Pink reveals she feared she was going to die from coronavirus and rewrote her will

PINK has revealed she feared she was going to die from coronavirus and rewrote her will.

The pop star – who is said to be worth $200million – and her four-year-old son Jameson tested positive for COVID-19 in April 2020.

Her husband Carey Hart and daughter Willow Sage were spared. 

"It was really, really bad, and I rewrote my will. I thought it was over for us," Pink, 41, revealed.

The star added to Mark Wright on Heart Radio: "I called my best friend and I said, 'I just need you to tell Willow how much I love her.

She added: "It was really really scary and really bad."

The singer then ran revealed a list of questions that ran through her mind and the things she wanted her kids to know before she died.

"As a parent, you think, 'What am I leaving for my kid? What am I teaching them? Are they going to make it in this world?'

"And what do I need to tell them if this is the last time I get to tell them anything?'"

Pink announced she was recovering after testing positive for coronavirus last year.

The American star told fans she had been struck down with Covid-19 and begged them to "stay at home".

The kind-hearted Grammy-Award winner, who battled the virus for two weeks,  added that she would also be donating a million dollars (£815,000) to emergency funds.

Pink said she and her three-year-old son Jameson had shown symptoms of Covid-19 and that she tested positive.

Posting on Twitter, she said they had since been re-tested and were "thankfully negative".

The singer, who's real name is Alecia Beth Moore, said: "It is an absolute travesty and failure of our government to not make testing more widely accessible."

The star called the illness "serious and real".

She added: "People need to know that the illness affects the young and old, healthy and unhealthy, rich and poor, and we must make testing free and more widely accessible to protect our children, our families, our friends and our communities."


Pink also said she would be donating 500,000 dollars (£407,000) to both the Temple University Hospital Emergency Fund in Philadelphia and the City of Los Angeles Mayor's Emergency Covid-19 crisis fund.

She said: "Thank you to all of our healthcare professionals and everyone in the world who are working so hard to protect our loved ones.

"These next two weeks are crucial: please stay home. Please. Stay. Home."

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