Pink Opens Up About ‘Trustfall’ and Trauma

On Tuesday, February 21st, Pink visited The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, in order to dive into her music, family, and more. While speaking about her latest LP and its title, she stated, “I feel like all of us are walking around sort of with this low level of trauma in our bodies and it takes a lot of trust to be human being these days, to get out of bed in the morning, go to work, and drop your kids off at school, and go to public places and participate in elections and have a vagina. It just takes a lot of trust.”

Pink continued to say how, “I know a lot of teenagers, also, I think a lot of people have anxiety, a lot of kids have anxiety, and a lot of us feel like we’re falling backwards. And we don’t know where the ground is now,” she says. “That’s a trustfall…you have to ask yourself, what’s worth falling for and who’s supposed to catch you, can you catch yourself.”

Pink left no stone uncovered in her time with Stephen Colbert. She also talked about her reunion with Chris Stapleton for “Just Say I’m Sorry” (“it sounds dumb, but I just called him up. I am a fan”). While also explaining how she even found herself in the music business to begin with.

It all started in the 1990s, when Moore signed at 16 years old to be a part of an “absolutely terrible” group that was eventually shelved. However, she signed a brand new contract at 17, and was eventually able to release her own music to the world at the age of 20.

While appearing on Stephen Colbert, Pink also performed “When I Get There,” off of Trustfall, that dropped on Friday via RCA.

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