Sarah Beeny’s Courageous Message to Princess catherine Sends Shockwaves Through EDEN CONFIDENTIAL
EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Brave Sarah Beeny’s very personal message of hope to the Princess of Wales
Having survived a brave battle with cancer herself, Sarah Beeny has a message of hope for the Princess of Wales.
‘I feel really sorry for Kate, but treatment now is so much better than it used to be,’ the Property Ladder presenter tells me.
‘A lot of our fears are based on having lost someone we love ten or 20 years ago, but medicine has moved on so much since – it’s a completely different picture.’
Catherine, 42, revealed in a moving and video message in March that she was in the early stages of treatment after a cancer diagnosis.
She said it was a ‘huge shock’ after an ‘incredibly tough couple of months’. Details of the cancer have not been disclosed.
Cancer survivor Sarah Beevy (pictured) has a message of hope for the Princess of Wales
Kate revealed in a moving video message in March that she was in the early stages of treatment following a cancer diagnosis
Sarah, 52, who shares the same birthday as Catherine, January 9, revealed her breast cancer diagnosis in 2022 and, after gruelling chemotherapy treatment and a double mastectomy, was given the all-clear by doctors last April.
She memorably posed for the cover of the Daily Mail’s Weekend magazine with a shaved head, saying cancer patients were often ‘ashamed’ to go bald.
She tells me that deciding to ‘walk around with a bald head made it easier’.
Speaking at a London event for Dettol’s GermWare range of copper antibacterial items, she says: ‘Losing your hair as a woman, if you look back through history, is often a punishment, something someone does to you.
‘You’re normally a victim, like in Game of Thrones – a punishment to a woman. So it feels disempowering losing your hair.’
The Channel 4 presenter, who left London for Somerset in 2019 with her husband, the artist Graham Swift, and their four sons, praises Catherine’s decision to talk publicly about her diagnosis.
‘I’m really impressed that she came out and talked about it because she will raise a huge amount of awareness for people who maybe are a bit worried but won’t go to the doctor.’
She adds: ‘The future is really bright; it’s not something to be something to be remotely scared of later on. Early diagnosis is the key.’