RUTH LANGSFORD BREAKS HER SILENCE: THE EMPOWERING TRANSFORMATION AFTER HEARTBREAK THAT EVERY WOMAN NEEDS TO SEE!

Two years ago, my marriage imploded. Now, as I step into what people like to call “middle age” (and honestly, when does that even begin or end?), I feel something unexpected: momentum.

Ruth Langsford: I reckon this is just the beginning, because I believe with all my heart (and quite a bit of lived experience) that this isn¿t the winding-down bit
Ruth Langsford: I reckon this is just the beginning, because I believe with all my heart (and quite a bit of lived experience) that this isn’t the winding-down bit

I don’t see this stage of life as a winding down. Quite the opposite. With a lot of lived experience behind me, I believe this is the moment to ramp things up.

The breakdown of my marriage to Eamonn Holmes, right, in 2024 has been the focus of almost every media story about me for the past couple of years
The breakdown of my marriage to Eamonn Holmes, right, in 2024 has been the focus of almost every media story about me for the past couple of years

Over years of conversations — in  TV studios, supermarkets, online, at events, and with friends — I’ve noticed a pattern. So many women spend mid-life playing small. Putting everyone else first. Smiling through pain. Saying “I’m fine” when we are anything but.

I reached a point where I thought: enough. This is our time. Not in a selfish way, but in a joyful, arms-wide-open kind of way.

Adapted from Feeling Fabulous by Ruth Langsford (Hodder & Stoughton, £22), to be published February 26
Adapted from Feeling Fabulous by Ruth Langsford (Hodder & Stoughton, £22), to be published February 26

That’s easy to say — and much harder to do — especially when life throws its worst at you: divorce, illness, grief, loss. I’ve lived through all of them. And I’m still standing.

When the Life You Imagined Disappears

My adored border collie cross Maggie was snoozing in her bed and the day stretched out luxuriously in front of me with no plans. I realised that this feeling I had was contentment
My adored border collie cross Maggie was snoozing in her bed and the day stretched out luxuriously in front of me with no plans. I realised that this feeling I had was contentment

The breakdown of my marriage to Eamonn Holmes in 2024 has dominated headlines about me ever since. At one of the most painful moments of my life — when I wanted nothing more than to hide — I was confronted daily with speculation and commentary.

Some people want every detail. Others couldn’t care less. The truth is, I won’t publicly dissect something that involves other people.

What I can share is how it affected me emotionally — because I know many of you are walking a similar path.

In the early days, the overwhelming feeling was sadness. After 26 years together, the future I had imagined vanished. I had expected us to be together forever. Accepting that this wouldn’t happen was devastating.

I was shocked. Lost. Afraid.

What if I couldn’t cope alone?
What if I was lonely forever?
What if I got ill? Lost my job? Had no one?

Talking to others going through separation helped me realise these fears are universal — and often wasted energy when you most need strength.

I had to grieve what was lost. But I also had to look at the life still ahead of me.

Learning I Could Stand Alone

One night, early on, the electricity went off. I checked the circuit board, fixed it — and suddenly realised I’d always done these things. I didn’t need someone to rescue me.

When Eamonn and I first met, I had a toolbox. He didn’t.

That moment stuck with me.

By telling myself I couldn’t cope, I was really saying I couldn’t cope without a man. That wasn’t true — and it wasn’t fair on myself.

Time, as cliched as it sounds, really does help. You don’t rush grief. You wade through it. One day, without noticing, you laugh again. Memories sting less.

Support comes in many forms — friends, dogs, wine, and sometimes therapy.

I resisted therapy at first. I didn’t think I needed it. I was wrong.

For weeks, my therapist only saw the top of my head on Zoom because I cried so much. She told me: This is grief. This is trauma. You’re in shock.

That permission to fall apart changed everything.

Acceptance — The Turning Point

I’m not happy my marriage ended. But I’ve accepted it. Fighting reality is exhausting.

You can collapse — or you can cry, get up, and keep going.

I cried in the shower. Pulled myself together. Went to work. Came home. Cuddled the dog. Cooked dinner. Watched TV.

No Eat-Pray-Love escape. Just life, one day at a time.

Grief Beyond Divorce

As I move forward, I do so without my beloved sister Julia, who took her own life in 2019.

That loss broke me in ways I didn’t know were possible. The unanswered why still echoes — but now, the memories bring more smiles than tears.

I promised myself I would live fully, in her honour.

Finding Contentment Again

I don’t plan five years ahead. I focus on the next week.

I didn’t expect to be single at 66. Or to lose my sister. Or for my mum to have Alzheimer’s. But here I am.

Recently, standing in my kitchen with the sun pouring in, music playing, coffee brewing, and my dog asleep at my feet — I realised something quietly profound.

I was content.

Happy.

Not dramatically. Just peacefully.

And I can’t wait to see what comes next.


Ruth’s Mid-Life Survival Notes

  • Don’t panic — it wastes energy.

  • No sudden decisions.

  • Stop looking backwards.

  • This is your life.

  • Mid-life isn’t the end. It can be the beginning.


Adapted from Feeling Fabulous (Hodder & Stoughton), published February 26.Source: 
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/