‘I’ve lost weight, but it’s a constant battle’: Robbie Williams details his diet struggle, says ‘better than okay’ after getting slim
Robbie Williams celebrated the release of his new album on Friday and admitted he was happy with his recent weight loss.
The 48-year-old singer, who has spoken candidly about her addiction to both food and drugs in the past, added that she has learned to accept herself and is “doing better than okay.”
His latest album, XXV, comes 25 years after he left Take That, embarked on a solo career, and then battled diets and drugs.
‘So-so’: Robbie Williams, 48, admitted he’s finally happy after his recent weight loss as he celebrated the release of his new album on Friday (pictured August 2022)
In an interview with The Sun, Robbie said: I have a huge person inside me.
“Thank God for my vanity and thank God for my job because I’m afraid to think what I would look like and what I would be if I didn’t do what I do for a living. .”
Robbie confessed that he has an “addiction” and struggles with this sugar intake and healthy food intake.
The Past: The singer, who has spoken out about his addiction to both food and drugs, has learned to accept himself and adds that he is “doing better than normal” (pictured in 1996).
The singer, who has now been sober for 20 years, has revealed that he’s finally learned to accept himself after a tough past.
He added: If anyone thought I was walking around with an exaggerated sense of self-importance, it’s actually the opposite.
That’s because Robbie frankly revealed that when he got high and went food shopping, he gained a huge amount of weight.
The singer found herself on a slippery slope when she left Take That in 1995 and adjusted to her new life.
He added: If anyone thought I was walking around with an exaggerated sense of self-importance, it’s actually the opposite.
Speaking on his At Home with Williamses podcast, the star said his drug use and bad diet contributed to his weight gain.
He said: “I rented an apartment. I went to the supermarket for the first time. Once. Stoned. Don’t go to the stoned supermarket. You make a bad choice.”
“I opened the fridge and there was a whole Mr. Kipling cake. And this moment made me think, ‘Wait a minute, I don’t live with my mother. I can eat all that cake.’
He explained that his newfound freedom caused him to gain weight in the months that followed.
Tough: After leaving Take That in 1995, he found himself on a slippery slope (to the left in 1992 with Mark Owen, Gary Barlow, Jason Orange and Howard Donald LR). drawn)
He said: “It was January. By February I was morbidly obese. As quoted in the press in 1996, I looked like a farm animal.”
Robbie has been open about his struggles with drugs and weight in the past, becoming an ambassador for Weight Watchers in 2018.
Starr began rehab in 2007 after taking speed, acid, heroin, cocaine, and “heart-stopping” doses of prescription drugs.
He previously admitted that he was “24 hours from death” at the height of his addiction when he was drinking a dangerous cocktail of drugs.
He said in 2009, “I would do 20 Vicodins in one night. I would be doing it in a tremendous, heart-stopping amount.
The Battle: The pop star, pictured in 1996, entered rehab in 2007 after taking speed, acid, heroin, cocaine, and “heart-stopping” doses of prescription drugs.
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