Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love Island Never Showed

Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love Island Never Showed

Olivia Bowen secretly self-harmed as recently as a few years ago while millions followed her 'perfect life' on Instagram — and she's finally ready to tell the full truth.

Jul 14, 2026 1:45:40 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

Love Island Season 2 star Olivia Bowen opens up about the hidden struggles behind her public image — from disordered eating and self-harm beginning at age 12, through a toxic relationship before the villa, to severe postnatal depression after her son Abel's traumatic birth. She reveals how Love Island unexpectedly cured her disordered eating through forced exposure, how her husband Alex Bowen's unwavering support held their relationship together, and how vanishing twin syndrome during her second pregnancy changed her perspective on life and loss. A raw, emotionally unfiltered conversation for anyone who has ever felt they weren't enough — the key takeaway: talking about pain, however shameful it feels, is the only way to truly heal it.

#self-harm disclosure #disordered eating recovery #postnatal depression #vanishing twin syndrome #Love Island Season 2 #toxic relationship recovery #emotional regulation #childhood divorce #overnight celebrity #body image struggles #Alex Bowen marriage #trauma and healing #baby loss grief #Olivia Bowen #Love Island #disordered eating #self-harm #Alex Bowen #mental health #body image #toxic relationship #motherhood #trauma #recovery #resilience #Essex #reality TV #baby loss

Love Island star Olivia Bowen opens up about growing up after her parents' divorce, disordered eating, self-harm, a toxic relationship before the villa, overnight fame, postnatal depression, and losing a baby to vanishing twin syndrome — the full, unfiltered truth behind the life everyone thought they knew.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with pre-roll advertisements before cutting to an emotionally charged trailer of the conversation ahead — Olivia Bowen's voice breaking as she discusses disordered eating, self-harm, postnatal depression and baby loss. Paul C. Brunson delivers a direct content warning to listeners, noting the episode includes discussion of self-harm and eating disorders and directing viewers to resources in the show notes. The device of previewing the rawest moments before the full conversation builds immediate emotional investment and signals this will not be a standard celebrity interview.

  • The episode opens with pre-roll advertisements before cutting to an emotionally charged trailer of the conversation ahead — Olivia Bowen's voice breaking as she discusses disordered eating, self-harm, postnatal depression and baby loss. Paul C. Brunson delivers a direct content warning to listeners, noting the episode includes discussion of self-harm and eating disorders and directing viewers to resources in the show notes. The device of previewing the rawest moments before the full conversation builds immediate emotional investment and signals this will not be a standard celebrity interview.

  • Paul C. Brunson opens the conversation by gently probing the Essex stereotype, which Olivia acknowledges with self-deprecating humour, admitting that pre-Love Island she did have 'bad eyebrows and bad tan.' But the mood quickly deepens as the conversation turns to family. Olivia paints a picture of a genuinely happy early childhood — dancing from age three, the warmth of sleeping between her parents — a memory so powerful she now lets her own children sleep in her bed whenever they want. The shadow falls when Paul asks about her parents' divorce, which happened when she was around ten or eleven. Olivia's first clue was noticing her parents wearing pyjamas to bed for the first time. She insists she processed it with adult-like stoicism, but admits this control was itself part of the problem: she suppressed rather than felt.

  • Paul C. Brunson pays close attention to what Olivia doesn't say, pointing out she spoke warmly about her mother but omitted her father entirely. This prompts a careful, nuanced account of a relationship that became 'very fleeting' after the divorce. Her father moved through a series of rented properties, never had a dedicated bedroom for Olivia, and had multiple partners after the marriage ended. At one flat, Olivia slept on sofa cushions laid beside the bed. She is at pains not to victimise herself — 'I don't feel sorry for myself' — and insists the man she describes is not the man her father is today. He is now her daily phone call, her holiday companion, her best friend. But as she notes, when you start 'unpicking why you ended up the way you ended up,' the connections become clear.

  • In one of the episode's most emotionally arresting moments, Paul produces a letter written by Olivia's father in response to a passage she shared from her forthcoming memoir. The letter is gracious, pained and specific: he acknowledges that reading her words 'shamed' him and that he was not the father she needed, while also celebrating the extraordinary woman she has become. Olivia struggles to read it without breaking down, pausing repeatedly to collect herself. When she finishes, her immediate instinct is to protect her father — to insist that nothing he did caused her mental health struggles, that she believes in a predisposition rather than environment, and that she will always be grateful for the relationship they share today. The sequence is a masterclass in the complexity of love, regret, and healing between parent and child.

  • This is the chapter where Olivia's story becomes most raw and most important. From year seven, an intense and inexplicable shame overcame her at the idea of being seen eating: she would not join the lunch queue, could not put food on her own plate, and went full school days hungry. The feeling lasted her entire secondary school career and into her early twenties. Then, at around 14 or 15, the self-harm began — again driven not by a desire for attention, as Paul is careful to note, but by emotional overwhelm with no outlet. Olivia is visibly uncomfortable discussing it but insists on acknowledging it, both because it is in her book and because she wants to remove some of the shame that surrounds it. Crucially, she reveals this wasn't just a teenage phase: self-harm recurred as recently as a few years ago, during postnatal depression, shattering any assumption that her curated public life meant private recovery.

  • Paul C. Brunson shifts the conversation outward, citing Young Minds and NHS data to show Olivia — and the audience — just how widespread the experiences she has been describing actually are. The figures are stark: a third of young adults, nearly 70% of those with mental health conditions, and self-harm incidents in the UK nearly tripling since 2000. For Olivia, the statistics land as a genuine revelation. Her whole life she believed she was uniquely broken, uniquely shameful. To hear she was never alone is almost more than she can process. Paul links this directly back to the British 'stiff upper lip' culture — the same silence that kept Olivia from seeking therapy at 14 and kept the problem growing underground for over a decade.

  • The episode pauses for a mid-roll advertisement for Huel's black edition ramen noodles. Paul frames it around the challenge of making good food choices when life is busy, highlights the product's nutritional credentials — 40g protein, 26 vitamins and minerals, under 400 calories — and recommends the Korean Spicy flavour as his personal favourite. A promo code of WNTT is offered for £10 off at uk.huel.com/wntt.

  • Leaving school without a clear plan, Olivia had one dream: to model. It was dismissed immediately — she was told her body type meant glamour was the only route, and glamour meant taking her clothes off. The rejection stung. What followed was worse: a relationship characterised by control, isolation from friends, and pure neglect. On Christmas Eve, her boyfriend left her stranded at a pub and she came home to find herself locked out at 1AM. The final word came from his own mother: please never come back. Olivia lost two stone in the weeks that followed and was prescribed beta blockers and then antidepressants. Then, watching Love Island with that same man before they split, she had a thought. Six months after leaving him, she applied. She was scorned, scared, and faking every ounce of confidence she showed in that villa.

  • Leaving school without a clear plan, Olivia had one dream: to model. It was dismissed immediately — she was told her body type meant glamour was the only route, and glamour meant taking her clothes off. The rejection stung. What followed was worse: a relationship characterised by control, isolation from friends, and pure neglect. On Christmas Eve, her boyfriend left her stranded at a pub and she came home to find herself locked out at 1AM. The final word came from his own mother: please never come back. Olivia lost two stone in the weeks that followed and was prescribed beta blockers and then antidepressants. Then, watching Love Island with that same man before they split, she had a thought. Six months after leaving him, she applied. She was scorned, scared, and faking every ounce of confidence she showed in that villa.

  • Olivia entered the Love Island villa on an emotional upswing, her eating disorder still intact but her mental health more stable than it had been in years. She was still unable to put food on her own plate for the first couple of weeks — always engineering someone else to serve her — and was convinced her housemates thought she was a princess. But one day she just did it. She served herself. And then she did it again. And it was done. No therapy, no medication, no years of work: just six weeks of unavoidable community and a bit of nerve. She left the villa without disordered eating for the first time since she was 12 years old. Love Island, she says, will always hold a special place because of what it did for her in that respect alone — and she hadn't even met Alex yet.

  • Olivia entered the Love Island villa on an emotional upswing, her eating disorder still intact but her mental health more stable than it had been in years. She was still unable to put food on her own plate for the first couple of weeks — always engineering someone else to serve her — and was convinced her housemates thought she was a princess. But one day she just did it. She served herself. And then she did it again. And it was done. No therapy, no medication, no years of work: just six weeks of unavoidable community and a bit of nerve. She left the villa without disordered eating for the first time since she was 12 years old. Love Island, she says, will always hold a special place because of what it did for her in that respect alone — and she hadn't even met Alex yet.

  • In a lighter passage, Paul and Olivia compare the atmosphere of Love Island Season 2 to the show as it exists now. Olivia recalls taking up smoking in the villa simply because all the drama happened in the smoking area, and endorses the producers' later decision to remove cigarettes. She confirms that the show was considerably more sexually explicit in the early series — a product of its time, sitting alongside Geordie Shore and Ex on the Beach. She and Alex, she admits with a laugh, worked out that if they removed all the covers and got on with it, the cameras couldn't air the footage. They were, she notes, correct in that calculation.

  • Olivia reflects that she and Alex were both in active denial about falling in love. He came in wanting to be 'Jack the lad'; she came in scorned and wanting fun. The moment they started talking, both of them knew something was different — and both immediately tried to dismiss it. But they were fighting a losing battle. What was waiting outside the villa was something neither expected: the full weight of public opinion, and it landed almost entirely on Olivia. Daily messages questioning what Alex saw in her, articles debating whether the couple would last, and — while Alex was receiving explicit images on Snapchat — Olivia was being called fat and punching above her weight simultaneously. Every message confirmed what she'd already told herself her whole life.

  • In a candid admission, Olivia says it was Alex who did essentially all the relationship work in the turbulent period after leaving the villa. He was a 'solid rock' while she was destabilised by public opinion, stress-related disordered eating, and her own deep-seated inability to believe she deserved to be loved. She details his methods — constant contact, transparency, public defence — and contrasts this with her own behaviour: anxious, volatile, barely functional. She is quick to give credit without entirely disowning her own worth, but the honest assessment is clear. That man has a heart of gold, she says. He stood by her side and did all the work.

  • In a candid admission, Olivia says it was Alex who did essentially all the relationship work in the turbulent period after leaving the villa. He was a 'solid rock' while she was destabilised by public opinion, stress-related disordered eating, and her own deep-seated inability to believe she deserved to be loved. She details his methods — constant contact, transparency, public defence — and contrasts this with her own behaviour: anxious, volatile, barely functional. She is quick to give credit without entirely disowning her own worth, but the honest assessment is clear. That man has a heart of gold, she says. He stood by her side and did all the work.

  • Paul engineers a warm surprise by playing a pre-recorded video message from Tina, Olivia's closest friend from Love Island Season 2 and her bridesmaid. Tina describes Olivia as a literal part of her soul — her sister, her soul sister — and recalls a shared moment in the villa hiding from cameras that has become a private shared memory. Olivia lights up at the message, explaining that Tina became her 'little third wheel' in the villa after never quite finding her own partner there, and that despite their completely different lives now, the friendship is unconditional and permanent.

  • This chapter covers the remarkable professional trajectory Olivia built after Love Island. She was the first contestant to secure a major high street brand deal (with Quiz), the first to present on This Morning, and the first to host her own show, Second Chance Dresses. That show was then commissioned by Netflix for a US version, with Olivia's visa secured, boutique chosen, contributors met, and flight booked — before COVID-19 ended the project overnight. Olivia is remarkably equanimous about it: even getting to that point, she says, was extraordinary. She and Alex were actively planning an apartment in New York. Her life would have taken an entirely different path, and she might never have had children.

  • Paul steers the conversation toward the proposal, and Olivia reveals a detail that reframes the whole timeline: Alex bought the ring within months of leaving the villa not out of impulsiveness but out of a kind of loving desperation. He told her directly: you need to take me seriously. What more can I do? The proposal in New York — a last-minute trip swap from the planned Italy proposal — was the first thing that made the love feel real to Olivia. Then Paul produces a letter from Alex, read aloud live on camera. In it, Alex writes that he doesn't believe they have a perfect relationship, and that this is its beauty — they speak their minds, they grow, and they are not quitters. He calls Olivia an incredible wife and an even better mother. She dissolves. Ten years in, she says, she should really start believing he loves her.

  • Paul steers the conversation toward the proposal, and Olivia reveals a detail that reframes the whole timeline: Alex bought the ring within months of leaving the villa not out of impulsiveness but out of a kind of loving desperation. He told her directly: you need to take me seriously. What more can I do? The proposal in New York — a last-minute trip swap from the planned Italy proposal — was the first thing that made the love feel real to Olivia. Then Paul produces a letter from Alex, read aloud live on camera. In it, Alex writes that he doesn't believe they have a perfect relationship, and that this is its beauty — they speak their minds, they grow, and they are not quitters. He calls Olivia an incredible wife and an even better mother. She dissolves. Ten years in, she says, she should really start believing he loves her.

  • Paul steers the conversation toward the proposal, and Olivia reveals a detail that reframes the whole timeline: Alex bought the ring within months of leaving the villa not out of impulsiveness but out of a kind of loving desperation. He told her directly: you need to take me seriously. What more can I do? The proposal in New York — a last-minute trip swap from the planned Italy proposal — was the first thing that made the love feel real to Olivia. Then Paul produces a letter from Alex, read aloud live on camera. In it, Alex writes that he doesn't believe they have a perfect relationship, and that this is its beauty — they speak their minds, they grow, and they are not quitters. He calls Olivia an incredible wife and an even better mother. She dissolves. Ten years in, she says, she should really start believing he loves her.

  • After years of telling herself she never wanted to be a mother, Olivia found pregnancy itself beautiful. It was what came after that broke her. Abel's birth was 38 hours long, ended with forceps after a near-caesarean, and he arrived not breathing having swallowed meconium. The contrast between the event-filled celebrity life she and Alex had built and the sudden, relentless reality of new parenthood was catastrophic. Alex, an only child who had grown up without a father, was equally lost. Olivia became consumed by baby-tracking apps, refused to be called 'mum', stopped speaking and getting out of bed. She identified the familiar signs — the same warning signals from when she was 14 — but couldn't stop the spiral. Her bad habits returned. Alex found out.

  • Olivia had never heard of vanishing twin syndrome before it happened to her. The second pregnancy began with the joy of discovering twins — she and Alex started planning for two children, looking at cars and rooms — before a scan at nine weeks revealed one baby had no heartbeat. Unlike a miscarriage, there was no physical loss event. The baby simply stayed, present on every scan, until approximately 19 weeks, then vanished into her body. Paul adds the statistics: the syndrome affects 15–35% of twin pregnancies and half of all pregnancies involving three or more embryos. Speaking about it publicly on Loose Women generated thousands of messages from women who had experienced the same thing — including a 65-year-old woman who had carried this unnamed loss for four decades. Olivia describes the lost twin as her sunset baby and Sienna as her sunrise.

  • Olivia had never heard of vanishing twin syndrome before it happened to her. The second pregnancy began with the joy of discovering twins — she and Alex started planning for two children, looking at cars and rooms — before a scan at nine weeks revealed one baby had no heartbeat. Unlike a miscarriage, there was no physical loss event. The baby simply stayed, present on every scan, until approximately 19 weeks, then vanished into her body. Paul adds the statistics: the syndrome affects 15–35% of twin pregnancies and half of all pregnancies involving three or more embryos. Speaking about it publicly on Loose Women generated thousands of messages from women who had experienced the same thing — including a 65-year-old woman who had carried this unnamed loss for four decades. Olivia describes the lost twin as her sunset baby and Sienna as her sunrise.

  • For the final question — the most memorable conversation of her life — Olivia gives a uniquely personal answer. Two moments compete: her mother telling her that some people have a predisposition to mental health struggles (which validated her entirely), and her son Abel saying 'I love you' for the first time. After decades of struggling to believe she was worthy of being loved, hearing it offered freely and without agenda by the child she wasn't sure she deserved changed her brain chemistry, she says. Paul closes with a moving tribute to what the conversation has revealed: that behind nearly 3 million Instagram followers following what appears to be a perfect life is a woman who has lived with enormous pain for a very long time, and kept going anyway. His message is clear — the stiff upper lip must go. Talking about the pain is not weakness; it is the only way the weeds stop growing.

  • For the final question — the most memorable conversation of her life — Olivia gives a uniquely personal answer. Two moments compete: her mother telling her that some people have a predisposition to mental health struggles (which validated her entirely), and her son Abel saying 'I love you' for the first time. After decades of struggling to believe she was worthy of being loved, hearing it offered freely and without agenda by the child she wasn't sure she deserved changed her brain chemistry, she says. Paul closes with a moving tribute to what the conversation has revealed: that behind nearly 3 million Instagram followers following what appears to be a perfect life is a woman who has lived with enormous pain for a very long time, and kept going anyway. His message is clear — the stiff upper lip must go. Talking about the pain is not weakness; it is the only way the weeds stop growing.

Vanishing twin syndrome
A condition in which one foetus in a twin pregnancy stops developing and is reabsorbed into the body, often without pain or bleeding; affects an estimated 15–35% of twin pregnancies.
Postnatal depression (PND)
A form of prolonged depression that develops gradually after giving birth, distinct from 'baby blues'; can affect both mothers and fathers and is often hard to recognise.
Meconium
The first stool a newborn passes, typically dark and tar-like; if swallowed by the baby during birth it can cause breathing complications, as happened with Olivia's son Abel.
Disordered eating
A range of irregular eating behaviours that may or may not meet diagnostic criteria for a specific eating disorder; used in this episode to describe Olivia's shame-driven avoidance of eating in front of others.
Exposure therapy
A psychological treatment that involves gradual, controlled confrontation of a feared stimulus to reduce anxiety over time; Olivia uses the term to describe how eating communally in the Love Island villa unintentionally resolved her disordered eating.
Beta blockers
A class of medication that slows the heart rate and reduces blood pressure, sometimes prescribed off-label for anxiety; Olivia was prescribed them following her breakup but found they worsened her symptoms.
Matrescence
Term used (likely 'matrescence') referring to the profound psychological and hormonal transition a woman undergoes when becoming a mother, comparable in intensity to adolescence.
Stiff upper lip
A British cultural idiom describing the tendency to suppress emotional distress and present stoic composure rather than showing or discussing pain.
Baby blues
A short-lived emotional dip lasting approximately two weeks after birth, characterised by tearfulness and anxiety, distinct from the longer-lasting postnatal depression.
Forceps
A large, smooth metal instrument used by obstetricians to grip and guide a baby's head during a difficult vaginal delivery when labour stalls.
Coercive control
A pattern of behaviour in an intimate relationship used to dominate a partner, including controlling what they wear, limiting their social contact and monitoring their movements; describes the dynamic Olivia experienced in her pre-Love Island relationship.
Epiphany
A sudden, revelatory moment of understanding; used by Olivia to describe the impact of hearing the self-harm statistics and realising she was not alone.
Predisposition
An inherent susceptibility to a particular condition or behaviour, often genetic or biological in origin; Olivia uses it to describe her belief that her mental health struggles come from inside her rather than solely from her environment.
Matrescence
The physical, psychological, relational and identity shift a woman experiences when becoming a mother; Olivia references this (as 'mattress sense') when comparing the hormonal upheaval of motherhood to puberty.

Chapter 1 · 00:00

Intro

The episode opens with pre-roll advertisements before cutting to an emotionally charged trailer of the conversation ahead — Olivia Bowen's voice breaking as she discusses disordered eating, self-harm, postnatal depression and baby loss. Paul C. Brunson delivers a direct content warning to listeners, noting the episode includes discussion of self-harm and eating disorders and directing viewers to resources in the show notes. The device of previewing the rawest moments before the full conversation builds immediate emotional investment and signals this will not be a standard celebrity interview.

Chapter 3 · 03:03

How Olivia's Parents' Divorce Affected Her

Paul C. Brunson opens the conversation by gently probing the Essex stereotype, which Olivia acknowledges with self-deprecating humour, admitting that pre-Love Island she did have 'bad eyebrows and bad tan.' But the mood quickly deepens as the conversation turns to family. Olivia paints a picture of a genuinely happy early childhood — dancing from age three, the warmth of sleeping between her parents — a memory so powerful she now lets her own children sleep in her bed whenever they want. The shadow falls when Paul asks about her parents' divorce, which happened when she was around ten or eleven. Olivia's first clue was noticing her parents wearing pyjamas to bed for the first time. She insists she processed it with adult-like stoicism, but admits this control was itself part of the problem: she suppressed rather than felt.

Chapter 4 · 08:09

Olivia's Relationship With Her Father During Childhood

Paul C. Brunson pays close attention to what Olivia doesn't say, pointing out she spoke warmly about her mother but omitted her father entirely. This prompts a careful, nuanced account of a relationship that became 'very fleeting' after the divorce. Her father moved through a series of rented properties, never had a dedicated bedroom for Olivia, and had multiple partners after the marriage ended. At one flat, Olivia slept on sofa cushions laid beside the bed. She is at pains not to victimise herself — 'I don't feel sorry for myself' — and insists the man she describes is not the man her father is today. He is now her daily phone call, her holiday companion, her best friend. But as she notes, when you start 'unpicking why you ended up the way you ended up,' the connections become clear.

Chapter 5 · 13:37

Olivia Reads an Emotional Letter From Her Father

In one of the episode's most emotionally arresting moments, Paul produces a letter written by Olivia's father in response to a passage she shared from her forthcoming memoir. The letter is gracious, pained and specific: he acknowledges that reading her words 'shamed' him and that he was not the father she needed, while also celebrating the extraordinary woman she has become. Olivia struggles to read it without breaking down, pausing repeatedly to collect herself. When she finishes, her immediate instinct is to protect her father — to insist that nothing he did caused her mental health struggles, that she believes in a predisposition rather than environment, and that she will always be grateful for the relationship they share today. The sequence is a masterclass in the complexity of love, regret, and healing between parent and child.

Society & Culture
Olivia Reads Her Father's Letter Live

Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love … · Jul 14, 2026 Society & Culture

Paul produced a letter Olivia's father had written — an unprompted, heartfelt apology for the years when he was in and out of her life and not the parent she deserved. Reading it on camera while fighting tears, Olivia immediately wanted to absolve him: he never failed her, she insisted. The relationship they have now is everything.

Chapter 6 · 19:52

Olivia Opens Up About Her Teenage Mental Health Struggles

This is the chapter where Olivia's story becomes most raw and most important. From year seven, an intense and inexplicable shame overcame her at the idea of being seen eating: she would not join the lunch queue, could not put food on her own plate, and went full school days hungry. The feeling lasted her entire secondary school career and into her early twenties. Then, at around 14 or 15, the self-harm began — again driven not by a desire for attention, as Paul is careful to note, but by emotional overwhelm with no outlet. Olivia is visibly uncomfortable discussing it but insists on acknowledging it, both because it is in her book and because she wants to remove some of the shame that surrounds it. Crucially, she reveals this wasn't just a teenage phase: self-harm recurred as recently as a few years ago, during postnatal depression, shattering any assumption that her curated public life meant private recovery.

Claims made here

Almost one third (32%) of 17 to 24 year olds have self-harmed or attempted to self-harm at some point.

Paul C. Brunson Young Minds

Almost 70% of young people with a probable mental health condition have self-harmed or attempted to self-harm.

Paul C. Brunson Young Minds

Incidents of self-harm in the UK have increased from approximately 3.8% in 2000 to around 10% today.

Paul C. Brunson no source cited

83% of people who had self-harmed reported doing so to relieve unpleasant feelings of anger, tension, anxiety or depression.

Paul C. Brunson NHS survey

Health & Fitness
The Shame of Eating in Public

Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love … · Jul 14, 2026 Health & Fitness

Something shifted in year seven and Olivia was suddenly gripped by an overwhelming shame around being seen eating. She wouldn't queue for food, wouldn't put a fork to her mouth in public, and went full school days hungry rather than let anyone watch her eat. This lasted her entire teenage years.

Health & Fitness
Data point 32%

Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love … · Jul 14, 2026 Health & Fitness

Almost a third of 17–24 year olds have self-harmed. Among young people with a mental health condition, that rises to nearly 70%. UK incidents have tripled since 2000. And 83% do it to regulate painful emotions — not for attention. Olivia's reaction: an epiphany, because she had felt utterly alone for years.

Chapter 7 · 30:09

Huel Ad

Paul C. Brunson shifts the conversation outward, citing Young Minds and NHS data to show Olivia — and the audience — just how widespread the experiences she has been describing actually are. The figures are stark: a third of young adults, nearly 70% of those with mental health conditions, and self-harm incidents in the UK nearly tripling since 2000. For Olivia, the statistics land as a genuine revelation. Her whole life she believed she was uniquely broken, uniquely shameful. To hear she was never alone is almost more than she can process. Paul links this directly back to the British 'stiff upper lip' culture — the same silence that kept Olivia from seeking therapy at 14 and kept the problem growing underground for over a decade.

Chapter 9 · 33:14

Olivia Opens Up About Her Toxic Relationship Before Love Island

Leaving school without a clear plan, Olivia had one dream: to model. It was dismissed immediately — she was told her body type meant glamour was the only route, and glamour meant taking her clothes off. The rejection stung. What followed was worse: a relationship characterised by control, isolation from friends, and pure neglect. On Christmas Eve, her boyfriend left her stranded at a pub and she came home to find herself locked out at 1AM. The final word came from his own mother: please never come back. Olivia lost two stone in the weeks that followed and was prescribed beta blockers and then antidepressants. Then, watching Love Island with that same man before they split, she had a thought. Six months after leaving him, she applied. She was scorned, scared, and faking every ounce of confidence she showed in that villa.

Chapter 10 · 36:32

How and Why Olivia Joined Love Island

Leaving school without a clear plan, Olivia had one dream: to model. It was dismissed immediately — she was told her body type meant glamour was the only route, and glamour meant taking her clothes off. The rejection stung. What followed was worse: a relationship characterised by control, isolation from friends, and pure neglect. On Christmas Eve, her boyfriend left her stranded at a pub and she came home to find herself locked out at 1AM. The final word came from his own mother: please never come back. Olivia lost two stone in the weeks that followed and was prescribed beta blockers and then antidepressants. Then, watching Love Island with that same man before they split, she had a thought. Six months after leaving him, she applied. She was scorned, scared, and faking every ounce of confidence she showed in that villa.

Claims made here

Olivia lost approximately two stone in a matter of weeks following her breakup with her toxic ex-boyfriend.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Chapter 11 · 39:03

Olivia's Mental Health Struggles in the Love Island Villa

Olivia entered the Love Island villa on an emotional upswing, her eating disorder still intact but her mental health more stable than it had been in years. She was still unable to put food on her own plate for the first couple of weeks — always engineering someone else to serve her — and was convinced her housemates thought she was a princess. But one day she just did it. She served herself. And then she did it again. And it was done. No therapy, no medication, no years of work: just six weeks of unavoidable community and a bit of nerve. She left the villa without disordered eating for the first time since she was 12 years old. Love Island, she says, will always hold a special place because of what it did for her in that respect alone — and she hadn't even met Alex yet.

Chapter 14 · 47:09

Paul Shows Olivia a Photo of Her and Alex on Love Island

Olivia reflects that she and Alex were both in active denial about falling in love. He came in wanting to be 'Jack the lad'; she came in scorned and wanting fun. The moment they started talking, both of them knew something was different — and both immediately tried to dismiss it. But they were fighting a losing battle. What was waiting outside the villa was something neither expected: the full weight of public opinion, and it landed almost entirely on Olivia. Daily messages questioning what Alex saw in her, articles debating whether the couple would last, and — while Alex was receiving explicit images on Snapchat — Olivia was being called fat and punching above her weight simultaneously. Every message confirmed what she'd already told herself her whole life.

Society & Culture
The Public Told Her She Was Punching — Every Single Day

Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love … · Jul 14, 2026 Society & Culture

The moment Love Island finished, Olivia's inbox filled with one message on repeat: you are not good enough for Alex. 'Punching' was the dominant narrative. Coming from a place of pre-existing low self-worth, she absorbed it all. Meanwhile Alex was receiving unsolicited explicit images on Snapchat every day.

Chapter 15 · 51:00

How Olivia Handled the Huge Success of Love Island Season 2

In a candid admission, Olivia says it was Alex who did essentially all the relationship work in the turbulent period after leaving the villa. He was a 'solid rock' while she was destabilised by public opinion, stress-related disordered eating, and her own deep-seated inability to believe she deserved to be loved. She details his methods — constant contact, transparency, public defence — and contrasts this with her own behaviour: anxious, volatile, barely functional. She is quick to give credit without entirely disowning her own worth, but the honest assessment is clear. That man has a heart of gold, she says. He stood by her side and did all the work.

Claims made here

Love Island Season 2 attracted on average over 1.4 million viewers per episode.

Paul C. Brunson no source cited

Chapter 18 · 1:02:04

Olivia's Biggest Highlights After Love Island

This chapter covers the remarkable professional trajectory Olivia built after Love Island. She was the first contestant to secure a major high street brand deal (with Quiz), the first to present on This Morning, and the first to host her own show, Second Chance Dresses. That show was then commissioned by Netflix for a US version, with Olivia's visa secured, boutique chosen, contributors met, and flight booked — before COVID-19 ended the project overnight. Olivia is remarkably equanimous about it: even getting to that point, she says, was extraordinary. She and Alex were actively planning an apartment in New York. Her life would have taken an entirely different path, and she might never have had children.

Chapter 20 · 1:08:33

Olivia Reads an Emotional Letter From Alex

Paul steers the conversation toward the proposal, and Olivia reveals a detail that reframes the whole timeline: Alex bought the ring within months of leaving the villa not out of impulsiveness but out of a kind of loving desperation. He told her directly: you need to take me seriously. What more can I do? The proposal in New York — a last-minute trip swap from the planned Italy proposal — was the first thing that made the love feel real to Olivia. Then Paul produces a letter from Alex, read aloud live on camera. In it, Alex writes that he doesn't believe they have a perfect relationship, and that this is its beauty — they speak their minds, they grow, and they are not quitters. He calls Olivia an incredible wife and an even better mother. She dissolves. Ten years in, she says, she should really start believing he loves her.

Claims made here

Olivia Bowen was the first Love Island contestant to secure a brand deal with a UK high street retailer, specifically Quiz.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Olivia Bowen was the first Love Island contestant to present on This Morning.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Society & Culture
Olivia Reads Alex's Letter Live

Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love … · Jul 14, 2026 Society & Culture

Paul had sourced a private letter from Alex Bowen. Reading it aloud on camera, Olivia dissolved into tears as Alex wrote that he doesn't believe they have a perfect relationship — and that's exactly why it works. He said she was an incredible wife and an even better mother, and he was proud of every word in her book.

Chapter 22 · 1:12:45

Olivia Opens Up About Pregnancy and Postnatal Depression

After years of telling herself she never wanted to be a mother, Olivia found pregnancy itself beautiful. It was what came after that broke her. Abel's birth was 38 hours long, ended with forceps after a near-caesarean, and he arrived not breathing having swallowed meconium. The contrast between the event-filled celebrity life she and Alex had built and the sudden, relentless reality of new parenthood was catastrophic. Alex, an only child who had grown up without a father, was equally lost. Olivia became consumed by baby-tracking apps, refused to be called 'mum', stopped speaking and getting out of bed. She identified the familiar signs — the same warning signals from when she was 14 — but couldn't stop the spiral. Her bad habits returned. Alex found out.

Claims made here

Olivia Bowen's first labour with son Abel lasted approximately 38 hours.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Health & Fitness
Postnatal Depression: Losing Herself After Abel

Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love … · Jul 14, 2026 Health & Fitness

After Abel's traumatic 38-hour labour and forceps birth, Olivia spiralled. She became obsessed with baby-tracking apps, dreaded being called 'mum', stopped getting out of bed, and eventually the self-harm she thought was behind her returned. Alex was struggling too — and for the first time, neither of them could hold the other up.

Chapter 23 · 1:24:53

Olivia's Experience of Vanishing Twin Syndrome

Olivia had never heard of vanishing twin syndrome before it happened to her. The second pregnancy began with the joy of discovering twins — she and Alex started planning for two children, looking at cars and rooms — before a scan at nine weeks revealed one baby had no heartbeat. Unlike a miscarriage, there was no physical loss event. The baby simply stayed, present on every scan, until approximately 19 weeks, then vanished into her body. Paul adds the statistics: the syndrome affects 15–35% of twin pregnancies and half of all pregnancies involving three or more embryos. Speaking about it publicly on Loose Women generated thousands of messages from women who had experienced the same thing — including a 65-year-old woman who had carried this unnamed loss for four decades. Olivia describes the lost twin as her sunset baby and Sienna as her sunrise.

Chapter 24 · 1:31:33

Paul Shows Olivia a Photo of Her Family

Olivia had never heard of vanishing twin syndrome before it happened to her. The second pregnancy began with the joy of discovering twins — she and Alex started planning for two children, looking at cars and rooms — before a scan at nine weeks revealed one baby had no heartbeat. Unlike a miscarriage, there was no physical loss event. The baby simply stayed, present on every scan, until approximately 19 weeks, then vanished into her body. Paul adds the statistics: the syndrome affects 15–35% of twin pregnancies and half of all pregnancies involving three or more embryos. Speaking about it publicly on Loose Women generated thousands of messages from women who had experienced the same thing — including a 65-year-old woman who had carried this unnamed loss for four decades. Olivia describes the lost twin as her sunset baby and Sienna as her sunrise.

Claims made here

Vanishing twin syndrome affects 15–35% of all twin pregnancies.

Paul C. Brunson no source cited

Vanishing twin syndrome affects one half of pregnancies with three or more embryos.

Paul C. Brunson no source cited

Vanishing twin syndrome can occur without pain or bleeding, with the deceased foetus remaining in the womb before being absorbed into the body.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Health & Fitness
Talking About Vanishing Twin Syndrome Changed Other Women's Lives

Olivia Bowen: I Lost Myself After Giving Birth & What Love … · Jul 14, 2026 Health & Fitness

When Olivia spoke about vanishing twin syndrome on Loose Women, thousands of women messaged her saying they had never felt so seen. One woman, aged 65, came up to her after the show and revealed she had experienced it 40 years ago and never even known it had a name until that moment.

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Claims & Sources

3 / 12 cited (25%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Almost one third (32%) of 17 to 24 year olds have self-harmed or attempted to self-harm at some point.

Paul C. Brunson Young Minds

Almost 70% of young people with a probable mental health condition have self-harmed or attempted to self-harm.

Paul C. Brunson Young Minds

Incidents of self-harm in the UK have increased from approximately 3.8% in 2000 to around 10% today.

Paul C. Brunson no source cited

83% of people who had self-harmed reported doing so to relieve unpleasant feelings of anger, tension, anxiety or depression.

Paul C. Brunson NHS survey

Vanishing twin syndrome affects 15–35% of all twin pregnancies.

Paul C. Brunson no source cited

Vanishing twin syndrome affects one half of pregnancies with three or more embryos.

Paul C. Brunson no source cited

Love Island Season 2 attracted on average over 1.4 million viewers per episode.

Paul C. Brunson no source cited

Olivia Bowen was the first Love Island contestant to secure a brand deal with a UK high street retailer, specifically Quiz.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Olivia Bowen was the first Love Island contestant to present on This Morning.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Olivia lost approximately two stone in a matter of weeks following her breakup with her toxic ex-boyfriend.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Olivia Bowen's first labour with son Abel lasted approximately 38 hours.

Olivia Bowen no source cited

Vanishing twin syndrome can occur without pain or bleeding, with the deceased foetus remaining in the womb before being absorbed into the body.

Olivia Bowen no source cited