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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Rutland
Posts: 25,358
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Rutland
Posts: 25,358
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Davina McCall reveals her marriage crisis
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Davina McCall reveals her marriage crisis BIG Brother frontwoman Davina McCall has spoken for the first time about the bust-ups that threatened to break up her marriage.
The TV host has admitted she and her husband, former Pet Rescue presenter Matthew Robertson, had counselling to save their relationship.
Davina, who has previously denied any problems in her eight-year marriage, said: āI like to talk things through and Matthew, like most men, doesnāt. Heāll generally say, āThis is ridiculous,ā and walk out.
āIām left huffing and thinking, āI need to talk about this!ā Under duress heāll sit down and listen if he has to.ā
In the interview, to be published this week, she admitted that five years ago they went to see a therapist, ānot because we were splitting up, but because we were bickering a lotā.
BUST-UPS: With Matthew
Davina, 39, and Matthew, 40, who now have three children, had four therapy sessions.
āWe had this stumbling block and every time we started talking about it, weād have a row. So we needed a mediator to say, āHang on a minute, let Matthew talk. Right Davina, how do you feel?ā Afterwards we were like, āBlimey. Weāve achieved in 90 minutes what weāve been trying to talk about for six weeks,ā ā she said.
Davina stressed the therapy worked and now she couldnāt imagine life without Matthew.
She said: āIt was the best thing weāve done and Iāve recommended it to lots of friends. I canāt imagine ever being with anybody else now. Iām so ensconced with Matthew I donāt know what Iād do without him. Iād be lost.ā
Davina also confessed sheās still haunted by her drink and drugs demons and religiously attends addiction recovery meetings, even though sheās been clean for 16 years. In the frank interview with Janet Street-Porter in Marie Claire magazine, she said: āI go twice a week. Iāve been going to them for 15 years and no one has ever blown my anonymity. I think everybody who is trying to get themselves off drugs is entitled to a bit of privacy.
āIf their anonymity has been blown and they donāt feel safe at those meetings, they may well never go back and they might die.
āI had a really nice boy at my meetings who died last week. He had a relapse and died. Accidental overdose. Itās life and death. Itās not a game.ā
Davina was addicted to cocaine and heroin for six years from the age of 18. She remembered when she first took Ecstasy. āI was talking about the āsecond summer of loveā the other dayāround 1988 to 1990āand the madness that was the birth of Ecstasy.
āEveryone was gurning all night. I remember when I took my first-ever E and, for a moment, it filled that hole.
āI was like, āOh my God, this is it!ā And then it started waning and it never quite worked as well again.ā
Davina is still getting over the death of her estranged ex-alcoholic mother Florence Kock, who died at 62 this year.
In 2000 Davina banished Florence from her life for claiming in an interview that they went to a recovery meeting together because Davinaās drink and drugs demons had returned.
Davina recalled: āThatās how it all went wrong. Itās a powerful thing going to a meeting with your mum. Sheād sold a story saying I was on the verge of relapse before the wedding and she had to take me to a meeting, which was so far from the truth.
āI go to meetings every week, not because Iām on the verge of relapse but because it keeps me sane.ā
Davina was raised by her paternal grandparents after French-born Florence walked out on her husband Andrew and her daughter.
As a result, Davina was bullied at school: āThings like emptying my pencil case on the floor or teasing me about my granny not having money.
āA lot of my drive came from proving that theyād regret not being nice to me because I was going to end up āsomebodyā.
āAlso, my mum was an alcoholic and I think part of my wanting to be famous was trying to get acceptance from her.ā
But she wants to tell the wannabes who go on Big Brother, which she has fronted since it started in 2000, their lives wonāt be better once theyāve had their five minutes of fame.
She said: āThey canāt fill their spiritual void with celebrity.
āBut when you ask kids what they want to be when they grow up, they simply say, āFamousā. Itās like a career option. Depressing.ā
Read the full interview in Marie Claire, out on Thursday.
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source: News of the World
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