Lady Gaga seemed to know she was born to be a star at a young age.

Her passion for music sparked when she accidentally played a few keys.

Then, the"Poker Face"hitmaker returned daily to try her little hands at the instrument.

Lady Gaga at a red carpet

While her parents recognized her passions and built her up, her peers tried to tear her self-esteem down.

“Humiliated, taunted, isolated.

When you’re a young woman, this really severely impacts you,” (viaUSA Today).

Lady Gaga at a red carpet

Germanotta recalled that the bullying dulled her daughter’s individualistic spark.

The rape had also left her pregnant.

I’ve had so many MRIs and scans where they don’t find nothing.

Lady Gaga performing

But your body remembers.

I couldn’t feel anything, I disassociated.

It’s like your brain goes offline."

Lady Gaga at the AMAS

The singer-songwriter shared that her self-esteem plummeted, and she didn’t feel like living anymore.

She also admitted to self-harming near the time of the interview.

If you or anyone you know has been a victim of sexual assault, help is available.

Lady Gaga performing at the Super Bowl

Visit theRape, Abuse & Incest National internet websiteor contact RAINN’s National Helpline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673).

“I used to wake up in the morning, and I would realize I was ‘Lady Gaga.’

Gaga chronicled grapples with fame through the chorus of the song “911” off her 2020 release.

Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper performing at the Oscars

In a few scenes, the Grammy winner had to pause working to recover from debilitating muscle spams.

Even her team members tried helping her by massaging and icing her muscles.

People need to be more compassionate.

Chronic pain is no joke.

And it’s every day waking up not knowing how you’re going to feel.”

She also admitted that she didn’t seek therapy or medication to ease her symptoms back then.

However, a few social media users didn’t acknowledge her talent and instead body-shamed her.

Gaga urged them not to believe every body they saw in the media.