Billy Joel reflects on suicide attempts in new documentary

Billy Joel The candid details of some of his tough times in his youth are shared in the new documentary.
New documentary, Billy Joel: That way, According to reports people On Thursday, June 5th.
According to the exit, Joel, 76, shares details about how he “froze” him Elizabeth Webber, Wife at that time Jon Smott, In his 20s. Small was Joel’s best friend and band member at the time, and Joel moved in with the couple and their son.
Weber appears in the documentary and points out that she and Joel spend a lot of time together before a small stumbling. Joel confessed: “I fell in love with your wife.” (Weber and Joel later rekindled their romance and got married from 1973 to 1982.)
“I feel very, very introverted by it,” Joel said in the documentary. “I just fell in love with a woman and I was hit in the nose with a well-deserved nose.” Jon was very upset. I’m very upset. ”
This incident splits Joel and Small’s band, and they start spinning in a ragged friendship.
“I don’t have a place to live. I’m sleeping in the laundry and I’m very upset, I think it’s almost mentally ill.” “So I thought, ‘That’s it. I don’t want to live anymore.’ I’m just in pain, it’s like why hanging out, tomorrow will be as bad as today, so I just thought I’m going to end it all.”

Elizabeth Webber.
(Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival)In the documentary Joel’s sister Judy Molinari, Joel’s first suicide attempt details the emotional period, and she thinks she’ll lose him.
“He was in a coma for a few days and a few days,” she said in the documentary. “I went to the hospital to see him, and he was lying there white.
In fact, it was small in his second attempt, he took Joel to the hospital for help.
Joel shared: “Even if our friendship is breaking out, Jon saved my life.” (Even though, little forgives Joel and Weber’s romance.)
After trying, Joel checked out an “observation ward” and this experience helped him get back on the right path.
Joel explained, “I left the observational disease and I thought to myself that you can use all these emotions to direct these things into the music.”
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