The grieving family of the dead ”love island” presenter Caroline Flack has released an unpublished post found on her phone.
The 40-year-old radio and television presenter passed away on the 15th of February. She was found dead in her East London flat after she took her life in her London flat three weeks before she was due in court for an alleged assault on her boyfriend, Lewis Burton in December 2019.
In the unpublished Instagram post written days before she killed herself, the former Love Island host denied domestic abuse and explained how her ‘whole world and future was swept from under her feet’ after her arrest for assault.
At that time, Caroline Flack was advised not to post the message but her family have now decided to release it through the Norwich-based Eastern Daily Press newspaper.
The post read; ‘For a lot of people, being arrested for common assault is an extreme way to have some sort of spiritual awakening but for me, it’s become normal.
I’ve been pressing the snooze button on many stresses in my life – for my whole life. I’ve accepted shame and toxic opinions on my life for over 10 years and yet told myself it’s all part of my job. No complaining.
The problem with brushing things under the carpet is …. they are still there and one day someone is going to lift that carpet up and all you are going to feel is shame and embarrassment.
On December the 12th 2019 I was arrested for common assault on my boyfriend… Within 24 hours my whole world and future was swept from under my feet and all the walls that I had taken so long to build around me, collapsed. I am suddenly on a different kind of stage and everyone is watching it happen.
I have always taken responsibility for what happened that night. Even on the night. But the truth is… It was an accident. I’ve been having some sort of emotional breakdown for a very long time.
But I am NOT a domestic abuser. We had an argument and an accident happened. An accident. The blood that someone SOLD to a newspaper was MY blood and that was something very sad and very personal.
The reason I am talking today is because my family can’t take it anymore. I’ve lost my job. My home. My ability to speak. And the truth has been taken out of my hands and used as entertainment.
I can’t spend every day hidden away being told not to say or speak to anyone.
I’m so sorry to my family for what I have brought upon them and for what my friends have had to go through.
I’m not thinking about ‘how I’m going to get my career back.’ I’m thinking about how I’m going to get mine and my family’s life back’.
AFP