Rossendale Free Press

It takes effort not to look too old and decrepit

HE WORKS HARD TO STAY YOUTHFUL BUT LIMAHL TELLS LISA SALMON WHY HE’S NOT TOO SHY TO TALK ABOUT HIS IBS

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IT’S not cool to talk about your tummy troubles when you’re a pop star. But when you’re a pop star in your 60s, what’s the point of pretending things work like they used to in your Eighties heyday?

You have to be truthful about the realities of life, insists a disarmingl­y honest Limahl – the spiky-haired frontman of Kajagoogoo, the 1980s chart-toppers who had a huge hit with Too Shy.

He is still enjoying a pop career and is promoting his new Christmas single, One Wish for Christmas. But he has come to terms with ageing and health problems.

“As you get older, your joints, your eyesight, hips and knees wear out, and I think the tummy and the bowel etc, which are constantly working, are just another thing that goes,” says Limahl, who has irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and lactose intoleranc­e.

“I’m 63 next – you can’t ignore that. People mainly remember me from 40 years ago when I was 23, so I feel a responsibi­lity not to look too old and decrepit. It takes effort! I haven’t embraced my grey – it looks great on George Clooney, but I don’t want it on me!”

The singer’s weathered well and really doesn’t look hugely different from the Eighties idol he once was (although the hair is more floppy than spiky now, and no longer twotone black and white, but definitely not grey or thinning).

But his life isn’t only about singing and image – health is vitally important too, and he’s had trouble with his digestive system for years.

However, he says he got to the root of the problem earlier this year.

“I think the IBS has been brewing over a few years, and it came to a head this year,” he reveals. “It seemed like everything I ate caused bloating, which feels very uncomforta­ble and looks awful. If I was performing that day, I’d got to the point where I didn’t want to eat because I was scared of going on stage and bursting out of my clothes and looking like I’d put on five stone. I look pregnant if I eat the wrong things, it’s awful.

“With IBS, there are different symptoms for different people. Some people get diarrhoea, but with me it’s the opposite, I can get constipate­d, but that exacerbate­s the problem. And of course it’s not very cool to talk about constipati­on as a pop star!

“But I have to face the realities of life, like everyone else. There’s mental and physical pain involved.”

Limahl was eventually diagnosed with IBS after having blood tests, an endoscopy and a CT scan, and admits: “When it started, oh God I was worried! I thought the worst.”

He went to see a qualified nutritioni­st, who told him his problem was with

FODMAP foods – an acronym for fermentabl­e oligosacch­arides, disacchari­des, monosaccha­rides, and polyols – simple sugars that can be poorly absorbed and rapidly fermented by the gut.

“Researcher­s have found people with IBS don’t tolerate certain sugars in foods,” explains Limahl. “They don’t get digested, and once they hit the colon all the bad bacteria go, ‘Woo-hoo, it’s party time’!”

With the guidance of his nutritioni­st, Limahl went on an eliminatio­n diet for to find out exactly which foods caused his problems.

“There are so many foods that affect me,” he says. “There’s a lot of things ending in ‘ol’ that are often in manufactur­ed cakes and biscuits that I can’t have.

“I’ve just got to find the stuff I can eat. You’ve got to dig around and make it work for you and then it’s ok. I thank my lucky stars at least I can eat some stuff. I suddenly got my life back!”

He explains that certain FODMAPS are ok for certain people, and stresses: “It’s very individual. IBS is such a massive, broad-spectrum umbrella. It really restricts my diet, but I’d rather be in control than just be stressed about it all the time.

“If you decide to have a blow-out for a special occasion, you know you’re going to suffer for two days, but you have that choice.”

At around the same time as his IBS was becoming more of a problem, Limahl also discovered he was lactose intolerant. But he says he now carries a supplement with an enzyme in it to help him tolerate lactose. “It’s about taking back a bit of control. I also carry a supplement to help me tolerate oligosacch­aride foods like beans, peas, lentils, and even oats.”

Limahl, who lives with his partner Steve in Hertfordsh­ire, admits the IBS affects his mental health too.

“You feel mentally ill when you eat something that doesn’t agree with you.

“I look down, my stomach is bloated, I feel uncomforta­ble. It takes your mind off concentrat­ing on whatever you’re doing, and it lasts for hours – it’s quite awful. I reckon there’s millions of people around the world suffering with these types of symptoms. “My nutritioni­st says that in the near future low FODMAP foods will be as common in restaurant­s as vegan food is today.

“It’s a new science that people are finding out about, and I’m glad I can talk about it and hopefully spread the word.”

Limahl’s new single One Wish For Christmas is available now

Almost everything I ate caused bloating. I look pregant if I eat the wrong things

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 ?? ?? Limahl is happy to have solved his diet problems
Limahl is happy to have solved his diet problems
 ?? ?? Limahl in the 80s...
Limahl in the 80s...
 ?? ?? .... and now
.... and now

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