Retour

Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Everything Changed with Rosie Fawehimi

Plongez dans la liste complète des épisodes de Everything Changed with Rosie Fawehimi. Chaque épisode est catalogué accompagné de descriptions détaillées, ce qui facilite la recherche et l'exploration de sujets spécifiques. Suivez tous les épisodes de votre podcast préféré et ne manquez aucun contenu pertinent.

Rows per page:

1–15 of 15

TitreDateDurée
Brain Surgery to 126 Miles: Alice Greaves on Fight Mode30 Sep 202500:29:39

Thanks to Our Sponsor:This episode is brought to you by Never Fully Dressed — a brand that champions confidence, individuality, and authenticity. We’re grateful for their support in helping us share stories like Alice’s.


At 24, Alice Greaves was told she was “too young for breast cancer.” Within weeks she was diagnosed — and everything changed.


In this first episode of Everything Changed, Alice shares her journey from that devastating diagnosis to life-saving brain surgery, and how she found the resilience to cycle 126 miles just eight weeks after surgery. Along the way, she’s raised over £350,000 for charity and become a powerful advocate for knowing your body, pushing for answers, and choosing what she calls “fight mode.”


In this episode:


  • Why Alice refused to accept a GP dismissal

  • The moment she heard “if anyone can, Alice can”

  • Surviving brain surgery and choosing resilience

  • How she’s raised over £350,000 for cancer charities

  • The biggest life lesson she wants others to hear



Follow Everything Changed for more stories of resilience, loss, and reinvention.

He lost three babies. Then came the heartbeat that changed everything. | Everything Changed Ep 214 Oct 202500:30:26

He was ready to be a dad for years — but nothing prepared him for what came next.


TV presenter James Green opens up to Rosie Fawehimi about the hidden grief of miscarriage, the toll repeated loss takes on couples, and the long road through IVF that finally brought him and his partner Nicola their miracle daughter.


They talk about:


  • Losing three pregnancies during lockdown

  • The trauma of being shut out of hospitals during Covid

  • Mental health and the dark thoughts few men admit

  • The hilariously awkward reality of IVF (yes, the Pornhub chair)

  • The moment they finally saw a heartbeat

  • How Nicola’s later breast cancer diagnosis during pregnancy changed everything again



This is one of the rawest and most hopeful conversations we’ve had — about love, resilience, and learning to find joy again after loss.


🎙 Everything Changed — real stories of life before and after everything changed.


👉 Watch in full on YouTube or listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

We Went to Nigeria — and Everything Changed | Everything Changed Episode 412 Nov 202500:31:47

🎧 EVERYTHING CHANGED — Episode 4: Gigi’s Story

Courtesy of ✨ RevitaLash Cosmetics ✨ www.revitalash.co.uk

💙 Enjoy 20% off with code ROSIE20


–––


🙏 Special thanks to our guest, Gigi (Grace)

Her award-winning podcast Journeys with Grace can be found wherever you get your podcasts or at http://jwgstory.com


–––


🎤 In this episode:

Singer-songwriter and British Podcast Award finalist Gigi opens up about the extraordinary twists in her life — from being sent from South London to Nigeria as a child, to facing years of pain from Crohn’s disease, to hearing the words no one ever expects: “We think it’s cancer.”


💫 This is a story of shock, resilience and self-belief — of learning to take control when everything feels lost. Gigi shares how she reversed her illness, rebuilt her life, and found healing through her music and her voice.


–––


🕰️ What we talk about:

00:00 — Growing up between cultures in Brixton and Nigeria

04:00 — Being “sent away” and what that taught her about identity

07:00 — The first taste of fame on Pop Idol

08:40 — Living with Crohn’s and learning to self-heal

14:00 — “I had no symptoms — and then they told me it was cancer.”

20:00 — Advocating for yourself when doctors rush your decisions

24:00 — What it means to be in the driver’s seat of your healing

27:00 — The power of discipline, mindset and self-trust

29:00 — Gigi on what really makes her happy today


–––


💬 Connect with Gigi:

Instagram: @jwgstory

Podcast: Journeys with Grace


🌿 Follow Rosie:

Instagram: @rosiefawehimi

Podcast updates: @everythingchangedpod


–––


🎙️ About Everything Changed

Real stories. Raw conversations. Life-changing moments.

New episodes every other Wednesday on Spotify, YouTube & Apple Podcasts.

Losing My Best Friend: Carly Moosah on Grief, Resilience and Starting Over29 Oct 202500:39:19

Thanks to Our Sponsor:

This episode is supported by Never Fully Dressed, a brand that champions confidence, individuality, and authenticity.


At just 29, Carly Moosah’s life was turned upside down when she lost her best friend to cancer. What followed was grief, shock, and a long road to finding her feet again.


In this episode of Everything Changed, Carly shares the raw reality of navigating loss, her outrage at the gaps in testing and diagnosis, and how she’s managed to rebuild life with clarity, resilience, and purpose.


In this episode you’ll learn:


  • ​The impact of losing a best friend so young
  • ​How Carly channelled grief into advocacy and awareness
  • ​Why she speaks out about testing and early diagnosis
  • ​The mindset shifts that helped her start over


Follow Everything Changed for more powerful stories of resilience, loss, and reinvention.

Losing Alfie: Rachel Jones on the Day Everything Changed26 Nov 202500:25:43

Supported by RevitaLash Cosmetics. Use code ROSIE20 for 20 percent off on their official site.


When Rachel Jones took her son Alfie to a routine weigh-in, she never imagined it would lead to a life-altering diagnosis. What followed was years of treatment, surgeries, hope, fear and unimaginable strength. And then, in a single night, everything changed again.


In this extraordinary conversation, Rachel shares:

• The moment doctors gave Alfie a 5 percent chance of survival

• The rushed wedding and christening that happened within 48 hours

• Years of chemo, brain surgeries and hospital life

• The sudden sepsis infection that took Alfie’s life within hours

• Navigating grief while raising two other children

• How she is rebuilding purpose through the Alfie Foundation


This is one of the most powerful and honest stories we have ever shared. A profound conversation about love, loss, resilience and what it means to keep going when your world collapses.

I lost my mobility, my voice, and my identity… and somehow found a new life10 Dec 202500:40:00

Sponsored by RevitaLash Cosmetics

Use code ROSIE20 for 20 percent off at checkout.


Kristen’s life changed almost overnight. In early 2022, she suddenly developed extreme anxiety, tremors, and escalating neurological symptoms that no one could explain. Within months, she lost her voice, her confidence, and eventually her mobility — going from walking for half an hour to barely lasting five minutes. Her husband carried her up and down the stairs. She stopped going out. She hid from friends and family because she couldn’t face the questions. 


This episode follows Kristen’s raw, honest journey through misdiagnosis, fear, and the emotional shock of becoming a full-time wheelchair user at 26. It also traces the unexpected moment everything shifted — a chance encounter at Paddington Station with another wheelchair user — and how that single conversation opened the door to wheelchair basketball, then padel, and ultimately a new identity. Today, Kristen is Britain’s number-one female wheelchair padel player. 


Her story is about identity, loss, resilience, and rebuilding a life that looks nothing like the one she had before — but one she is proud of.






00:00 Losing mobility, losing her voice — everything collapses

00:23 Meet Kristen: nurse and Britain’s No.1 wheelchair padel player

01:31 The sudden anxiety and confusion in 2022

03:37 Misdiagnosis, dismissal, and declining mobility

06:13 Losing her voice — and losing her identity

11:37 The Bath trip: realising she can no longer walk

17:27 Isolation, hiding from the world, husband becoming a carer

23:53 Paddington Station: the moment everything changed

27:58 From wheelchair basketball to becoming No.1 in padel

31:29 The pink hair: reclaiming identity and confidence

One in 80 Million: What Happens When Both Parents Carry the Same Rare Gene?07 Jan 202600:43:33

✨ This episode is sponsored by RevitaLash Cosmetics.

Rosie has partnered with RevitaLash, the original lash conditioning brand, to bring you a special offer.

Use code ROSIE20 for 20% off your order at revitalash.co.uk.

Thank you to RevitaLash for supporting Everything Changed.



When Nicola Whitbread-Hastings became a mother, she expected the “typical” experience. Instead, she was thrust into a world of medical terminology, 24/7 care, and a diagnosis so rare there are only a few hundred cases worldwide.


In this episode of Everything Changed, Nicola joins us to share the raw, unfiltered reality of raising her son, Rudy, who lives with MCAHS1, a genetic condition that causes epilepsy, visual impairment, and profound physical disability.


In this episode we discuss:


* The COVID diagnosis

Navigating the terrifying first weeks of lockdown while realising something was wrong.


* Finding out both she and her husband carried the same rare gene.


* The survival instinct

Why she had to emotionally detach from her second pregnancy to survive the weight of a potential second diagnosis.


* Milestones vs inchstones

The beautiful, small victories that mean everything.


This is a story about resilience, the fight of a special-needs parent, and how the arrival of her second son, Dexter, helped their family rediscover laughter in the chaos.



Resources mentioned in this episode:


Haven House Children’s Hospice: https://www.havenhouse.org.uk/

Follow Rudy’s journey on Instagram: @rudysw0rld



Timestamps


00:00 – Highlights: The moment everything changed

02:15 – The first signs and the COVID lockdown

08:50 – Getting the MCAHS1 diagnosis

16:10 – The heartbreaking reality of the second pregnancy

21:45 – The IVF journey and travelling to Barcelona

25:30 – Dexter: finding joy in “typical” motherhood

34:00 – Advice for parents facing a new diagnosis

I had my baby, then needed urgent mental health care24 Dec 202500:36:12

✨ Sponsored by RevitaLash Cosmetics ✨


This episode is proudly sponsored by RevitaLash Cosmetics 💗

Founded by Dr Michael Brinkenhoff to help his wife feel more beautiful during her battle with breast cancer, RevitaLash is best known for its clinically tested RevitaLash Advanced Eyelash Serum.


A portion of every purchase supports global breast cancer research, including studies at the Francis Crick Institute in London.


Thank you to RevitaLash for supporting Everything Changed.



🎙️ Everything Changed | Carly Chan’s story


In this episode, Rosie speaks to Carly Chan, who shares the reality of pregnancy sickness that became life-threatening and why giving birth was not the end of her struggle.


Just weeks into pregnancy, Carly developed hyperemesis gravidarum (HG), a severe condition that left her bedridden, dehydrated, and unable to function. What’s often dismissed as “bad morning sickness” became months of relentless nausea, isolation, and a devastating impact on her mental health.


Carly speaks honestly about:

* Losing her sense of identity

* Feeling trapped in her own body

* Experiencing suicidal thoughts, not because she didn’t want her baby, but because she desperately wanted the sickness to stop


Although the physical symptoms ended as soon as her son was born, Carly explains how she struggled to bond with him, feeling intense fear, anxiety, and shame in the early days of motherhood.


With support from friends, her husband, and specialist perinatal mental health services, Carly made the terrifying but life-changing decision to enter a Mother and Baby Unit, where she received intensive support for severe postnatal anxiety and depression.


This is a powerful, honest conversation about pregnancy, postnatal mental health, and why asking for help can be lifesaving.


If this episode resonates with you, you are not alone.



⏱️ Timestamps


00:00 “I felt suicidal during pregnancy”

00:36 Meeting Carly and the start of her story

01:58 When pregnancy sickness suddenly took over

04:19 Hospital visits, dehydration and being dismissed

06:12 Diagnosed with hyperemesis gravidarum (HG)

09:49 Giving birth and expecting everything to be okay

10:15 Struggling to bond with her newborn

13:24 Reaching breaking point and suicidal thoughts

15:32 Friends stepping in when Carly couldn’t cope

18:48 The moment she realised she needed more help

19:48 Being told she needed a Mother and Baby Unit

21:57 The first night alone with her baby

24:14 Treatment, exposure therapy and recovery

29:28 How this changed her decision to have more children

32:00 Carly’s message to anyone struggling

33:07 Finding strength, endurance and pride



🧡 Support and resources


If you are struggling during pregnancy or after birth, these organisations can help:


🤍 Pregnancy Sickness Support

https://pregnancysicknesssupport.org.uk

Support, information, and peer mentoring for people experiencing hyperemesis gravidarum and severe pregnancy sickness.


💛 PANDAS Foundation

https://pandasfoundation.org.uk

Support for parents and families affected by perinatal mental illness, including postnatal depression and anxiety.

She lost both her sons. Here is what kept her going.25 Mar 202600:33:14

She lost two sons in one year. This is how she survived.

Carly Smith is a mother of five. In the last two years she has lost two sons. Morgan, who she loved as her own from the moment she met him. And Barnie, her beautiful non-verbal autistic boy, whose heart now beats inside a fifteen year old girl somewhere in the UK.

In this episode Carly talks about the love that built her family, the grief that nearly broke it, and the quiet signs that have kept her going.

Have tissues close by.

⚠️ This episode contains discussions of child loss, grief, and suicidal thoughts. Please take care of yourself while listening.

💛 This episode is sponsored by RevitaLash Cosmetics

RevitaLash was created by ophthalmologist Dr Michael Brinkenhoff for his wife Gayle during her breast cancer journey, because feeling confident and beautiful matters, especially when life is hard. Now trusted in over 70 countries and having donated more than $13 million to breast cancer initiatives, RevitaLash is a brand built on strength, love, and giving back.

Visit revitalash.com to find out more.

📌 Chapters

0:00 Cold open

0:24 A word from our sponsor

1:03 Meet Carly

1:55 Barnie's diagnosis

3:33 The first seizure

4:18 The IVF journey

12:26 Meet Morgan

13:11 The phone call

21:29 The anniversary

24:58 Great Ormond Street

26:09 The decision

27:06 The sign

29:18 "I need you too"

31:10 Finding a reason to keep going

📲 Follow Carly:instagram.com/carlylousmith83

📲 Follow Everything Changed:instagram.com/everythingchangedpodcast

🎧 Listen on Spotify:https://open.spotify.com/show/2XH1S48Q9rubN7TaywfxVe?si=cd71458fbb06449b


She went on holiday after beating breast cancer. She nearly didn't come home08 Apr 202600:43:55

Kreena Dhiman. Diagnosed with breast cancer at 33. Told she may never have children. Here she is today with four.In this episode Kreena talks about fighting her oncologist for the right to freeze her embryos before chemotherapy, navigating the NHS postcode lottery for IVF funding while going through treatment, and the heart failure diagnosis on holiday that nearly killed her three years after her cancer treatment ended.And then, through surrogacy and egg donation, how she built a family of four anyway.This is one of the most determined and quietly extraordinary women we have ever spoken to.⚠️ This episode contains discussions of serious illness, infertility, and near death.💛 This episode is sponsored by RevitaLash CosmeticsRevitaLash was created by ophthalmologist Dr Michael Brinkenhoff for his wife Gayle during her breast cancer journey, because feeling confident and beautiful matters, especially when life is hard. Now trusted in over 70 countries and having donated more than $13 million to breast cancer initiatives, RevitaLash is a brand built on strength, love, and giving back.Visit revitalash.co.uk to find out more.📌 Chapters0:00 Open0:24 A word from our sponsor1:33 Meet Kreena2:02 The fertility conversation nobody had with her3:11 Fighting for the right to freeze her embryos5:48 The NHS funding battle6:50 Waiting to try8:15 Discovering surrogacy9:09 The cultural shame nobody talks about11:28 Heart failure on holiday14:27 Back to surrogacy16:51 Finding her first surrogate19:00 The embryo clinic error23:14 The pregnancy test video24:57 Her daughter is born25:19 No embryos left26:40 Egg donation in South Africa29:09 Meeting her donor in Cyprus30:08 Finding Laura31:43 Transferring to Laura32:28 Triplets36:01 Born ten weeks early in lockdown37:58 "I wouldn't have them without breast cancer"41:09 Advice for women facing infertility42:55 The Intended Parent podcast📲 Follow Kreena:instagram.com/kreenadhiman/📲 Follow Everything Changed:instagram.com/everythingchangedpodcast🎧 Listen on Spotify:https://open.spotify.com/show/2XH1S48Q9rubN7TaywfxVe?si=cd71458fbb06449b

Her seven-year-old son said "I love you, mummy" and went back to playing. An hour later, he was gone20 May 202600:37:50

Trigger warning:This episode contains descriptions of the sudden death of a child and the grief that follows. Please take care of yourself.

Guest description:Danielle Jones's son Harvey was seven years old when he died on an ordinary Tuesday evening in September 2018. He was walking along a wall at their local pub when he came into contact with a live electrical casing -- the result of 32 safety defects that experts later described as the worst they had encountered in over 40 years. The pub owner was convicted of gross negligence manslaughter. Danielle has spent the years since fighting for mandatory electrical safety inspections in public places, raising two more children, and training as a sound healer and Reiki practitioner. Harvey's campaign has gathered over 55,000 signatures. This is her story.

Sponsor message:This episode is brought to you by RevitaLash Cosmetics. RevitaLash was founded by a physician who created a lash serum for his wife during her breast cancer treatment -- because he wanted her to feel like herself again. Find them at revitalash.co.uk. ✨


00:00 Intro01:54 Who was Harvey?02:46 The Three Musketeers -- life before03:42 The day everything changed04:35 The phone call -- Harvey has had an accident06:41 Harvey is taken to hospital08:24 The time was 18:3310:01 The last thing they said to each other10:37 What actually happened?12:20 The police knock at the door13:06 Harvey had been electrocuted13:48 Completely avoidable -- 32 defects, ten of them fatal15:25 How did it feel knowing someone was to blame?16:23 The trial -- two years of waiting17:06 The pub is still open18:33 How are you today?19:08 Turning pain into purpose19:34 Jackson, Ollie, and the angel brother21:05 Fighting for change -- 55,000 signatures21:35 The MOT analogy -- why regulation has to change26:14 A different path -- sound healing and Reiki29:34 Grieving differently as a couple32:18 Advice for anyone going through unimaginable loss34:22 He will be released from prison next year36:03 I am living the life sentence36:13 How would you like Harvey to be remembered?

Everything Changed on Instagram: instagram.com/everythingchangedpodcast

Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2XH1S48Q9rubN7TaywfxVe?si=cd71458fbb06449b

By 30, her world had fallen apart. Then she went to the Amazon06 May 202600:41:33

Trigger warning:This episode contains descriptions of childhood abuse and neglect, a suicide attempt, suicidal ideation, and non-consensual intimate image sharing. Please take care of yourself.


Sponsor message:This episode is brought to you by RevitaLash Cosmetics. RevitaLash was founded by a physician who created a lash serum for his wife during her breast cancer treatment -- because he wanted her to feel like herself again. Find them at revitalash.com. ✨


Guest description:Lacey Banghard grew up in a home without stability or love, moved out at 15, and tried to take her own life at 13. She went on to become one of Britain's most recognised Page 3 models and appeared on Celebrity Big Brother. In 2017, her iCloud was hacked and intimate images were shared publicly without her consent -- an experience that brought her to the edge again. What followed was a years-long journey through motherhood, her daughter's severe eczema, ayahuasca in the Amazon, and a spiritual awakening that she is still navigating today. Lacey is writing a book and building a platform called Remembering I Am Her.


Chapters:

00:00 Cold open00:53 Rosie's intro01:17 Growing up without love02:14 Moving out at 1505:28 At 13, she tried to take her own life06:11 How Page 3 found her07:48 Did she feel beautiful growing up?09:37 How Page 3 shaped her11:12 Celebrity Big Brother12:28 Acid threats -- a year in hiding13:00 The belief she was a bad person14:54 Having her daughter16:12 Her daughter -- her biggest mirror17:39 Solo mum, crying at 3am19:32 Her daughter's severe eczema21:29 Depression and anxiety attacks22:12 Her iCloud was hacked -- and her privacy destroyed24:22 Surrendering to what she couldn't control26:49 Fell pregnant two months later27:46 The calling to go to the Amazon29:36 What ayahuasca actually did32:46 The science -- it made her brain like Play-Doh33:31 Coming home to a life falling apart35:06 Who is Lacey today -- Remembering I Am Her36:12 What would you say to your 15-year-old self?37:35 The therapy revelation39:15 Grateful for the people God put in her path40:02 One thing she wants every listener to know

Everything Changed on Instagram: instagram.com/everythingchangedpodcastListen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2XH1S48Q9rubN7TaywfxVe?si=cd71458fbb06449b


She went to Tanzania at 18 to help children. She ended up raising fifteen of them.22 Apr 202600:26:33

Letty McMaster was 18 years old when she travelled to Tanzania to volunteer at an orphanage. What she found there stopped her in her tracks. The children were being kept in deliberate poverty -- a cycle of neglect designed to attract donations from Western volunteers, with the staff taking the money for themselves. Letty stayed. She learned Swahili. She exposed the abuse. When the local council shut the orphanage down, she was registered as the legal guardian of nine children who had nowhere to go. She was 22 years old.

Over the next ten years, Letty raised fifteen children in a family home she set up and ran herself in Tanzania. She founded Street Children Iringa, which now supports three houses -- a family home, a safe house welcoming over 100 street children a year, and a newly opened home for young mothers living on the streets. The children she raised have gone on to university, professional boxing, and international football. One of them achieved the best A-level results in the country and is now studying civil engineering at the University of Cape Town.

This is one of the most remarkable stories we have heard on Everything Changed.

To support Street Children Iringa visit www.streetchildreniringa.org or find them on Instagram at @streetchildreniringa.

This episode is brought to you by RevitaLash Cosmetics. RevitaLash was founded by a physician who created a lash serum for his wife during her breast cancer treatment -- because he wanted her to feel like herself again. Find them at revitalash.co.uk. ✨

00:00 Cold open00:59 Rosie's intro01:26 Life at 18 -- A-levels, saving up, the plan to volunteer01:42 Arriving at the orphanage -- and what Letty found01:52 The voluntourism business -- how the cycle of abuse worked03:34 How long did she stay?04:02 Learning Swahili -- and why it changed everything05:11 Were the children really orphans?05:54 Becoming legal guardian to nine children at 2207:38 Opening the home09:22 The challenges of raising fifteen teenagers10:23 Founding Street Children Iringa10:57 The three houses12:41 Why are there so many street children in Tanzania?13:30 The girl who ran away with her newborn at 1114:32 Life now -- splitting time between London and Tanzania15:45 How to support the charity -- and what 300 pounds does17:54 The children ten years on -- civil engineering, boxing, Real Madrid21:29 Why Letty takes no volunteers23:14 What would you say to your 18-year-old self?24:13 Did you ever feel scared or threatened?24:35 How the children shaped her25:15 Did you always want to help children?26:17 Find Street Children Iringa

Everything Changed on Instagram: instagram.com/everythingchangedpodcastListen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2XH1S48Q9rubN7TaywfxVe?si=cd71458fbb06449b


From Army. To Prison. To Realisation. (All while being a mother)03 Jun 202600:31:58

Naomi Alexander joined the military at 16 because someone told her she couldn't do it. She served in Iraq. She came home, left the army, and seven months later said yes to driving drugs from Amsterdam to the UK without a second thought.She was caught at the Channel Tunnel. She went to prison. She had her son inside.Today she is a yoga teacher, holistic therapist and Buddhist practitioner who holds healing space for people finding their way back to themselves.In this episode Naomi talks about growing up as one of the only brown girls in a small Lake District town, being born into a home shaped by addiction, becoming a mum at 16, the ranking officer who told her to choose between her baby and her military career, what it felt like to sleep through mortar fire in Iraq, the phone call that changed everything, and why she believes there are no mistakes — only choices that lead you exactly where you are meant to be."Naomi Momodu was the young mum. Naomi Thripland was the drug runner. Naomi Alexander is the medicine woman."This episode is brought to you by RevitaLash Cosmetics. RevitaLash was founded by a physician who created a lash serum for his wife during her breast cancer treatment, because he wanted her to feel like herself again. Find them at revitalash.co.uk ✨Chapters:00:00 Introduction00:38 Childhood as initiation: addiction, the Lake District, being the only brown family01:20 Becoming a mum at 16, and naming her Aiesha02:27 Joining the military because someone said she couldn't04:14 Iraq: sleeping through mortar fire06:25 Leaving the military and hitting rock bottom07:37 The phone call and the decision09:36 Caught at the Channel Tunnel10:08 Arrest, bail, pregnancy and the year on pause11:16 Nine years, reduced to four: what prison was actually like13:31 The mother and baby unit16:01 Shame, guilt and the gap between who people thought she was17:43 Buddhism and the stranger who knocked on her door26:38 Three names, three women28:56 Turning poison into medicineFollow Everything Changed:Instagram: instagram.com/everythingchangedpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2XH1S48Q9rubN7TaywfxVe?si=cd71458fbb06449b

She Nearly Died Giving Birth. Then the Real Fight Began.17 Jun 202600:54:46

Natalie Day went into labour and nearly didn't come home. Following a catastrophic placental abruption, she lost 4.5 litres of blood — almost her entire blood volume — and needed six transfusions to survive. Her newborn son was transferred to a high-dependency neonatal unit at another hospital. It would be five days before she was able to meet him. Doctors had already prepared her family for the possibility that she might not make it through the night.She made it. But the aftermath was only the beginning.Back home, and straight into lockdown, Natalie had no idea she had developed PTSD. Isolated, overwhelmed and unable to process what she had been through, she turned to alcohol and cocaine to numb the pain. What began as an escape quietly spiralled into addiction, bringing chaos into her home and pulling her further from the mother she wanted to be.It was her son who finally made her stop and look honestly at her life. Through the 12-step programme, therapy and a determination to rebuild herself from the ground up, she found a way back. Today, Natalie is 15 months sober — living proof that recovery is possible, and that even after the darkest times, it is never too late to find your way back to yourself.


Sponsor information:This episode is brought to you by RevitaLash Cosmetics. RevitaLash was founded by a physician who created a lash serum for his wife during her breast cancer treatment — because he wanted her to feel like herself again. Find them at revitalash.co.uk ✨Chapters:00:00 Introduction00:35 The birth: what happened that evening03:02 Calling 999 and the ambulance ride05:34 In theatre: no heartbeat, veins shutting down07:11 "Please don't let me die"09:00 Waking up in intensive care11:24 The piece of paper13:18 Five days without seeing her son14:39 What happened medically — and why blood donation saves lives16:12 Going back to the hospital for a debrief19:11 Meeting Vinny for the first time24:32 Coming home into lockdown25:58 Undiagnosed PTSD — the triggers, the obsessions, the anxiety30:53 Seeking help: CBT and the recording exercise33:25 When alcohol and drugs entered the picture39:08 What the addiction was doing for her44:28 The fork in the road46:43 What her son said in the car47:56 Walking into her first Narcotics Anonymous meeting50:18 15 months sober — what recovery looks like day to day52:46 Her husband's journey54:54 Revisiting the trauma in sobriety57:58 The message for anyone who is struggling01:00:36 Where she is nowFollow Everything Changed:Instagram: instagram.com/everythingchangedpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2XH1S48Q9rubN7TaywfxVe?si=cd71458fbb06449b

© My Podcast Data