Episodios

  • This epsiode of Life Interrupted with Katie Price, was recorded in April 2021.

    Katie Price, known for many years as Jordan, her picture hung on many a bedroom wall and covering the front of tabloids and magazines.

    But the Katie Price you think you know, is very different in reality.

    Although she began her career courting fame and publicity; famously she ended up marrying Peter Andre after they fell in love on ITV's "I'm a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here", she has longed for her side of the story to be heard.

    Katie has felt for a long time that the media portrayal of her is unfair.

    In this honest chat, I discovered that instead of the hard and cold person the media sometimes paint her as, she's actually a very sensitive and caring person, not least for her son Harvey, who has Prader-Willi Syndrome.

    Behind the scenes is a lady who has endured years of her own battles with trauma and mental illness.

    Katie's story is colorful, and at times desperately sad, but her humour and hope for the future shine throughout.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Libby Scott is fourteen years old. She loves hot chocolate, Taylor Swift and lives in Kent with her family.
    Her dad is a musician and Libby's mum is an education consultant and conference speaker.

    Libby is also autistic. For many years, it was a battle for her to understand herself and for her family and friends to understand her.
    Following an autism diagnosis, Libby was finally able to understand herself better and express how she felt.

    In 2018, her mum Kim, decided to share a piece of Libby's writing online. The piece went viral and was liked and retweeted thousands of times.

    The next year she wrote her first book with co-writer Rebecca Wescott. It is called "Can You See Me", a story about an autistic girl called Tally who tries to navigate school and her social life.

    Now fourteen, Libby is publishing her third book called "Ways To Be Me", which focuses on the process of getting a diagnosis. It's a brilliant and extraordinary book that not only will help many people understand autism better, but one that will give hope and perhaps more importantly, a voice to others with autism.

    Libby is a remarkable young lady. And it was a great honor for her and her mum Kim to join me on this episode of Life Interrupted.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

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  • Sixteen years ago, Matt Hampson was a professional rugby union player with bags of potential.

    He was on the books of the then formidable Leicester tigers, caps for the England Under-Eighteens and Under Twenty-Ones.

    Everything pointed Matt having a hugely successful playing career.

    But on a cold Tuesday morning in March 2005, whilse training with the England Under Twenty-Ones, everything changed in one single moment.

    As the forwards practice, the scrum Matt was part of collapsed and his neck took the full force of the blow.

    Many days later, he woke up in an intensive care unit, paralyzed from the neck down and now needing a ventilator just to stay alive. He was just twenty years old, and now a tetraplegic.

    For many, the road back to having any kind of life again, would have looked virtually impossible. But after seventeen long months in hospital, and many more in rehabilitation, Matt began to slowly rediscover life again.

    Through setting up the Matt Hampson Foundation, he's now devoted his life to helping men and women have also had to face up to life changing injuries.

    Matt teamed up with Author Paul Kimmage, to write the extraordinary tale of his life in his brilliant book, Engage.

    This is the story of a man whose world collapsed. A man who then found the strength and determination to reshape his life into one that should leave us all feeling inspired.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Dilly Carter may not be a name familiar to lots of people, but to the many thousands who follow her Instagram account DeClutter Dollies, she's very well known.

    Her daily tips and hacks help her many followers to not just declutter their homes, but to declutter their lives.

    She's now not just the author of a new book Create Space, which is as much about decluttering our minds as it is our homes, but she's also one of the presenters of the BBC One show Sort Your Life Out.

    To everyone watching on, Dilly's life looks one of order, organization and calm but it wasn't always like this.

    She was born in Sri Lanka and into a chaotic world as she spent the first part of her life in an orphanage.

    Eventually, three years later, Dilly was adopted by a couple living in England.

    Dilly's story is a complex one. It's the story of a reluctant man who questioned if he could ever love someone else's daughter.

    It's a story of an adoptive mum who had her own battles with being bipolar and the tale of rejection by Dillys blood parents.

    And her story is eventually one of acceptance of a couple who came to love her as their own.

    Dilly's life so far has brought so much help and hope to others not just practically, but emotionally and mentally as well.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Charlie Corbett is a name that won't be familiar to many. But he has a story that should be heard by many.

    Charlie is a writer, journalist, public speaker, husband and father to two sons. He grew up the son of a farmer and spent his childhood living a rural life immersed in the sights and sounds of the nature around him.

    After university, he left his farming roots behind and spent the next twenty years as a journalist reporting on business and finance. It was about as far away from the countryside life of his youth you could get.

    Yet, when he was 35, Charlie's world was profoundly interrupted when after a long struggle with cancer, his mum died.

    As Charlie battled with the weight and despair of grief, it was the song of a skylark as he lay on the side of a lonely hill, that began to lead him on a journey of healing.

    It was a journey of rediscovering not just about the power of nature, but also himself.

    Now he's written an incredible book called 12 birds to save your life (https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/442899/12-birds-to-save-your-life/9780241503331).

    It's a moving tale of loss, but also one of great joy and hope, as Charlie tells the tale of the amazing power of nature, and the songs of the birds around us which bring healing and joy in even the darkest of times.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Richard Marson maybe not a name many of you will know.

    For over thirty years, Richard has been an important figure within the TV industry. He's worked on some of the most recognizable programs in British television from Top of the Pops to the Paul Daniels Magic Show to Going Live.

    Richard is best known for the years he spent as a talented producer and then editor on the BBC his iconic children's show Blue Peter.

    Richard had it all, a brilliant career and a loving family.

    But in 2008, his life was interrupted by the unimaginable and any parent's worst nightmare.

    On a beautiful sunny Sunday morning, Richard and his family woke up to discover that their fouteen year old son Rupert had taken his life.

    Just finding a reason to even carry on living was at times a daily battle. But over the past thirteen years, the color has slowly began to seep back into Richard's life.

    As someone who I've known for over twenty years as a friend and colleague, I can honestly say, Richard is a remarkable person.

    I have no doubt that his story will move you and encourage you, in equal measure.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Sam Ward is a British hockey player who has represented England and Great Britain scoring an incredible 72 goals in 126 caps.

    He's a Commonwealth Games bronze medalist, and played for Team GB at the Rio 2016 Olympics.

    While following his ambition is to represent his country again at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, Sam's hopes of a second Olympics were dealt a hammer blow when he was struck by a ball in the face during an Olympic hockey quantifier.

    After extensive surgery to rebuild his injured face, Sam found out the life changing news, the damage to his left eye was irrepairable.

    He wouldn't be able to see out of it again.

    For a time, he thought his career in hockey was over. But through sheer determination, and huge strength of character, Sam has come through the dark times, overcome the many doubts and is back playing again.

    Sam's story is one that should inspire all of us facing life changing events, and show us that even when it feels like the end, it doesn't have to be.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • James Taylor was just 19 when he became the youngest professional cricket player to score 1000 championship runs in a season.

    He went on to make the move to Nottingham where he became captain, and by the age of 21, had made his debut for England.

    He represented his country over 30 times, but then in 2016, whilst warming up for a pre-season game against Cambridge University, James's life was interrupted in the most unexpected yet brutal of ways, as he collapsed and was left fighting for his life.

    A previously undetected heart condition led to the life changing news that if he ever played cricket, or exercised again, he could die.

    His bright cricketing career was extinguished in a moment.

    James's story is one that needs to be heard. It's the story of how you deal with having your dreams snatched away. It's the story of how he is faced a battle to rebuild his life. A battle more intense than anything he ever faced on the pitch.

    But it's also the life affirming tale of a man who has emerged from some really dark days with courage, humor, and enormous hope for the future.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • It may suprise you that 60,000 women and men are stalked in the UK each year.

    Tracey Morgan was 22 years old, happily married and living in Hampshire. But after her and her husband became friends with a colleague at the Naval Base she worked for, Tracey's life took a sinister turn.

    A man she tried to help with his mental health issues soon became her nightmare.

    As he began to stalk her every move, she soon became frightened of seeing him wherever she went, and one day found him parked outside her home.

    And then the endless silent phone calls began. She told her bosses, who ordered him to stay away from her. But this was just the start of a terrifying ordeal that would last for nearly 10 years.

    Yet time and again, she faced disbelief and prejudice. It cost her at times her sanity. It cost Tracey her marriage, and for many years, it was a struggle to get the police and courts to bring about the justice that a decade of stalking had deserved.

    Tracy's story is a chilling one. But given how many other women go through this experience every year in the UK, it's one that needs to be heard.

    And it's now given Tracy, a powerful voice in helping others who've lived through this kind of nightmare.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Jay blades is the stylish star of the wonderful BBC hit show the repair shop the show where his team of talented craftsmen and women bring downtrodden family heirlooms back to life and then reunite them with their often emotional owners.

    Part of the show secret is Jay's charm, style, wit and warmth. A man who always shows compassion and empathy to the many who have visited the repair shop bar.

    But behind this calm figure is a story of an upbringing and life that was anything but serene.

    Growing up in northeast London, Jay's early childhood was a largely happy and innocent one, yet when he went to senior school, all that changed.

    He was regularly physically and verbally abused because of the color of his skin. He left school battered, emotionally scarred and with no qualifications.

    By the age of 21, Jay was homeless.

    It was only in his 30s that he began to turn his life around, heading to university and then making changes in his life that transformed him and the lives of hundreds of young people through his various community projects.

    Now he's written a wonderful book called "Making It" about his life, and as he admits the most impressive restoration he's carried out has been on himself.

    His is a challenging but wonderfully inspiring story.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Tony Bellew is a name known to many who follow the world of boxing.

    He grew up in Wavertree in Liverpool, and by the age of just eighteen, was strapping on a bulletproof vest and working as a bouncer.

    His childhood had almost as many knocks as he took in the ring, with the end of his parents relationship and finding himself expelled from school at the age of fifteen.

    As he had heard said to him many times, he felt a waste of space and his life was at a crossroads.

    One direction could lead to a life of street fights and crime, the other was boxing.

    He chose the latter, and went on to become a world champion, but also held the British Commonwealth and European titles, and his glittering career culminated in two defining victories against David Heye.

    Tony Bellew's story of a chubby kid growing up in Liverpool to a world champion, is an example of willpower, incredible resilience and total dedication.

    After over 20 years in the ring, what you're about to hear is the tale of a man who has overcome the doubters and reached the pinnacle of his sport.

    Yet he is still vulnerable and honest enough to admit, he continues to face an almost daily battle with his demons.

    He's also just written a brilliant new book called Everybody Has A Plan Until They Get Punched In The Face, where he draws on the lessons he's learned from life in the ring to help others deal with the punches that life can throw all of us.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact The Samaritans, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Join Simon Thomas as he explores human endurance through the toughest times in the second series of his podcast Life Interrupted.

    In a series of incredible interviews, with guests including Katie Price, Tony Bellew, Jay Blades and more, he discovers how the more desperate times can lead to hope and inspiration for a new and happy life.

    In each episode, we hear from names we are familiar with and some we are not. These interviews teach us that despite the most difficult challenges in our lives, we can find the strength and the narrow path through to a better life.

    Subscribe now!

  • Lynsey Crombie is a best selling author, businesswoman, and TV personality. But behind Lindsay's success is a much darker story.

    She first came to prominence when by sheer chance, she landed a role on channel for obsessive compulsive cleaners, which evolved to a regular slot on ITV this morning, where she shared not just her love of cleaning, but as secrets and hacks to a cleaner house and became known as the 'Queen Of Clean'.

    Throughout the pandemic, Lindsay has continued to share her brilliant cleaning hacks on social media with her many followers, and it led to the release of her latest book, The 15 Minute Clean.

    Yet behind the successful career women, is a difficult and challenging history.

    Age just 24 married and expecting twins, her life was interrupted in perhaps one of the worst ways possible.

    In the early hours of one morning, without any warning, her husband was arrested. Shortly afterwards the stress caused by the ordeal brought about the premature birth of her twins.

    She had to endure living on a knife edge, watching her premature twins fighting for their lives, while not knowing why her husband had been arrested and detained.

    Slowly, Lindsay discovered her husband's dark secret. He was charged for pedophilia. For a time her world fell apart. She struggled to share her pain with anyone and became a compulsive cleaner as a way of coping with her trauma.

    Lindsey's story is both brutal and heartbreaking. But it's also one of triumph and hope.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • At the age of 17, Hope Edelman lost her Mom to breast cancer. After she lost her Dad later in life, she turned her pain into inspiration, as she began a journey to better understand the confusing world of grief.

    Her first book, "Motherless Daughters" was a number one New York Times best-seller, and now her latest book, "The After Grief", gives a brilliant insight into how we not only process grief, but how loss isn't something we just get over.

    The BBC Radio Five Live presenter Tony Livesey, who lost his Mum suddenly, when he was just 13 said about Hope's book, that if he'd had a roadmap like this for dealing with grief, it would have changed his childhood.

    So whether you're someone who's been recently bereaved, or is still struggling with loss from many years ago, or just want to understand grief a little more, than I know that Hope's story, insight and wisdom will help.

    This interview gives all of us a little more undserstanding about a difficult and confusing aspect of life that one day, we are all going to face.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Of all the Life interrupted episodes, I don't think I've ever heard a story quite as shocking and heartbreaking as the one you're about to hear.

    In 2004, Rob and Paul Forkan, now known as the Gandy Brothers, spent the Christmas holidays in Sri Lanka with their mum, dad, and siblings.

    For a few days, at least, it was the perfect Christmas.

    But on Boxing Day, their entire world changed forever.

    Without any warning, on the morning of the 26th of December 2004, the resort where they were staying was hit by one of the deadliest natural disasters in recorded history.

    The Boxing Day tsunami was so devastating that it claimed the lives of nearly 35,000 in Sri Lanka alone.

    I'll let the boys tell you the story of what happened to them. And the days, months and years that followed that dreadful day.

    This is a story that will at times be hard to listen to, at many points will break your heart. But I know it will also fill you with incredible joy, inspiration. And most importantly, hope.

    This is an episode that really does capture the power and strength and resilience of the human spirit.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • The last year has been a period of life like no other, as the Coronavirus pandemic has not only gripped the UK, but the World.

    For months on-end we’ve been asked to live our lives in a completely different way.
    For so many of us we’ve spend the last year working from home. For those of us who are parents we’ve seen our children spending most of the last few terms away from school and time with those we love, family and friends has been largely spent on screens rather than in person.
    And tragically for people up and down the country we've seen family and friends lost to this devastating virus.

    This has been a period of time when all our lives have been interrupted. Its a period when all of us have struggled with anxiety, fear, stress and loss. The loss of those we love, and the life we once had.

    My guest on this episode of Life Interrupted is a lady who has spent her life helping people deal with trauma.
    Dr. Emma Kavanagh is a police and military psychologist and also a best selling author. She’s also someone who has spend her entire life dealing with her own anxiety and mental health challenges.

    Throughout the pandemic, Emma’s honest posts online have been helping countless others through this strange new world we now find ourselves in.
    So if you, like so many, have found this past year incredibly hard, I have no doubt that Emma’s wise words will not only encourage you, but also remind you of that powerful truth. That you are not alone.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Tara Howell may not be a name known to many, but her story is one that should be.

    She grew up in Yorkshire and Saudi Arbia, and had a successful career in advertising, spanning over 20 years.

    The one constant in her life was horse riding, which she had enjoyed since childhood.

    In 2014, when she was just 43 years old, her life was suddenly interrupted when she was out riding on her horse Victor

    Out of the blue, her horse threw her to the ground, breaking her neck and instantly paralysing her.

    Discovered lying in a field 5 hours later, and subsequently airlifted to hospital, she began her fight against adversity.
    A story that is sure to humble and empower many.

    She's a remarkable women who over the past six years has not only had to rebuild her body, but her life as well.


    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • For nearly 20 years, Dan Walker has been on our screens for BBC Sport, where he still presents football focus every Saturday. For the past four years, he's also been waking us up every morning as the host of BBC Breakfast.

    Throughout his career, Dan has been lucky to chat to not just some of the biggest names in politics, sport and entertainment, but also some truly extraordinary people.

    People who may not be household names, but the stories of whom have touched millions.

    Now Dan has decided to tell some of these stories in his brilliant new book, 'Remarkable People'.

    Of the year where all of us have faced such profound uncertainty and worry, these tales will undoubtedly shine a ray of light and hope into one of this country's darkest hours.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Eddie Izzard is someone known to many. She's been a comedian for over three decades, whose unique and a time surreal style has made her a household name.

    But Eddie is art is much more than a comedian. She's also an actor who's made appearances in Hollywood movies, an activist and a Labor Party official.

    But in recent years, Eddie has become almost as well known for her extraordinary running exploits.
    In 2009, with only five weeks training, Eddie ran an amazing 43 marathons in just 51 days to raise money for the BBC Sport Relief.
    In 2016 she ran again for Sport Relief, and the start of 2021, she began the challenge of running 31 marathons and performing 31 stand up comedy shows to raise money for a number of different charities.

    The reason this episode is a bit different, is because I spoke to Eddie while she was running marathon number 18 on a treadmill.
    Despite this herculean effort, this is an honest and humbling insight into the life of a young boy who lost his mother when he was just six years of age, and who knew from childhood, she was gender fluid.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the Samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky

  • Andrew Strauss, is one of England's most successful cricket captains.

    He led his country to victory in the Ashes at home in 2009, before going on in the winter of 2010/11, to retain the Ashes down under, and in doing so became only the third England Captain to win a test series against Australia both home and away.

    But in December 2018, Andrew's life was interrupted in a life changing way.
    His wife Ruth died of lung cancer, only one year after she was diagnosed, leaving him and their two sons behind.

    Since that huge loss, Andrew has gone on to set up the Ruth Strauss foundation, which funds research into non-smoking lung cancer and provides emotional support for families facing the loss of a parent.

    He inspired many as a cricketer, now, he's inspiring many more.

    If you have been through life events similar to those described in this episode and you need someone to talk to, please contact the samaritans, free any time, from any phone, on 116 123

    And if you'd like to share your thoughts with Simon, he'd love to hear from you:

    Twitter

    @SimonThomasSky