Usha Vance Says Therapy Didn’t Work for Husband JD Vance

Second Wife New Vance she opens up about her husband the Vice President JD Vancefaith and failed attempts at conventional mental health treatment.
“It’s not that the treatment doesn’t work for some people,” Usha, 40, told CBS’. Sunday Morning national reporter Robert Costa on a Sunday, June 14, episode of the news show, confirming that she once told her husband, “The treatment didn’t work for you, the church does.”
“JD didn’t have the right confidence in that [therapy] process,” Usha continued. “She didn’t feel at home in it, really exploring some of the feelings she had when she was trying to figure out if she wanted to be the person she wanted to be for the rest of her life.”
The vice president, 41, who converted to Catholicism in 2019, says part of his constant search for something that makes him feel “grounded” and “grounded” stems from his turbulent upbringing in Middletown, Ohio, with divorced parents who separated when he was young and a mother who struggled with substance abuse.
“I grew up in a somewhat non-traditional family,” JD explained in the same Sunday interview. “It’s a revolving door of people coming in, people going out. I was raised by my grandparents sometimes and my parents sometimes – my mom, my dad. So there was some movement and some turmoil in my youth. And I think I wanted something, too, that was a little more rooted and a little more stable.”

Second wife Usha Vance and US Vice President JD Vance
Getty ImagesDespite his faith bringing him a sense of self-understanding and direction, JD finds himself at odds with the leader of his Catholic faith, Pope Leo XIVover his relationship with the President Donald Trump‘s and his controversial administration priorities, including immigration and the war on Iran.
“When it comes to disagreements with the Vatican, we’re going to have disagreements from time to time,” the vice president said. Fox News back in April. “I think it’s a good thing, actually, that the Pope stands up for the things he cares about. But we’re always going to have disagreements on public policy issues.”
JD added at the time, “The Pope has been critical of our immigration policy, but ultimately the immigration policy of the United States is set by Donald Trump. The Pope will have disagreements on other issues. We certainly respect the Pope, we certainly have a good relationship with the Vatican.”
Despite the fact that the vice president said that Trump’s government is getting along with the leader of the Catholic Church, the president himself has come out and seems to have his intentions with Pope Francis.
“[The Pope] it talks about the ‘fear’ of the Trump administration, but it does not deal with the FEAR of the Catholic Church, and all other Christian organizations, that they had during the time of COVID when they arrested priests, ministers, and all other people, for holding Church services, even going outside and being ten to twenty meters apart,” said Trump on his social media, Truth Social, on April 12, continuing to call the Pope on foreign policy.





