A LANDSCAPE artist has bravely revealed how a secret battle with anorexia almost cost him his life.

Over the past three decades, Iwan Gwyn Parry, who was born in Holyhead, Anglesey, has established himself as an award-winning painter, whose work has featured on national television, and at galleries in London, Cardiff and Dublin.

But this success has come despite secretly living with anorexia nervosa, a serious mental illness which has the highest mortality rate among all psychiatric illnesses.

The eating disorder causes people to limit how much they eat and exercise as much as possible, in order to achieve an abnormally low body weight.

The 52-year-old says he lived in "denial" about the seriousness of his illness for many years, keeping it hidden from friends and colleagues.

In October 2022, weighing just five stone and with his body covered in sores and bruises, Iwan turned up at Ysbyty Gwynedd’s Emergency Department in Bangor and asked for help.

Speaking on the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board podcast to mark Eating Disorders Awareness Week, where the focus is on eating disorders in men, the Bethesda based painter said: “I think there’s been various episodes throughout my life and I’ve just kind of brushed it off and thought ‘well I feel better today so I’ll control it today’, but it dictates and influences every decision you make in terms of food and in terms of your social life and relationships.

"When I had to go into a social situation and eat something I dreaded it. I couldn’t wait to go home so I could vomit. And when I felt empty, I felt back to myself again.”

Now on a ‘rocky road to recovery’, thanks to ongoing support from Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board’s Specialist Adult Eating Disorders Service (SAEDS) and staff at a specialist inpatient eating disorder unit, he has decided to bravely share his experience in a bid to help others.

Iwan spent three decades concealing the illness from friends and colleagues, fearing that he would be stigmatised, or that his complex condition would be misunderstood.

In October 2022, Iwan’s condition deteriorated to the point he weighed just five stone, and he describes himself as being a ‘shell of a man’.

“I was very close to basically going to meet my maker. I just decided to walk into A&E one day and I said I need help and support. The realisation was I couldn’t continue like this – physically, mentally, emotionally or spiritually. I just couldn’t function. I’d had enough and it was making my life totally unmanageable. Physically, I felt drained, I had no energy, my body was covered in sores and bruises – it was not good at all. I looked a shell of a man. That’s what it does – it takes the mind emotionally and spiritually away and then you’re just left as an empty shell. And that’s all I was.”

Iwan is encouraging others who may be struggling to reach out for support, describing it as the best decision he ever made.

“Sometimes in life you can’t make it on your own and the key thing is to surrender to it and accept that you’re ill. There is support our there if you reach out for it," he said. 

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“The NHS staff who have supported me are quite remarkable, angelic people who saved me from myself really. And they shared the journey to a painful recovery with me. The NHS is an incredible service, despite its difficulties.

“You feel naked at the beginning – both physically and mentally. But now I feel I’ve grown in stature, in confidence and self-esteem – and I’m enjoying life again.”

Looking to the future, Iwan says despite facing a "rocky road to recovery", he has a "burning passion for living".

He added: “I’m happy. I haven’t been happy for a long time. I don’t have to hide, pretend, conceal, brush things aside. I can just be maybe the person I lost over the last 15 years.

“There is a rocky road ahead but it’s a rocky road to recovery and not to ruin. I’ve been on that road – I’ve travelled it, trampled on it but no more."

Iwan was speaking on ‘Anorexia and Me’, a special episode of the BCUHB podcast.

Anyone is is struggling with an eating disorder, or knows someone that is struggling, can visit beat for free help and advice.

GPs may refer patients to more specialist support, if appropriate. All referrals are screened by BCUHB’s mental health team, who will consider whether support from the Specialist Adult Eating Disorders Service, a mental health team, or both, is most appropriate.