Maren Morrisis getting candid about herexperience with postpartum depression.

OnWednesday’s episode ofThe Howard Stern Show, the musician, 33, opened up about her experience with postpartum depression after delivering son Hayes Andrew, 3½. Discussing how she recently chopped off her long locks, the singer says that she “cut all the trauma out of her hair.”

After hostHoward Stern, 69, asks Morris about what trauma she’s referring to, the singer notes that she hasn’t seen Stern since she had her son in March 2020, but that she’s been very public abouther experience with depression.

“I think I was just starting to make very little sense to myself and to people around me,” Morris says when asked about her depression. “I felt useless in the way of I couldn’t work. I couldn’t tour. Everything got canceled.”

Morris tells Stern that she struggles with feeling like what she does for a living defines her identity.

Maren Morris in New York City on Dec. 13, 2023.Cindy Ord/Getty

Maren Morris visits SiriusXM’s ‘The Howard Stern Show’ at SiriusXM Studios on December 13, 2023 in New York City.

Cindy Ord/Getty

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“It’s a tough one when you’ve done something for so long to not think that that’s you, even though you love it and it makes you a living, that’s not who you are. So separating those things was helpful, getting on Zoloft was also really cool.”

Stern asks if getting on medication lifted her out of her depression, which Morris says did help.

“It’s like you’re living in the negative, the red, for a long time without realizing it. That your supply is so depleted of just serotonin, dopamine and a lot of that is just chemical.”

Morris explained, “Not just being a new parent and a new mother and dealing with postpartum depression for the first time, and reeling from that, and trying to like find the forest through the trees. But also just knowing my worth without someone clapping for me.”

The musician also discussed why she’s felt more inclined to speak up about her opinions and the things she believes in since becoming a mom.

“I think it’s gotten more galvanized since I’ve had my son, that I am really trying to make something beyond music,” she said. “And I want people to look around at my shows and realize, ‘OK, this is really loving, and safe, and comfortable.'”

source: people.com