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Chris Packham 'loathed himself' as he opens up about heartbreaking health battle

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Chris also spoke about how his love of nature has helped him manage the disorder
Chris also spoke about how his love of nature has helped him manage the disorder

CHRIS Packham has been flooded with support after revealing his struggle with Asperger's Syndrome made him 'loathe himself'.

The Springwatch presenter was diagnosed with the disorder, which is a form of autism, in his 40s.

Chris Packham has been flooded with support after revealing his struggle with Asperger's Syndrome made him 'loathe himself' eiqtidqridrrprw
Chris Packham has been flooded with support after revealing his struggle with Asperger's Syndrome made him 'loathe himself'Credit: Rex
Chris, 62, appeared on Good Morning Britain to discuss his Asperger's diagnosis
Chris, 62, appeared on Good Morning Britain to discuss his Asperger's diagnosisCredit: ITV
Chris also said being surrounded by nature helps him manage his condition
Chris also said being surrounded by nature helps him manage his conditionCredit: Channel 4 - check copyright

Appearing on Good Morning Britain, Chris, 62, opened up about how he has dealt with the condition during his life.

He told host Charlotte Hawkins: "I can only tell you about my own experience and my childhood.

"I grew up in the 60s and 70s when the condition wasn’t widely known, certainly by my parents and teachers.

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"By the time I’d got to the beginning of my teens, certainly into the early part of my 20s, mental health issues were quite considerable.

"I loathed myself, I thought that I was broken and clearly I was in a lesser cohort than most other people.”

Chris elaborated that he used to blame himself for everything that would go wrong, but finally became aware of the condition in the 1990s while dating a healthcare professional.

He added: "I’m much more confident to talk about my needs and my incapacities and things that I can do better.

“I’ll put myself forward if there’s something I am enabled to do by the condition and I will be far more frank and honest about the disabling aspects.”

Chris also spoke about how his love of nature has helped him with managing the condition.

He said: "I went as a child on my own, I thought I was going because everything I was interested in or fascinated by lived there, all the wildlife.

“In fact, now what I recognise with the benefit of hindsight is one of the reasons I was going there was to be solitary.

“So there was no one to compare myself with, in those spaces I was ‘normal’ as it were.

"But then, of course, the sensory side of it is one of the traits of autism and we all experience it in different ways, for me it’s a visual sense.”

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Good Morning Britain airs weekdays from 6am on ITV1.

Jill Robinson

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