‘Grieving her is a daily challenge’: Kimberley Walsh opens up about losing her Girls Aloud bandmate Sarah Harding for the first time
Kimberley Walsh was devastated when her Girls Aloud bandmate, Sarah Harding, died of breast cancer at the age of 39. In this exclusive interview with Psychologies, she talks about coping with grief, becoming a mother for the third time, and why losing Sarah made her determined to mark her 40th birthday with gratitude, hope and positivity
When Kimberley Walsh looks back on 2021 it will be with conflicting emotions. Little Nate, her third son with her husband, Justin Scott, is now six months old and, with his big smiles and easy-going nature, has slotted into their busy family like a dream. โWe got so lucky with this one,โ she says, her West Yorkshire brogue still strong despite 20 years of living in London.
โObviously, I adore all my kids, but Nate has been the easiest โ which was a relief, with him being the third. Even the breastfeeding, which Iโve struggled with in the past and has put a dampener on those first few weeks, has been brilliant. He came out of the womb, latched on and fed for an hour, and I was more excited by that than anything else!โ
She adds: โFriends of mine who had totally hung up their heels when it came to having more babies have said Nateโs seriously made them reconsider. Heโs so content and a proper little chiller, just like his dad.โ
Walsh is also mum to Bobby, seven, and Cole, who has just turned five, and knowing that Nate is her last โ she says adamantly that she is โdefinitely doneโ โ has given her a different mindset this time around. The sleepless nights havenโt felt quite as much of a bind and any notion of implementing a routine has been chucked out the window.
โA big part of me wants to savour those night feeds, because I know Iโm not having any more babies and Iโm so aware of how quickly the time goes. They get so attached to you with breastfeeding, and Nate loves the cuddles that come with it.
โIf I thought I was doing all this again, maybe Iโd be more practically minded, but heโs my last baby and I just canโt bring myself to be hard on him. So Iโve ruined him, instead!โ
She laughs โ but intertwined with this time of happiness has been immense sadness and grief. Walsh is still coming to terms with the loss of her friend and former bandmate, Sarah Harding, who died in September at the age of 39, just over a year after being diagnosed with stage 4 breast cancer.
As she speaks about Hardingโs death publicly for the first time, itโs clear the pain is still raw, and Walsh admits she struggles to make sense of it.
โI canโt lie, it absolutely knocked us all for six and the grieving is a daily challenge. Until youโre actually experiencing something like this with somebody who was close to you, itโs impossible to imagine what itโs going to feel like. And I honestly still canโt work out how you ever truly accept it,โ she says.
โI deal with it day to day and, for me, thatโs about checking in with everyone, especially Sarahโs mum, and making sure that theyโre OK too. Itโs going to take time, and itโs very, very tough.โ
Read the full interview in the February 2022 issue of Psychologies. On sale in retailers now or buy here.
Words: Beth Neil
Main photo: Anna Fowler. Second photo: Getty Images.