Megan Thee Stallion Launches Website That Offers Mental Health Resources to Fans

“Bad Bitches have bad days too,” Megan Thee Stallion raps on “Anxiety,” a track from her new album. The line is now the title of a mental health site.

Megan Thee Stallion performs at Glastonbury Festival 2022
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Photo by Denise Truscello/Getty Images for iHeartRadio

Megan Thee Stallion performs at Glastonbury Festival 2022

“Bad Bitches have bad days too,” Megan Thee Stallion raps on “Anxiety,” a track off her latest album Traumazine. As of this weekend, the line has inspired a new website from the Houston rapper.

Megan recently launched Bad Girls Have Bad Days Too to provide her fans with mental health resources. The site doubles as a collection of links for free therapy, crisis hotlines, and groups working specifically with the Black community, including therapy for Black women and Black men and a LGBTQ Psychotherapist of Color Directory.

A Twitter user shared the news on Sunday, posting a link to the site alongside a message Megan sent to her fans that read, “Hotties! You know how much mental wellness means to me, so I created a hub with resources that can help when you might need a hand.”

"Hotties! You know how much mental wellness means to me, so I created a hub with resources that can help when you might need a hand. Head to https://t.co/dUAnYKW0mb now and check it out. Love y'all so much 🖤" - @theestallion pic.twitter.com/LMta2wIIRK

— Shea Jordan Smith (@shea_jordan) September 25, 2022

Back in August, Megan dropped her second studio album Traumazine. The project marks her first full-length effort since last year’s Something for Thee Hotties, while serving as the official follow-up to Megan’s 2020 debut album Good News.

“Everybody has gone through their own trauma in their own way, and to me, Traumazine is me facing the things that I’ve been running from about myself. … It’s comforting to know that other people are going through the same thing that you might be feeling,” Megan told The Cut in August. “When something happens to people, they feel like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is only me. This is not normal, or I’m probably the only person in the world that feels like this.’ But to hear somebody else talking about something that you’re probably feeling, it’s more comforting and more familiar. That’s why people resonate with hearing other people’s stories.”

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