How To Fail With Elizabeth Day - ON PANIC ATTACKS… With Jamie Laing and Fearne Cotton
Episode Date: January 19, 2026Panic attacks are wide-spread in today’s society, and yet remain something we rarely talk about openly. So it’s vital that we normalise an experience so many of us share - because talking about it... is often the first step towards understanding, accepting and working through it. Jamie Laing and Fearne Cotton both came on How to Fail back in 2019 and spoke so honestly about their own experiences. Jamie reflected on the early days of Made in Chelsea, when he experienced panic attacks for a full year. Fearne shares how she still experiences panic attacks today and the stigma that can surround them. Hopefully this conversation feels reassuring, validating and helps to normalise a topic that has remained unnecessarily taboo for far too long. Listen to Jamie’s full episode of How to Fail here: swap.fm/l/QXKrzzpg5hULgBpXWMBY Listen to Fearne’s full episode of How to Fail here: swap.fm/l/UT0WhcQT43TY0hDtgnFW 🔗 LINKS + MENTIONS: Elizabeth’s Substack: https://theelizabethday.substack.com/ Join the How To Fail community: https://howtofail.supportingcast.fm/#content 💌 LOVE THIS EPISODE? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review – it helps more people discover these stories 👋 Follow How To Fail & Elizabeth: Instagram: @howtofailpod @elizabday TikTok: @howtofailpod @elizabday Website: www.elizabethday.org Have a failure you’re trying to work through for Elizabeth to discuss? Click here to get in touch: howtofailpod.com How to Fail is an Elizabeth Day and Sony Music Entertainment Production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts To bring your brand to life in this podcast, email podcastadsales@sonymusic.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Panic attacks are far.
more common than many of us realize. The NHS estimates that around one in ten people will experience
a panic attack at some point in their lives, and NHS England reports that women are more likely
to be affected. And yet, despite how widespread they are, panic attacks remain something we rarely
talk about openly. Many people carry a quiet sense of shame or misplaced embarrassment,
as though it's a secret they need to hide. But I believe it's vital we know. We know.
normalise and experience so many of us share because talking about it is often the first step towards
understanding, accepting and working through it. That's why I'm so grateful to my friends Jamie Lang
and Fern Cotton for joining how to fail and for speaking so honestly about their own experiences.
Jamie reflects on the early days of Maiden Chelsea when he experienced panic attacks for a full year.
Fern shares how she still experiences panic attacks today, the stigma that can surround them,
and the way she now manages and copes.
I hope this conversation feels reassuring, validating, and that it helps to normalise a topic
that has remained unnecessarily taboo for far too long.
First up, here's Jamie.
Yeah, because I think I saw in an interview that given that when you started doing Maiden Chelsea,
you had panic attacks for a year.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, it wasn't so much that.
What it was was, why I did have panic attacks.
I basically, I started doing this TV show made in Chelsea,
and it started at the very beginning where I was at Lee's University,
and I also was one of these guys who didn't really know what I wanted to do in life.
My stepfather said to me, Jamie has so much energy.
If you harness it, he can do great things.
But I was never really knew my place.
And I find that's the problem with the education system,
that if you aren't good at history or geography or math and those things,
you kind of are seen as a failure.
And I was very good at sport and all those kind of things, but I wasn't very academic because I wasn't interested in it.
So I was always seen as this kind of failure guy.
So then I went and joined.
He went to Leeds University and I was offered this TV show.
I remember I went on holiday with one of my best friend's moms, a girl called Sophie Tanner Lang, who actually is head of Endemort Shine.
And I was on holiday with her, and she said, Jamie, what are you going to do with your life?
And I said, I was about 20 years old at the time.
And I said, I'm going to be a TV presenter.
And she said, you're not.
And I said, why?
And she said, well, you're too posh.
You cannot be a TV person
and there's no way that's going to happen
And I went okay
Well I'd be not offered a TV show
With my friends about being posh
And she said don't do it
It'll be the worst I do in the entire world
Reality TV is this, it's that
It's this, it's that
And I said well I'm going to go and do it then
Because you told me I'm not going to go and do it
And I went on to this TV show
And started Made in Chelsea
And all those kind of things
And it was great fun
However what happens with doing a TV show
I suppose is that you're suddenly hit
With some sort of fame
Whatever, however miniscule
have a Z-list, people want to call it.
It's just, you know, you get some sort of profile.
You also are 20 years old and you are going, parting and all these different things.
And with that combined and that pressure, not really knowing yourself and not really knowing
what you want to do and always being seen as a failure, I had this anxiety built up in my body.
And after filming for the first six months, I suddenly started having these panic attacks.
And the problem with the panic attacks was I'm such an open person and so kind of outgoing and all these kind of things.
and suddenly from going from this incredibly outgoing open person,
I then felt that I was trapped in my own body
and I didn't want to leave the house.
And I didn't want to see people
and had social anxiety because I thought I would have a panic attack
whenever I went and saw someone.
So it was a really horrible moment.
And it lasted for about a year,
but I just didn't tell anyone
because if I told anyone, it became a reality.
And so it was really quite horrible.
But you learn so much from those kind of things.
I've got so many questions that spiral outwards from that.
Sorry, by the way, I talk so much.
It's amazing.
You're the ideal guest.
If I keep talking, I apologise.
Because so many people come on to this podcast
and say that they felt they failed at their 20s.
And I think that's because, as you rightly identify,
you're trying to find your way in a world that is confusing
because you've left full-time education
and you're still working out your own identity.
But to play out your 20s on screen
must have just been a whole heap of anxiety.
It's a weird one.
And people just,
talk about how reality shows and, you know, people are talking about these suicides and things
like that are going on reality TV. And in fact, actually, suicide is the biggest killer for males
under 45. And that's happening in all industries. It doesn't matter if you're a baker, a butcher,
and a reality star, it's happening all over the place. It's just because you have some sort of profile
that it's sort of shown across. But it's weird because your 20s, I think, is about finding
your identity and finding out who you are, as you said. And for me, I had no clue who I was,
really. I thought I did. I thought I knew everything about me, but I knew nothing. You were also
also then are playing a part on a television show and I was being myself, but then you have
the ups and the downs and these kind of things. And also, there's no stability in it as well.
You know, you could suddenly, the show could stop. They could do all these things. And then what do you
do with your life? And so with all those pressures added up, it was really quite, I sound like
I working down a mind. I mean, I got to hang out my mates and got paid to do it. It was pretty sweet.
But at the same time, it was just a combination of things. But all of my anxieties and the hepto
things happened from when I was a kid. And so I had to understand myself. And I was trying to blame it
on going out too much or doing this or doing that, all this and things. But in fact, I had to really
discover actually who I was. And I think the thing is, you know, Socrates said, right, there are two
levels of happiness, lower level and higher level. The lower level is wealth, fame, power, those kind of
things. And that's why I thought I wanted. I thought I wanted to be rich. When I was a kid, I was like,
oh no, I'm going to go and be driving a Ferrari when I'm 25 and this kind of thing.
And I thought that's what success was.
But in fact, the higher level of happiness is what Soccer says is the one you want to go for,
which is empathy, friendship, love, kindness, all those kind of things, doing good.
And I had to learn throughout my 20s, then in fact, the thing that's going to make me happy
isn't being wealthy and being famous and all those kind of things.
And all those things that you think are going to make you happy.
And you climb to the top of the mountain, you get there.
And you realize they're actually not.
make you happy, what actually makes you happy is having strong relationships with your friends,
being empathetic and having self-awareness and doing good and having a purpose. And the most important
thing I had to learn was I had to find my purpose and I couldn't find it throughout my life. I didn't
know what I wanted to do. And that's why I started to have anxiety and things like that.
Do you think you found your purpose now? I think I have. Yeah, I think so. But I've been really
quite lucky because I was able to discover what I wanted to do because I came from a family who
gave me an allowance and I went to a boarding school that taught you to stand up in front of a
crowd and be able to give us, you know, talk. I didn't have to go and work in the local ASDA to pay my
rent or look after my family or do those kind of things. I could sit on my butt and kind of go,
okay, I'm 21, what do I really want to do? I'll do this reality show. I'll do this, I'll do that
and figure out what I wanted to do. And I figured now that my purpose,
and life is to, I just love entertaining and whatever form that is, I don't mind, but as long as I
can continue to do that, I will be immensely happy. And, you know, the key is, you know, when me younger,
we were asked these things, if you had one wish, what would you wish be? And people go, oh, I want to,
you know, be the richest person in world, all this, all those kind of things. Oh, I want to have
40 girlfriends or whatever it is. But now, actually, everyone's wish what you find out is just to be
happy and that's what I had to figure out. And how did that manifest itself? In a lot of ways,
but the main one having a disordered relationship with my body and food for 10 years. And it's so
strange because I even feel, you know, nervous talking about it because I haven't. And I think I've got
to the point, which is why I wanted to talk today, that I talk the talk and I love being honest,
but I don't 100% walk the walk because I haven't gone there.
You know, I've definitely talked about a big period of depression that I've had
and I've talked about that prolifically.
And panic attacks, which was really scary to talk about because I still get them.
So there's all sorts of weirdness going on with that when you're still experiencing them.
But this one is a strange one because it's been like this sort of weird secret that I felt a little bit embarrassed about,
a little bit ashamed of, a little bit worried, like I'm still worried now, like what are people
going to think when I tell this story and share this side of myself? I have a weird worry
like I did with talking about the depression that people won't hire me to work, like silly
stigma that I still attach to all of these situations that I know loads of people are going
through. But the main problem I had and this sort of weird new release that I invented for myself
was to have bulimia. I had that for on off a good decade of my life. So the beginning of my
20s, it was quite intense and sort of ruled everything. And then in my later 20s, it was more
like a bad habit I would kick into if something emotional was happening or if I felt out of control,
it would be my go-to thing. But it wasn't as regular. And another reason why I've been nervous to talk
about it is, you know, I've experienced so many times how the press will jump on things I say
and then take them out of context and use wild headlines. And the one kind of thing I have to
talk about is the reaction that I've had to that period of my life has been a lot of, you know,
in my 30s, which have been all about health and looking after myself and eating extremely well
and healing and recovering and being really on it with my health because I denied myself the pleasure
of cooking and food for so long that it's now become my everything. So it's really important that
that side of my story is also really communicated because it's something I'm so passionate about.
And I know, because I read a lot of articles about it, there are so many people out there, men and women, going through this situation with disordered eating, bulimia, and feeling like they'll never, ever get out of it. And I don't define myself by being a bulimic. I'm not. I, for the last eight years, have been very studious with food and very careful about how I eat and how I cook and how I talk about food. And I feel really good and recovered.
I hope I'm not being naive by saying it, but I do feel like that.
It was a period of my life, but I'm not in it anymore.
It is the past.
But it does signify a big chunk of my life where I failed at being me because I'm just me these days.
So whatever anybody thinks or says, that's their issue.
Back then, I felt I couldn't be me.
It had to be something wildly different.
And that became my little secret to contain.
it, I guess. That's such a beautiful way of putting something so difficult and thank you so much for that
because I know how much it will speak to so many people, myself included. I know people very close to me
who have lived with that condition. And I think the reason it's so hard to talk about and the reason
that there's still unfair stigma attached to it is because we're expected to be perfect and you're
expected, particularly in the job that you had, to kind of have it all and to have it all
without seeming to put effort into it. And so it feeds into this narrative that you have
to be in control. And I think that one of the misunderstandings about disorder eating,
bulimia, anorexia, is that it's about your physical presentation of the outside world.
And actually, my understanding is it's a lot about control when you feel out of control.
Yeah, that's exactly what it was.
I didn't recognise that until a lot later down the line.
But for me, partly it was something that no one knew about me
because I felt at times very overexposed.
Partly that was, I take responsibility for that,
but it was still the case.
And also about control,
because I had this first chunk of my life,
which was very normal,
and I was doing normal family things.
And then the next chunk of it overnight
switched up and was just bonkers at times.
So it was a way of feeling, like,
like I was calling the shots and I was in control.
And it's sad to look back and see that it was obviously the absolute opposite of that.
I felt so out of control that it came to abusing my own body.
And it took quite a while physically to kind of move on from that.
But mentally, a very long time.
I will still have unkind thoughts about myself on a physical level
because there was an element of that in there as well.
And that's something that I remedy by doing the,
opposite, eating a really lovely meal or doing some very gentle yoga. You know, I used to, I was never
the sort of person that binged and then puked up after. I would eat relatively regular meals,
but then still go and get rid of it all and have, it felt like a release. Like every worry,
every problem thought was just like gone. It was like a little bit of euphoria afterwards. Of course
it wasn't. I want to be very clear about that. But at the time, the mental state I was in,
it did feel like that. I was exercising, you know, like going running to the gym and like pounding
my body. And now it's all about being gentle and being kind to myself and exercising when I feel
like I want to and doing it so I'm energized rather than exhausted and eating so that I'm
vibrant and energized to have energy for my family. And I also have shame attached to the fact that I
purposefully hurt my own body. When I'm so grateful for my health today, I can't tell you.
Like, absolutely the main thing I'm grateful for every day is I wake up and I'm here. I have a
healthy body. Like, thank God. And to think that I damaged it on purpose, you know, I do have
some shame attached to that. And I guess that's why I've also found it very difficult to even
admit, like, sometimes I feel like, did I make it all up? Like, did it really happen? Because I've
never talked about it. You know, even to my close friends, I haven't really felt like that was
a place I wanted to go to. And I'll go there. You know, I like being honest. I like putting it
out on the table, but this one has felt, I don't even know why, just too spiky to deal with.
