Latest news with #Priory

South Wales Argus
16-05-2025
- Entertainment
- South Wales Argus
Dalmatian Bike Ride returning to Newport this summer
The Dalmatian Bike Ride will be held on Saturday, June 7, starting from Caerleon, with various routes available. Each year, the event features a raffle to raise money for St David's Hospice Care. The raffle, supported by Evans Electrical Ltd, offers a chance to win prizes sourced throughout the year by the company's staff, helping the hospice provide free services. The draw will take place at a family festival in the Priory Hotel & Restaurant gardens at 4pm on June 7. Tickets can be purchased online at The raffle is open to those aged 16 and over, with tickets allocated randomly and entered directly into the draw. Winners will be notified automatically. The Dalmatian Bike Ride is sponsored by Hedyn. New for 2025, the event will also feature a 5km walk for participants. More information about the event can be found on the St David's Hospice website.


Daily Mail
13-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Katie Price discusses heartbreaking suicide attempt that left her with 'a black eye' as she 'self medicated on coke during lowest moment'
Katie Price opened up about her heartbreaking suicide attempt that left her with 'a black eye' during a new interview on Tuesday. The former glamour model, 46, recalled 'self medicating on coke during her lowest moment' four years ago that left her 'not wanting to be here.' Katie, who is now in a happy relationship with JJ Slater, admitted herself into the Priory shortly after she noticed she was relying on drugs and alcohol as a coping mechanism. Speaking on the latest episode of Paul C Brunson's podcast, We Need To Talk, she spoke about her defining life moments and her healing journey. The TV personality began: 'I tried to commit suicide and then I woke up. My phone was down the toilet. I had a black eye, Just didn't want to be here anymore. 'The lowest moment for me was when I took coke, self medicating on it because it blocked everything…This was about four years ago, I'd say.' While most people who take cocaine get an intense high, it shut Katie down. This is typical of people who suffer from ADHD, and it was after her stay in the Priory that she had a formal diagnosis. She continued: 'It was the denial to my family. 'Kate are you alright?' [her family would ask] and I'd be like 'yeah yeah I'm fine, I'm fine' and then I'm in bed depressed, didn't want to get up, didn't want to have a shower, not me. 'When really when I did get up to go to work, people would be like, "are you alright?" and it was like inside I wanted to cry and go "no, I'm not' but I had to put on the face.'' In September 2021, Katie was arrested for drink-driving after flipping her uninsured BMW X5 on its side on a country lane near her home in West Sussex. She admitted drink-driving, driving while disqualified and driving without insurance at court, and immediately checked into The Priory following the arrest. Katie was handed a 16-week suspended sentence and two-year ban at Crawley Magistrates' Court. Discussing her stay at The Priory, she explained: 'I thought oh my god, I've got to do something, this isn't me. 'That's why I don't judge anyone or when they talk about mental health, because I think it is an actual, real, serious thing. If you want to help yourself, it doesn't matter who's around you, it doesn't matter who says help yourself.' Katie continued: 'You've got to want to do it yourself, and if you can't do it for yourself, you'll never get better. You have got to want to do it yourself, by taking accountability of the situation I was in and owning up to how I felt. 'You've got to take accountability to people you've hurt, you know, your family, yes, you've got to own it and realise by getting through it, what doors have opened. 'It's like the sunshine. Look what opportunities you've got now. Why? Because your head's better. 'I'm not being dictated. I control what I do. No one's controlling me. I know where I'm at. I've just been in control and communicating.' Katie also visited The Priory in September 2018 and spent 28 days in the facility after her family urged her to seek help following wild partying antics in Mallorca and a turbulent year in which she was arrested for drink-driving. At the time, she was confronted by her loved ones after shocking footage emerged of her rapping 'I love coke' during a booze-fuelled hen do. Katie broke down after the intervention and admitted she needed help to get over her chaotic behaviour, which she blamed on her PTSD. If you have been affected by this story, you can call the Samaritans on 116 123 or visit A look at Katie Price's troubled past A household name in the UK, Katie Price has lived out the highs and lows of life in the spotlight. An open book with her fans, the mother-of-five has documented many of her woes on her various reality series and in tell-all interviews. Having courted the limelight as a teenage glamour model, the public have witnessed Jordan's rocket to fame and occasional falls from grace. Despite her fame and wealth, life has not come easily for Katie, who has battled bankruptcy, burglaries, assaults and drug abuse, while also navigating a very rocky love life. Now we take a look back at her turbulent past. ROCKY ROMANCES Katie's quest for love has seen her tie the knot three times and get engaged eight. In 1996, Katie, then a surgery-free 18-year-old, got engaged to Gladiator star Warren Furman, now 48, (better known as Ace), but they split in two years later. She was also technically engaged to businessman Scott Sullivan, but has since admitted her heart wasn't in it when he gave her a ring just before she was about to enter the I'm A Celebrity jungle in 2004, where she famously met Peter Andre. Katie fell madly in love with Pete, 48, on the show and the pair got married in 2006. They went on to have two children; son Junior, 15, and Princess, 13, before they split in 2009. Admitting she was on the 'rebound' Katie started dating cage fighter Alex Reid, 45, a mere eight weeks after her split from Pete. Following a whirlwind romance the pair wed in Las Vegas in January 2010 but the marriage fell apart less than a year later. Two years later Katie fell for Argentinian model model Leandro Penna, 35, after meeting him at Elton John's Oscars party in LA. Revealing she bedded him on the first night, the pair went on to get engaged before they split in 2012. Later that year, Katie met part-time stripper and plasterer Kieran Hayler, who is nine years her junior. The pair exchanged vows a mere five weeks later with Katie already pregnant with the couple's first son Jett. However, in 2017 the pair announced they were going to divorce, three years after she found out about Kieran's affairs with her friends Jane Poutney and Chrissy Thomas. In July 2019, Katie announced she was engaged again to personal trainer Kris Boyson, 32, after a year of dating. The reality star - who was still legally married to third husband Kieran at the time- made the shock announcement during an appearance on Loose Women. Their engagement was short-lived however as the couple split in November of that year, with Katie admitting to Kris that she cheated on him. The reality star went on to find love with Carl Woods in July 2020 and the couple got engaged in April 2021. Three months later her divorce with Kieran was made official and she set about planning her wedding to Carl. However, it wasn't meant to be as in November 2022 Carl revealed he had dumped Katie after claiming he found out she allegedly slept with someone else - and admitted to it. BRUSHES WITH THE LAW Katie is no stranger to court, having risked jail time on multiple occasions due to various driving violations. In 2003, Katie swerved a speeding charge after police failed to arrest her within 12 weeks of allegedly clocking 70mph in a 40mph zone in her Range Rover. Five years later she landed three penalty points after being caught talking on her mobile phone while driving. In 2009 she failed to provide the identity of the driver after her car was allegedly caught speeding in a 30mph zone and was later handed four penalty points after being clocked at 99mph and was handed four points on her licence. The following year she was convicted for failing to be in proper control of her horsebox after veering into another lane in February and was given three points on her licence, bringing her total to 10. Later that year she was banned from driving for six months after doing 83mph in a 70mph zone in her home county of West Sussex. In 2012, Katie was disqualified for 12 months for failing to respond to two speeding tickets in September. After a quiet few years Katie landed a six-month ban in February 2018 for speeding after totting up 12 penalty points for speeding. In July, photos emerged of her driving while still banned. Then in October she was arrested on suspicion of drink driving and spent 13 hours in custody after crashing into a VW Golf and a hedge on a gated estate at 2am. In 2019 she was given a three-month ban for driving while disqualified in January of that year and was later handed a five-year restraining order banning her from contacting Michelle Penticost either directly or indirectly after hurling abuse at her during an argument at a school playground. Then in October, Katie was banned from driving for a further 18 months for failing to inform police who was behind the wheel of her pink Range Rover during a crash in Bexley, south east London. Two years later she crashed her BMW car on a country road near her West Sussex home in the early hours of the morning after drinking and taking drugs. She pleaded guilty at Crawley Magistrates of drink driving, driving while disqualified and driving without insurance and is handed a 16-week suspended prison sentence. In 2022 she then pleaded guilty to breaching a five-year restraining order not to contact, directly or indirectly, Michelle Penticost. She avoided jail again after claiming she 'misunderstood' the rules of a restraining order when she sent a 'vile and nasty' message about her ex-husband's fiancée. FINANCIAL WOES Katie was declared bankrupt in 2019 with debts of £3.2m from her failed company Jordan Trading Ltd, that was set up to oversee her perfume and cosmetics line. She set up the company in 2003 but in 2017 an application was put in to wind up the company as she tried to sort out her finances. When the mother-of-five was declared bankrupt she vowed to pay back £12,000 a month to creditors of the firm through an individual voluntary arrangement. The bankruptcy meant Katie, once worth a reported £45million, faced losing her £2million 11-bedroom mansion. She took out a second mortgage on the property in 2015, but faced monthly payments of £12,300. In June 2022 the former model had been due to attend the Royal Court of Justice to explain to a judge why she has failed to repay millions owed to creditors. However, the hearing was adjourned at the last minute with her solicitors giving no reason for Katie's no show before the court. Despite being bankrupt Katie has seemingly led a lavish life, including exotic holidays to Las Vegas and Thailand. ADDICTION STRUGGLES Katie's children have threatened to 'never speak to her again' if she took cocaine after her highly publicised battle with drugs. Katie also visited The Priory in 2018 when she spent 28 days as an inpatient after her family urged her to seek help following wild partying antics in Mallorca. At the time, she was confronted by her loved ones after shocking footage emerged of her rapping 'I love coke' during a booze-fuelled hen do. Katie broke down after the intervention and admitted she needed help to get over her chaotic behaviour, which she blamed on her PTSD. She later said: 'My family and friends were hurt, they didn't know what to do. All these years in the industry I never have [done drugs] but I purely did it to self-medicate, I went to the doctors and told them the truth... 'Self-medicating on drugs really, it was disgusting, but it was my way of dealing with it. At least I can hold my hands up, if I didn't speak out now, I would still be in a rut'. In 2020 Katie revealed she had been taking monthly drug tests to 'build trust' with her ex-husbands Peter Andre and Kieran Hayler, with whom she shares four children. In 2021, Katie crashed her BMW while double the drink-drive limit after leaving her home to allegedly hunt for drugs during an all-night alcohol and cocaine bender. In November 2022 Katie's ex Carl Woods reportedly leaked a recording of his former partner speaking about drugs. In the midst of their break-up, Carl was said to have released a recording which allegedly hears Katie saying she didn't turn up to an event 'because I was on coke'. THE MUCKY MANSION Katie purchased a sprawling property in West Sussex for £1.3million back in 2014 with the hope of turning it into a cosy family home. However the property was left in disarray after various mishaps, including fly tipping, floods, a fire and burglaries. Renovations kicked off in June 2019, but the influencer was left devastated when the mucky mansion was broken into and destroyed by intruders a year later. In June 2020, thieves broke in to steal her I'm A Celebrity rucksack and leant the shower head over the ceiling which caused the bathroom to flood and the ceiling to collapse. Just weeks later, she suffered a fresh blow as thieves broke in again, and she vowed to up security after a neighbour witnessed three men on her private property. In 2021 the place was ransacked yet again, with thieves stealing old photographs and hard drives. The following year she landed a £45,000 payday to chart her renovations in the Channel 4 series Katie Price's Mucky Mansion. She bagged a second series of the show but filming was allegedly been thrown into mayhem since her 'filthy' house is too dirty for production crews to shoot in. ASSAULT Katie suffered trauma from a young age, revealing she was raped in a park at the age of seven. The former Page 3 star detailed the damage the ordeal has caused during an appearance on Loose Women in 2017, stating: 'There was the sexual assault and I was later raped. 'I have discussed before and I do believe it led to me dressing provocatively and becoming a model. 'I had been training to be a nurse but the glamour modelling world is aimed at men. They can look but they can't touch. You can say or do what you like in a picture.' The media personality was also sexually exploited by a photographer as a child, revealing: 'He took indecent photographs that I thought were innocent at the time. I was 12. He made me do pictures where I was sticking my tongue out. They looked young and girly but to him. It is sexual. He used to make these milkshakes. 'I never took one because I didn't like it. The police when they came around.. that's what he did he made the girls drink them and he drugged them.' In 2018, Katie was raped at gunpoint during a horrifying carjacking in South Africa. Katie was thrown out of the vehicle by the attackers, during her journey from Johannesburg to Swaziland in two people carriers with the production crew. The vehicles were ransacked of laptops, iPads, passports, cash and jewellery – but the robbers left behind a fortune in camera gear which the crew had stored on board. The attackers were never apprehended. In September 2021 Katie was allegedly punched in the face at her home in Essex, with a 32-year-old man who was then held on suspicious of assault. Police were called to the former glamour model's at around 1.30am on August 23, where a man was arrested on suspicion of assault, theft and coercive and controlling behaviour. Katie was taken to hospital and was pictured the following day with bruises to her face and an injured lip. MENTAL HEALTH BATTLES Katie has been open about her struggle with anxiety and depression. In September, the mother-of-five revealed that she attempted suicide after suffering from 'anxiety, depression and major trauma' following her horrific 2018 carjacking. The reality star admitted she hit rock bottom after she was raped at gunpoint during the ordeal and tried to hang herself, but after passing out she 'saw her kids faces' and realised she 'never wanted it to happen again.' Katie also said she'll likely need therapy 'for the rest of her life,' after being diagnosed with PTSD. She has received help for her mental health struggles during several stints at The Priory. Katie thanked her therapist in a sweet Instagram post in May 2022 as she gave an update on her mental health. She penned: 'I'm so proud of myself and how far I've come changing the ways I now deal with situations that I've now learnt are my trigger points that I wasn't about to control before. 'Thank you to my therapists, consultant and my support network around me,' Katie added a red heart emoji. She added: 'Tomorrow finally is a chapter I've completed in moving forwards, I'll let you know tomorrow what it is.' FAMILY MATTERS Katie welcomed her first child, Harvey, in September 2022 but his father Dwight Yorke denied he was the father, until a DNA test proved his paternity. The former glamour model and the former premier league footballer briefly had a romance in 2001, and broke up soon after Katie fell pregnant. Katie has claimed Dwight 'disowned' their son and has no contact with him. Her relationship with her son was shown in two BBC documentaries that charted Harvey transitioning into adulthood and Katie's journey into researching for a specialist college that caters to Harvey's complex needs. Harvey is on the autism spectrum and was born with disabilities including partial blindness, ADHD and Prader-Willi syndrome. Katie is also mother to Junior, 17, and Princess, 15, with ex-husband Peter Andre and has Bunny, eight, and Jett, nine, with ex Kieran Hayler. In August 2022, Katie claimed she has limited access to her two youngest children after her already strained relationship with their father broke down. Katie's mother Amy suffers from the terminal illness idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis- which causes scarring to the lungs and makes it difficult to breathe, after being diagnosed in 2017. The star previously revealed she's begun to organise her mother's funeral, after 'accepting' her death is imminent. Katie had previously revealed she offered one of her own lungs for Amy, because she is currently waiting to see if she can have a transplant Little is known about Katie's biological father Ray after he walked out on Katie and her mother when she was just four years old. BOTCHED SURGERY AND INJURIES Katie has undergone an array of procedures over the years, including rhinoplasty, a silhouette facelift, 3D, veneers, lip fillers and Botox. In 2015, just before appearing on Celebrity Big Brother, the reality star had a botched boob reduction that left her with a hole in her breast and an implant protruding from her flesh. Katie told her shocked housemates: 'I've got no tits anymore. They've gone. There's not even anything there. If you saw what I'm like underneath. The scar's gone septic. My whole implant was hanging out on New Year's Day.' Shortly after leaving the Big Brother house she underwent corrective surgery and had her implants swapped for a D-cup. Katie claimed her first face lift in 2017 had been a botched job and went back under the knife the following year aged 40 to correct it. She said at the time 'I need to get my face re-corrected after surgeon has totally f**ked my face up'. He agent added: 'She had the thread and it really quite distorted her look. She got a lot of backlash, a lot of negative press, a lot of trolling, everyone saying she'd taken it too far, when actually it was a job that had not gone to plan.' In 2012 she jetted to Belgium to correct botched surgery on her breasts, saying her surgeon was utterly shocked by the 'awful' previous procedure. Katie said: 'They looked deformed, they were absolutely awful. That's the first time I've gone to a different surgeon. I had to go back to Frank with my head down, ashamed that I'd been to another clinic.' In August 2020, Katie revealed a freak accident had left her with two broken feet after she had plummeted 25ft off a wall at a theme park in Turkey. Upon her return to the UK, she was left using a wheelchair and fearing she would be paralysed before doctors told her she could be in recovery for up to two years and was initially unable to walk for six months. PET TRAGEDIES Katie has been lambasted by animal charities and petitions have been set up to stop her owning animals after several pets died under her care. In November 2022, Katie's beloved dog Sharon was killed when she allegedly escaped and ran onto the road where she was hit by a car. Pomeranian Sharon was picked up off the A24 by the driver of the vehicle and taken to to Arun Vets in Pulborough, West Sussex, where her death was confirmed. Weeks before she was left distraught after losing her beloved Chihuahua Captain while on holiday in Dorset. Katie's dogs Rolo, Queenie and Sparkle died in recent years, while she has also lost a pet chameleon and a beloved horse. In 2021 it was revealed she she gave away her daughter Princess' puppy Precious to a member of the crew on her TV show.


The Guardian
06-05-2025
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
Sunstruck by William Rayfet Hunter review – a Saltburn-style story of identity
The unnamed narrator of William Rayfet Hunter's debut novel, a mixed-race aspiring musician from Manchester, is plunged into an unfamiliar milieu when his posh university friend, Lily, invites him to spend a summer at her parents' chateau in the French countryside. There's an undercurrent of unease – at one point he is mistaken for staff – but the family are welcoming. Lily's bisexual brother, Felix, a handsome actor and enfant terrible who has just emerged from a stint in the Priory, is especially friendly. A relationship develops, which brings perks for the narrator: Felix's father gives him a cushy job at his property firm, and his mother promises to pull strings and get him an audition with the Royal Academy. It all seems too good to last – and so it proves. Sunstruck is a story about identity and belonging. The protagonist had hung out with goth kids at school; his black best friend, Jasmine, teasingly nicknames him 'WhiteBoy' because he is so out of touch with black pop culture. But when the action moves to London in the second half of the novel, and particularly after a black friend of Jasmine's is badly beaten up by police at the Notting Hill carnival, a racial consciousness gradually awakens within him. He suspects that he'll never be truly accepted in Felix's world, and their relationship is troublingly imbalanced. Yet he can't quite tear himself away: 'The intoxicating sense of belonging, of moving through a space I didn't know existed … this is something I cannot give up.' Psychological damage from a traumatic childhood makes the narrator particularly susceptible to Felix's charms. We learn, through a series of poignant flashbacks, that his mother suffered from severe mental health problems, and they have been estranged for many years. However, we get little sense of what makes him tick in the here and now; he's something of a passenger in his own story, defined more by disconnectedness than any personality of his own. His outstanding traits are physical attractiveness and an agreeable manner, but these are not much good to the reader. The first-person voice is underwhelming company on the page, at one point musing tritely on the melancholia of birthdays. Lily's siblings call her Magpie, 'Because she collects beautiful things' – perhaps he is simply a himbo? Luckily, there's plenty of plot; the novel's brisk pacing, together with its shrewd blend of emotional sincerity, brooding intrigue and political overtones, make for a lively beach read. The prose reads like a cross between an airport romance and a screenplay for a Saltburn-style television drama. Heightened emotions manifest, time and again, in intense sensations in the narrator's chest. The characters in Lily and Felix's milieu feel like stock types, alternating between blithe, jolly-hockey-sticks esprit and sociopathic coldness, and the descriptions of upper-class opulence have a similarly generic quality: a great many people and things 'glitter' and 'glow'; clothes, drinks and lovers are 'expensive' or 'expensive-looking'. At times, the narrator himself seems to have half an eye on screen adaptation: 'The shaft of light slides from my face to his' while the lovers cuddle; after an embrace, 'our reflections blur inside the window'. Some moments are downright schlocky: 'an instant, a flash of something like fury in Felix's eyes … it flares and bursts like the filament in a camera bulb.' Early on in Sunstruck, the narrator happens across the headless torso of an alabaster statue of Venus, the Roman goddess of love. Felix's mother had made it, and Felix had decapitated it in a fit of rage – 'A warning not to get in my son's way,' she quips. Here is the novel in microcosm: the on-the-nose metaphor; the sinister, hiding-in-plain-sight menace; and our dozy, hapless hero, too mesmerised to heed the signs. Sign up to Inside Saturday The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend. after newsletter promotion Sunstruck by William Rayfet Hunter is published by Merky (£16.99). To support the Guardian, order your copy at Delivery charges may apply.


Press and Journal
25-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Press and Journal
Priory boss defends May Day prices - as Belmont Street venue tickets in high demand
The boss of Priory on Belmont Street has opened up about his plans for the highly anticipated May Day weekend. Grant Leslie is hoping to have one of the best Sundays of 2025 when the May Day weekend rolls around. The venue has recently undergone a major makeover and May Day will be one of its first big events since reopening. Already, tickets have been selling out fast, with other venues on Belmont Street charging up to £56 per entry ticket, such as Revolución de Cuba. Soul, Paramount and Motif were selling tickets for between £16 and £55, although some were combination tickets for multiple venues. Grant was keen for the 900-capacity venue to be the go-to destination for the May Day afterparty, planning to open only from 10pm until 3am. However, on release of the first batch of tickets, he soon realised demand was very high and adapted his plan. The first release was priced at just £13.44, the second at £16.80, the third at £22.55, and the final release at £28.25. Priory will now be open from 12pm until 9pm during the day for partygoers. It will then reopen at 10pm after a quick turnaround for the afterparty. He also defended the high ticket prices of other venues. He said: 'A lot of the big venues are putting on big acts. It's costing them money to actually run the events. That's why they've got a high ticket price attached to them. 'Unfortunately, we've all got bills to keep and some of these things cost money to get put on and other venues have had to put tickets on sale, which is fair enough.' Grant revealed he was in talks with an act that wanted £45,000 to perform at his venue – this would have bumped up the ticket price to £50 each. However, he believes people who want to go out for May Day budget for such an occasion. He said: 'We want Priory to be the final destination for partygoers on May Day.' The nightclub has been open for a few weeks and Grant says they have been able to capture the 25-plus demographic, while the beer garden will open just in time for May Day. He also says that Priory's drinks rates will remain as normal on May Day. He added: 'The feedback from customers who come into Priory since its reopened has been amazing. They are really happy that we are open again.' In a break with tradition, Prohibition, also owned by Grant, will offer free entry on May Day, with entertainment from a Pitbull tribute act. Grant says the venue has been free entry for the past 16 years. He intends to keep it that way, as there were little extra costs involved for May Day. Read more: Review: I visit Aberdeen's The Priory on opening night for my first Purple Rain


BBC News
11-04-2025
- Health
- BBC News
Mental illness shouldn't define us, says Woodbridge runner
A marathon runner who said he refused to be defined by a mental illness he had as a child has been pounding the pavements as part of a 365-day Berry, 23, from Woodbridge, Suffolk, is running at least 7.46 miles (12km) every day in 2025 to raise money for Suffolk Mind – and he has just conquered his 100th running coach had anorexia for six years from the age of 11 and hoped his year-long, 2,721 mile (4380km) run would encourage more people to speak out about their mental health struggles."I am very lucky to still be here today and I do not take that for granted, but some people do still suffer in silence, so my goal is to get more men talking," he said. "I think we still don't talk about our feelings enough and it can be really tough - 12 men take their own life every day in the UK, so that's why the number 12 has such significance."Even going for a run is really helpful and I just want people to have meaningful connections and speak about their feelings." Mr Berry, who ran a marathon in two hours and 24 seconds - his personal best time - was driven to embark on the challenge after his high school friend took his own life."I have always wanted to do a charity challenge but that was a real calling for me to take action," he added."My parents work in the mental health sector so it has been a part of my life for as long as I have been alive and I've also struggled with my own mental health battles." 'Anorexia doesn't define me' Mr Berry was diagnosed with anorexia as a schoolboy and missed out on large portions of education due to having to spend time "in and out of hospital".According to the Priory charity, about 25% of those affected by an eating disorder are male, while about 10% of all people affected by an eating disorder suffer from anorexia Eating Disorders said anorexia nervosa has the highest mortality rate of any mental illness."Still now there is not much support and I think people don't understand the illness and it can be judged in an unfair ways, in males, especially," he told the BBC."Anorexia is the most deadly of all mental illnesses, but I am fully recovered now and I don't want it to become my identity."I've found myself now and, while it made me who I am, it doesn't define me - I am Cooper." Mr Berry, who recently ran 49 miles (79km) across Lanzarote and completed the Berlin Marathon, has 265 days of the challenge left to complete."I've been running for the majority of my life now, so it's just all about knowing when to put your foot on the accelerator and when to take it off," he said."It's been a crazy journey so far but I am glad to be at day 100 and I am sure I going to complete this."This isn't a gimmick or a fitness stunt, it's a personal mission to start conversations and remind people they're not alone." If you have been affected by this story or would like support then you can find organisations which offer help and information at the BBC Action Line Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.