Published
1 mês agoon
By
“For your friends, this will last 10 minutes. For you, it’ll be a lifetime.” I’ll never forget the words of my housemistress, crouched over me in her office, as she held off the people trying to find and comfort me. I’d just been told my dad had died, on a cold day on a crowded platform at Liverpool Street Station. It was the worst day of my life—and the beginning of a totally new one.
Now, 15 years and a carousel of therapists (and types of therapy) later, I can speak about it with some rationality: it wasn’t my fault and I couldn’t have done anything differently to save him. From Louis Tomlinson’s recent interview on the Diary of a CEO podcast, it seems he’s reached the same conclusion.
“I felt utterly guilty and I felt powerless,” he shares, when asked about the death of his sister, Félicité, in 2019. “To lose my sister in the manner that we did, even though I knew that it wasn’t fair on myself… I felt like I’d let my sister and I’d let my mum down, really.”
Félicité died as the result of an accidental overdose on a combination of drugs, and Tomlinson describes her as being “fragile” in the time leading up to it. His mother, Johannah Deakin, died in 2016 from acute leukaemia, and his friend and One Direction bandmate Liam Payne after falling from a hotel roof in 2024.
“I felt that I’d failed her,” Tomlinson says of Deakin, referring to the time of his sister’s death, “and I know if she was here now she would say that you didn’t. But it doesn’t change the feeling.”