I’m not well. I don’t know if this is of any use but I want to say it. I am sad and tired (…) Sometimes I don’t even want to be there”, the singer assured this Saturday Alejandro Sanz on Twitter, a message that has generated thousands of support responses and thanks for making mental health problems visible.

“I’m working to make it go away… I’ll get to the stage and something inside will tell me what to do. But sometimes I don’t even want to be there. Literally. Just to be honest. Not to get into the useless noise. I know there are people who It feels like that. If it works for you, I feel the same way,” he explains.

In the text, which already has more than 100,000 “likes” and almost 10,000 retweetsthe interpreter says that he wants to share this feeling “in case someone else believes that there must always be a sea breeze or a firework on a summer night.”

Among the comments of encouragement and solidarity, he received that of James Rhodes pianistwho on more than one occasion has made his depressions public, and who transmits his understanding: “How I understand you, dear. There are always clouds. They pass, often very slowly, but they do. They are temporary,” he tells him.

“This message does more for mental health than ten institutional campaigns. You have to normalize not feeling well, being sad… And asking for help when the signs are clear,” comments the writer of books for young people Javier Padilla.

The singer resumed the presentation tour of “Sanz en vivo” on April 14 in Bogotá, and sang in other Latin American cities such as Lima (April 20), Guayaquil (April 22), Santiago de Chile (April 26 and 27), April) or Buenos Aires (May 11, 12 and 14), to name a few.

He will return to Spain from June 3, when he will perform in Pamplona and will offer concerts in places such as Valencia (June 15), Barcelona (June 17) or Madrid (June 29 and 30). Then she will return to America and will sing in Miami (September 23), New York (September 30) or Los Angeles (October 14). Last March he released the song “Correcaminos” with Danny Ocean, as part of an EP that also includes the songs “Cuándo” and “Volé”, in which he engages in a dialogue with the child who ceased to be.