Celine Dion aims to help people with documentary I Am: Celine Dion

Celine Dion expressed her desire to raise awareness with her documentary I Am: Celine Dion. On Monday, at the NYC premiere of her documentary, Dion told The Hollywood Reporter that she wishes to help people with the documentary which documents her battle with Stiff-person syndrome.

The My Heart Will Go On hitmaker announced her diagnosis of the life-altering and rare neurological illness in December 2022, leading her to postpone and cancel tour dates.

Dion explained, “It’s such an honor and a privilege to be a mother, and I thought that it was my biggest responsibility for me to know what was going on with my health for my kids, and then the respect that I have for my fans and my family.”

“A lot of people in the world are suffering or alone are wondering, and I hope that this documentary gives an opportunity to people, first of all, to let them know that I am here as a mother as an artist, as a woman as an ambassador in a way of I want to help people,” she added.

She reflected, “a lot of people are looking into a bag of empty hope, and it’s pretty dark, and I felt like that for a long time until I realized that this is not living. That’s not even dying. This is just being still, and I didn’t want that anymore. I don’t think I deserved that. My kids especially did not deserve that.

Source: People

In other news – SNP leader John Swinney proposes a social tariff to cut energy bills

SNP leader John Swinney has proposed a “social tariff” that would see people on low incomes, the elderly and disabled pay less on energy bills. The first minister said the policy would give people “reassurance and peace of mind” about energy costs, which have soared in recent years.

 

The proposal would be funded by a mixture of general taxation and “top slicing” the profits of energy companies, with the party claiming the cost would be about £7.8bn for the current year. Read more

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