Snoop Dogg's Daughter Cori Opens Up About Her Mental Health Suicide Encounter 'Appreciate Life'
top of page

Snoop Dogg's Daughter Cori Opens Up About Her Mental Health Suicide Encounter 'Appreciate Life'

Updated: Jul 4, 2023



Snoop Dogg's daughter Cori a young aspiring artist spoke out about her private struggles with mental health trauma over the weekend sharing to her followers on Instagram her long haul of mental struggles, the caption reading "My Story" with a (Brown heart emoji).


During a 36-minute video, Snoop's 21-year-old daughter & third child between wife Shaunte, Cori explains why she attempted suicide roughly more then one occasion.



Cori Says Her Depression Started in Her Early Childhood


“People just always talk about me, ‘You’re fat, you’re ugly, you’re dark, you’re this, you’re that.’ And I used to cry,” she says in the clip. “At 13, I was ready to die. Just so sad, crying to my mom like, ‘I’m so ugly, why did you have me? Why do I look like this? Why don’t I look like my brothers?’ It was just so many why why why’s.
"I grew up with two light-skinned brothers, and I was the only chocolate one. I was overweight. I got lupus at 6, so I was overweight from being on steroids, and that automatically messed with my health ... People looked at me like I was an alien."
"Sometimes, I just feel like I don't have a purpose here. I deal with so much health stuff, and I feel like people don't really feel me, like I'm being dramatic. I've been through so much s--t."



Being The Daughter of a Celebrity Doesn’t Automatically Make Life Easy.


“Just because you have money and just because you’re able to do certain things that other people can’t do, that doesn’t mean you don’t have a heart, a mind, a soul,” she continues. “I go through it just like everybody else. It don’t matter cause my dad is rich, I drive a Toyota Corolla and I am content.
“My dad bought me that car and I’m not gonna lie, at first, I was like, ‘Hm… a Toyota Corolla?’ You just learn to appreciate stuff because, at the end of the day, this stuff don’t matter.”




 
 

SUBSCRIBE TO JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER LIST


“People just always talk about me, ‘You’re fat, you’re ugly, you’re dark, you’re this, you’re that.’ And I used to cry,” she says in the clip. “At 13, I was ready to die. Just so sad, crying to my mom like, ‘I’m so ugly, why did you have me? Why do I look like this? Why don’t I look like my brothers?’ It was just so many why why why’s.”

bottom of page