Gordon Ramsay's daughter Holly, 21, reveals she spent three months after assault

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    ‘I had PTSD, anxiety and depression’: Gordon Ramsay’s daughter Holly, 21, reveals she spent three months in a mental health hospital after being sexually assaulted twice aged 18

    • Speaking on her 21 & Over with Holly Ramsay podcast, the celebrity offspring detailed her traumatic experience and her stay in hospital 
    • She left university after one  year and was admitted to Marylebone’s Nightingale Hospital – London’s only private mental health hospital
    • She thanked her father, 54, her mother Tana, 46, her twin, Jack, 21, sisters Megan, 23, and Matilda, 19, and baby brother Oscar, two, for their support
    • For help with any issues in this story call Refuge on 0808 2000 247, Mind on 0300 123 3393 or Samaritans on 116 123

    Gordon Ramsay’s daughter Holly has revealed she spent three months in a mental health hospital after suffering PTSD from sexual assaults.

    Speaking on her 21 & Over with Holly Ramsay podcast, the 21-year-old detailed how she was diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder at university, which was the result of two sexual assaults when she was 18. 

    She left Ravensbourne University after one year and was admitted to the Nightingale Hospital in Marylebone, London’s only private mental health hospital. 

    Emotional: Gordon Ramsay's daughter Holly has revealed she spent three months in a mental health hospital after suffering PTSD from sexual assaults

    Emotional: Gordon Ramsay’s daughter Holly has revealed she spent three months in a mental health hospital after suffering PTSD from sexual assaults

    Holly gave the heartbreaking account, as she said: ‘I went to university, studied fashion design, and I loved it. But by the second half of the first year I was being affected by my PTSD and I had no idea that this was happening.

    ‘I was going out a lot, missing class because I’d been out. I wasn’t enjoying myself. I was struggling a lot. The PTSD was a result of two sexual assaults when I was 18…

    ‘I didn’t tell anyone about it until a year afterwards. I just buried it in a box in the back of my mind. [In hospital] is was where I was diagnosed with PTSD, anxiety and depression.

    ‘Since then, I have been in therapy up to three times a week. I now have these diagnoses that I carry around with me. It’s confusing and I’m trying to take control of my narrative and use that to make something good.’ 

    Open and honest: Speaking on her 21 & Over with Holly Ramsay podcast, the 21-year-old detailed how she was diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder at university, which was the result of two sexual assaults when she was 18

    Open and honest: Speaking on her 21 & Over with Holly Ramsay podcast, the 21-year-old detailed how she was diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder at university, which was the result of two sexual assaults when she was 18

    Taking to Instagram upon the release of the podcast, Holly penned: ‘Wow. I hope by listening, we can continue to break the stigma surrounding our mental health…

    ‘Asking for help is not only the bravest thing you can do, but it is also your first step to reaching a happier & healthier you’.  

    She then gave a nod to her father Gordon, 54, her mother Tana, 46, her twin, Jack, 21, sisters Megan, 23, and Matilda, 19, and baby brother Oscar, two. 

    The Ramsay family have long been staunch mental health campaigners, with mum Tana previously revealing that the family use exercise to help with trauma. 

    Sweet: She gave a nod to her father Gordon, 54, her mother Tana, 46, and her siblings Megan, 23, Jack, 21, Matilda, 19, and Oscar, two

    Sweet: She gave a nod to her father Gordon, 54, her mother Tana, 46, and her siblings Megan, 23, Jack, 21, Matilda, 19, and Oscar, two

    On exercise and mental health, she said: ‘What it does is allow you to process things. Whether it is cycling and chatting together, or running and having a cry on your own, you have to have that release…

    ‘You also have to have those moments where you allow yourself to feel really sad, when you’re thinking, “Why me?” We’re all going to think like that occasionally. It means we can handle it. It has drawn us together as a family.

    ‘It’s also important to talk with the children and not just think everything is fine. Gordon’s a really big one for talking. Sometimes I just say to him “Seriously?”, and he’s like: “No, we have to talk about it.” Sometimes that’s irritating.’

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