The legendary performer, Lady Gaga, with her wild personality, bizarre sense of fashion, and massive hits like Poker Face, didn’t just gently step onto the music industry’s threshold—she exploded the scene with a million different colors. Right from the start, Lady Gaga was more than just a pop star; she was a movement, unapologetically speaking out on political and social issues. But as her fame skyrocketed, so did the pressure. Beneath the glitz and wild outfits, Gaga was battling something far more painful than the world realized.

In 2018, fans were heartbroken when she had to cut her Joanne world tour short due to a chronic illness that causes widespread pain, fatigue, and sensitivity called fibromyalgia. Many people aren’t familiar with the condition, and even doctors still struggle to fully understand it. According to the Mayo Clinic, fibromyalgia affects how the brain processes pain, making everyday aches feel unbearable. Gaga described it in her 2020 interview with Oprah Winfrey as pain that’s controlled by the brain itself, saying, “It makes your body hurt through your brain.” She also noted there’s an immune system component to the disease, making it even more complex.


Fibromyalgia is not a sudden onset. It can develop over time due to extreme stress or trauma or sometimes after a single triggering event. For Gaga, it was both. She has been open about being a survivor of sexual assault and suffering from PTSD. However, a serious hip injury in 2013 seemed to push her body beyond its limits. She documented her struggles in the 2017 Netflix documentary Five Foot Two, which includes raw, painful moments of her crying in painful agony. The footage showed a side of Gaga that wasn’t hidden behind glitter and high-energy performances—just a woman in pain, trying to cope.