"Depression never discriminates," the
45-year-old actor wrote to his 12.7 million Twitter followers.
"Took me a long time to realize it but the key is to not be
afraid to open up. Especially us dudes have a tendency to keep
it in. You're not alone."
Johnson, who is currently promoting the Warner Bros action film
"Rampage," told British newspaper Express on Sunday he faced his
own demons after witnessing his mother's suicide attempt as a
teenager.
"I reached a point where I didn't want to do a thing or go
anywhere," the "Fast & Furious" film star said. "I was crying
constantly."
Johnson recounted that he was 15 when he watched his mother,
Ata, walked into oncoming traffic on Interstate 65 in Nashville
shortly after they were evicted from their apartment.
He said he was able to pull her from the highway but then sunk
into several years of depression that were made more difficult
by injuries that halted his would-be football career and a
breakup with a girlfriend.
"We both healed," Johnson said of himself and his mother, "but
we've always got to do our best to pay attention when other
people are in pain."
Johnson rose to prominence as a professional wrestler in the
1990s as "The Rock" and has considered entering politics. Forbes
has estimated he was Hollywood's second highest paid actor with
$65 million in 2017 earnings.
(Reporting by Eric Kelsey; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)
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