Showbiz

Quratulain Balouch on trauma, privacy, treating life as a second chance

Singer speaks candidly on Tauseeq Haider’s podcast about bear attack, car accident, her creative process

Singer Quratulain Balouch opened up in a candid and reflective conversation on Tauseeq Haider’s podcast, discussing her life, past experiences, and music career. Known widely as QB, the singer spoke with honesty about how surviving traumatic experiences shaped her outlook, saying she now feels she has been given a second chance at life.

The conversation began with Balouch discussing her childhood ambitions and early connection with music. She shared that singing had always been a part of her life and something she enjoyed from a young age. However, Balouch explained that while music came naturally to her, turning it into a career was never part of a carefully planned path.

Instead, she said, success arrived gradually as opportunities emerged and audiences connected with her voice.

The interview then shifted to Balouch’s creative process. She described the depth of research she undertakes before committing to any project, saying she approaches her work seriously and spends time understanding the emotional layers, history, and meaning behind a composition before performing it.

According to the singer, she cannot simply record a song for the sake of it. If she does not feel a genuine emotional connection with the lyrics or melody, she explained, she prefers to step away rather than deliver something insincere.

Moving to discuss certain traumatic experiences that altered her outlook on life, Balouch revisited a bear attack she survived on September 5 while camping in Gilgit-Baltistan. 

She recalled that the animal was likely drawn to the scented products in her backpack, including shampoo and conditioner, which had not been properly sealed or stored away. The bag had been placed close to her head inside the tent, which she believes is why the bear targeted that area.

The singer spoke calmly about the frightening ordeal, framing it as a life-altering moment rather than something that left her defeated.

Balouch also referenced a car accident she was in, saying that surviving such incidents has made her stronger, more resilient and less fearful. Describing it as a “bonus life”, the singer also said such experiences have changed the way she thinks about risk, courage and gratitude.

Towards the end of the interview, Balouch addressed the pressure on public figures to constantly share their lives online, questioning why celebrities must expose every personal detail in order to appear genuine.

Balouch argued that authenticity does not require documenting one’s entire existence on social media. Instead, she stressed the value of privacy and the importance of protecting personal spaces from public consumption.

The conversation offered a rare glimpse into the artist behind the music; thoughtful, self-aware and shaped by experiences that have transformed the way she views fame, creativity and life itself.

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