walked in the kitchen door, she said, “Here’s my darling, here’s my baby.” And she lit up. I enjoyed those moments. “

Naomi and Winona Judd recorded 14 songs № 1 in a career that lasted almost three decades. The red-haired duo combines traditional Appalachian sounds of bluegrass with polished pop styles, marking hit after hit in the 1980s. Wynonna led the duo with her powerful vocals, while Naomi provided harmony and a stylish look on stage.

Judd released six studio albums and an EP between 1984 and 1991 and won nine Country Music Association Awards and seven from the Country Academy. They won a total of five Grammy Awards together for hits such as “Why Not Me” and “Give A Little Love”, and Naomi won a sixth Grammy for writing “Love Can Build a Bridge”.