
Lisa Riley su lutto, resilienza e benessere emotivo
Autore Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCSPubblicato originariamente 2 Dec 2025
Rispetta le linee guida editoriali
- ScaricaScarica
- Condividi
- Language
- Discussione
- Versione audio
This year, the whole country fell in love with Lisa Riley once again during I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!. Her humour, honesty, and kindness struck a chord with viewers of all ages. But just before she entered the jungle, Lisa sat down with Matt Jameson and Christine Talbot for a deeply personal conversation that goes far beyond her life on screen.
As she celebrates 30 years as Mandy Dingle nei Emmerdale, Lisa reflects on the health journeys that have shaped her life from grief and emotional recovery to body confidence, resilience and protecting her wellbeing in the public eye.
In questo articolo:
Lisa Riley: Emmerdale Legend & I’m A Celebrity Star
Continua a leggere sotto
A career at the heart of British TV - and the pressures that come with it
Lisa talks openly about spending decades in the spotlight, from her breakout roles in Fat Friends e Emmerdale to hosting You’ve Been Framed and becoming a fan favourite on Strictly Come Dancing. But woven through her stories is a recurring theme: how constant visibility affects your mental health.
She shares how she learned to maintain confidence despite public scrutiny, how she handled online trolling about her weight, and how shifting her focus towards health and happiness - rather than appearance - became a turning point. Her reflections echo conversations many people have about body image, self-worth and the pressures amplified by social media.
Grief, love, and rebuilding your life
Torna ai contenutiOne of the most moving parts of the episode comes when Lisa talks about the loss of her beloved mum, Cath. Her recollection of those months will resonate deeply with anyone who has experienced lutto. Lisa describes the physical and emotional impacts of grief, the exhaustion, the unexpected triggers, and the long process of learning to live around loss.
She also shares the routines, relationships, and moments of joy that helped her rebuild her wellbeing - a reminder that emotional recovery rarely happens neatly or quickly, and that seeking support is a sign of strength rather than weakness.
For many viewers, her story offers reassurance that grief is not something to “get over”, but something you learn to carry with compassion for yourself.
Continua a leggere sotto
Health, confidence, and living on your own terms
Torna ai contenutiThroughout the interview, Lisa returns to the importance of listening to your body and protecting your health. She talks candidly about reaching a place in her life where she finally felt strong, happy, and grounded - not because of external approval, but because she prioritised what made her feel well.
Her reflections highlight something we hear often at Patient.info - health is not just about diagnoses or treatment. It’s also about daily habits, mental wellbeing, relationships, boundaries, and the mindset we bring to the challenges in front of us.
Scelte dei pazienti per Yorkshire Talks

Podcast
Lindsey Burrow su amore, assistenza e vita dopo la perdita
Some stories change the way a country talks about illness, love and resilience. Not because they are extraordinary in a sensational sense, but because they reveal what happens inside ordinary families when life becomes unimaginably hard. Matt Jameson and Christine Talbot sit down with Lindsey Burrow, mother, campaigner and the devoted wife of Rob Burrow. Together, Rob and Lindsey became the public face of love in the face of motor neurone disease. Their story moved millions not because it sought attention, but because it showed what commitment, dignity and compassion look like when everything else is stripped away. This conversation is not simply about loss. It is about caring, endurance, identity and what it means to keep showing up for the people you love when the future becomes uncertain.
di Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

Podcast
Claire Warren sulla maternità, il senso di colpa delle mamme e il lasciar andare la perfezione
Modern motherhood can feel overwhelming. The advice is endless, the expectations are high, and the pressure to get everything right can quietly erode confidence and wellbeing. This episode of Yorkshire Talks offers something many parents rarely get. Permission to breathe. Matt Jameson and Christine Talbot are joined by Claire Warren, the award-winning creator behind My Kinda Mum. With more than half a million followers across Instagram and Facebook, Claire has built a community around honest, funny and deeply relatable reflections on parenting. Not the polished version. The real one. This conversation is warm, candid and reassuring. It explores motherhood as it is actually lived, messy, joyful, exhausting and often full of self doubt.
di Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS
Storia dell'articolo
Le informazioni su questa pagina sono revisionate da clinici qualificati.
2 Dec 2025 | Pubblicato originariamente
Autore:
Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

Chiedi, condividi, connettiti.
Esplora le discussioni, fai domande e condividi esperienze su centinaia di argomenti di salute.

Non ti senti bene?
Valuta i tuoi sintomi online gratuitamente
Iscriviti alla newsletter di Patient
La tua dose settimanale di consigli sulla salute chiari e affidabili - scritti per aiutarti a sentirti informato, sicuro e in controllo.
Abbonandoti accetti il nostro Informativa sulla Privacy. Puoi annullare l'iscrizione in qualsiasi momento. Non vendiamo mai i tuoi dati.