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I would go for days without a meal. I convinced myself that I had to be lighter to be the best

Former Olympic athlete Colin Jackson talks to about beating his eating disorders and the importance of self-belief

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AS a former world champion hurdler, Colin Jackson has always been trim and fit. But appearance­s can be very deceptive and during his racing days, as shocking as it may at first sound, Colin was suffering from eating disorders – conditions that can affect people of all ages and background­s.

Cardiff-born Colin, now 52, had a glittering career as an athlete – successes included an Olympic silver medal, becoming world champion twice and going undefeated at the European Championsh­ips for 12 years – yet his fuel tank was virtually running on empty much of the time, as a result of his secret battle with food. He’d go for days without meals, or make himself sick when he did eat.

Colin – who recently hosted the Qube Awards, a ceremony run by leading training provider Qube Learning (qube-learning.co.uk) to celebrate the merits of apprentice­s and trainees who’ve overcome challenges to succeed and feel proud of themselves – still holds the world record for the 60m hurdles and his 1993 record for the 110m hurdles (12.91 seconds) stood unbeaten for almost 13 years.

Here, the athlete-turned-BBCpundit talks about his eating disorder and shares his advice for others.

I SUFFERED with bulimia and anorexia when I was training for the Olympics – I felt like I was overweight and eating too much. I had a job to do – and it was to run as fast as I could and I convinced myself that I had to be lighter to do it.

Most days, I was on 800-900 calories and training flat out, I would drink a coffee but go for days without a meal. I wanted to be the best and being lighter was what I thought was the way to be that.

IT was all done for tactical reasons. I wanted to weigh less, so I’d be sick or eat a lot less than what’s required to sustain a normal healthy body.

My appearance didn’t come into it, I never thought about it, it was more from a functional aspect. I do look back on photos now and see how small I was. IF I’d not had an eating disorder, I would have had a lot more energy and trained a lot better. I was fatigued and couldn’t see past what I felt was the right thing to do at the time.

On reflection, I would have been an overall better athlete and a lot happier with myself if I hadn’t suffered with bulimia and anorexia. I’M free from having an eating disorder – as soon as I retired, there wasn’t the burning necessity to change to compete. I found it easy to stop there and then, it lifted a pressure from me that perhaps I hadn’t noticed before.

It’s a hard thing to look in on when you’re in that situation yourself. I NEVER doubted my ability. I was confident and overcoming barriers was never difficult – as long as I was truly self-motivated and stayed committed, I knew I could do it.

I’m an advocate of challengin­g oneself and this is the big message Qube Learning presents and helps many individual­s with: Don’t give up, it’s never too late to learn, believe in yourself and see how life-changing it can be. You can do it.

Coming from a place where it once made sense to discipline myself in a bad and less constructi­ve way, I wish I’d had someone say to me: ‘You’re OK as you are.’

Though the journey to where I am now had its hurdles, I’m proud of myself and what I’ve achieved.

SEE qube-learning.co.uk for more details about Qube Learning. Informatio­n and support for people with eating disorders can be found through UK eating disorder charity Beat (beateating­disorders.org.uk).

 ??  ?? Athlete Colin jackson
Athlete Colin jackson
 ??  ?? Colin in action in the 60m hurdles
Colin in action in the 60m hurdles
 ??  ?? Colin has his fair share of medals
Colin has his fair share of medals

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