Sian Williams, who is best known for her time on BBC Breakfast, has spoken about the mental health condition that she has faced for years and now works as an NHS counselling psychologist
Former BBC Breakfast presenter Sian Williams has revealed her “lifelong” struggle with a health condition that made her “keel over” at a royal event.
Sian, 61, a familiar face on BBC Breakfast throughout the early 2000s, has discussed how the condition anxiety impacted her whilst working for the broadcaster.
This included during the opening of the Diana memorial fountain in London’s Hyde Park in 2004. The event, which took place on July 6, was scheduled to be attended by the then monarch Queen Elizabeth II.
Sian, who was born in London to Welsh parents, described how halfway through the broadcast she collapsed on the scorching hot day. She had been sat on a stool for hours and mere seconds after she lost the live feed at her feet, reports the Mirror.
She told the Mail: “It is blazingly hot and I’ve been on this stool and talking for what seems like for ever. Until at last, my director tells me, ‘The royals are on their way.’…Just as I keel over, I hear the director shout to our royal correspondent, Nick Witchell: ‘Fill! Fill! Fill!’”
Sian added that whilst the BBC’s royal correspondent filled the gap, a producer helped to revive her and restore some of her lost energy with custard cream biscuits.
Later she characterised anxiety, something millions of Britons experience, as a “lifelong companion” and one she still hasn’t “eliminated” from her own story, but that neither is it something she would want to.
Sian went on to explain how she has since transitioned from breakfast presenter to a counselling psychologist who now primarily works in the NHS. This isn’t the first instance of Sian discussing her anxiety, having penned a book on the subject titled The Power of Anxiety, which was published this year.
Since beginning her training as a psychologist, she has gained a deeper understanding of her anxiety and now perceives it as a strength rather than a weakness.
She stated: “Sensitivity I think is the thing that helped me in journalism and certainly helps me as a psychologist. It can be your superpower – it has been mine.”
Sian isn’t the only high-profile celebrity to disclose their struggles with anxiety, with I’m A Celebrity star Shona McGarty also sharing her own experiences with the condition with the Mirror.
Last year, she spoke about her determination to confront her fears directly. Prior to her entrance into the jungle, she said: “I am very nervous, but it is just something I want to do to challenge myself and to kind of prove to myself that I am bigger than this anxiety…..I panic and I don’t know why…I am just sort of learning as I go.”
For emotional support, you can call the Samaritans 24-hour helpline on 116 123, email jo@samaritans.org, visit a Samaritans branch in person or go to the Samaritans website.
