• Home
  • 58必威
  • 必威ios下载
  • LAD Originals

U OK M8?
Free To Be
Extinct
Citizen Reef

To make sure you never miss out on your favouriteNEW stories, we're happy to send you some reminders

Click 'OK' then 'Allow' to enable notifications

Not now
OK
Advert
Advert
Advert

Christine McGuinness opens up on why she didn't leave 'unhappy' Paddy marriage

Jess Hardiman

Published
| Last updated

Christine McGuinness opens up on why she didn't leave 'unhappy' Paddy marriage

Christine McGuinness has opened up about why she didn’t leave her ‘unhappy’ marriage to presenter Paddy McGuinness, having spoken out in a new BBC documentary.

The pairannounced their splitin July last year, having been together for 15 years and married for 11.

At the time, they said in a joint statement that their priority would ‘moving forward as the best parents’ they could be for their ‘three beautiful children’, explaining: "We hadn't planned on sharing this publicly until we were ready but after the lack of privacy surrounding our personal life, we feel left with no other option but to clarify.

Christine and Paddy McGuinness. Credit: Instagram/@mrscmcguinness
Christine and Paddy McGuinness. Credit: Instagram/@mrscmcguinness
Advert

"A while ago we took the difficult decision to separate but our main focus as always is to continue loving and supporting our children.”

They said the decision had not been easy, but added: "We'll always be a loving family, we still have a great relationship and still live happily in our family home together.

"We hope this now draws a line under anymore unwanted and unnecessary intrusion into our private life.”

Christine, 34, has now revealed why she had stayed in therelationshipdespite feeling ‘unhappy’, having spoken about what happened in a new BBCdocumentarycalledChristine McGuinness: Unmasking My Autism, which explores the topic of women and girls withautismwho go undiagnosed – as she had.

Advert

Loading…

The model was diagnosed with autism at the age of 33, admitting she had ‘struggled’ throughout her life.

In the new programme, she explains how it was her autistic traits that kept her in the marriage as she finds ‘change’ particularly difficult.

Christine said: “I didn’t want my family to ever fall apart and that’s why I stayed married.

Advert

"As an autistic woman, I like to stay where I’m comfortable, I like things to stay the same."

She continued: “I understand myself better now because that’s where I was comfortable just knowing that it was me, Patrick and the children – but sometimes change has to happen.

She said there was something 'comfortable just knowing that it was me, Patrick and the children'. Credit: Instagram/@mrscmcguinness
She said there was something 'comfortable just knowing that it was me, Patrick and the children'. Credit: Instagram/@mrscmcguinness

“You just have to deal with it in the best way possible.”

Advert

She said when she first met Paddy, he felt like a ‘very safe’ influence in her life.

The forthcoming documentary, which airs next week, also sees Christine discuss her eating disorder as a young girl and sexual abuse as a teenager.

She added: “I’m trying to not ‘people please’ as much, which is hard because that’s just naturally me. I hate the thought of upsetting anyone, it really upsets me, I feel it a lot.”

Christine McGuinness: Unmasking My Autismairs on Wednesday 15 March on BBC One.

Featured Image Credit:BBC/WENN Rights Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo

Topics:Celebrity,Documentaries,Paddy McGuinness

Jess Hardiman
More like this
Advert
Advert
Advert

Chosen for YouChosen for You

58必威

Model convinced police 'would kill her' after £1 million of drugs found in her luggage

2 hours ago

Most Read StoriesMost Read

Gordon Ramsay show axed by ITV after just one series

4 hours ago