The pop icon explained that this overwhelming pressure manifested as a desperate internal drive to maintain a flawless public image. “I was like, ‘I have to be worthy of this success, I have to be perfect. I have to be the absolute best version of myself,'” she recalled. To cope, she developed a strict mental armor to endure relentless public scrutiny, explaining: “That was a little mantra that I had… ‘You’re a robot.’ Because I loved and I love being a Spice Girl so much and I love performing and this was all of my dreams come true.”
Behind the scenes, however, the star was spiraling into isolation. “I became really insular, and I was controlling what I was eating. I was exercising obsessively. I was really kind of withdrawing from the band as well because I was really embarrassed about it,” she admitted. “I knew I had an eating disorder, but I wouldn’t acknowledge it.” After years of restricting her intake, her body eventually rebelled, leading to uncontrollable nighttime binging. “It was petrifying,” she stated. Her true turning point arrived in 2000, when her physical and mental health reached a breaking point. “I was crying constantly, struggling to get out of bed,” she said. “That’s when I first went to my GP, and that’s when he said to me, ‘Well, first of all, we need to address your depression.’ That felt like a weight lifted off.”
The Louis Theroux Podcast is available on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.