Straight-talking, self-deprecating, and incredibly frank, Julia Morris is the kind of celebrity that Australia needs way more of.
Armed with a wicked sense of humour – and an infectious cackle to go with it – she has spent the last 30 years making us laugh, whether it’s on the stage as a stand-up comedian, or on our TV screens via a string of top-rating shows. All the while, she’s a wife and mother to two young girls so to call her life ‘busy’ would be an understatement.
Over the past 12 months in particular, a succession of high energy, prime-time shows – including I’m a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here!, Blind Date, and Sunday Night Takeaway – left the 51-year-old feeling exhausted and frazzled. Proving that age-old maxim ‘something has got to give’, in Julia’s case it was her health.
“I’ve definitely spoken about burnout before,” she tells Good Health & Wellbeing, “but I don’t think I had actually experienced it until we finished shooting Takeaway last year. Then I was like: ‘Oh this is burnout.’
I asked my husband Dan and my lovely psychologist: ‘Am I depressed?’ I didn’t understand what was happening. I got a cold and ended up taking to my bed for three weeks. I got up only to drop the girls to school and to pick them up, other than that I spent the rest of my days upstairs in bed watching Netflix.”
Clearing the decks
So, how has Julia remedied the stresses of an epic work schedule? True to form, it has nothing to do with meditation, massage, or crystal therapy.
Esta historia es de la edición February 2020 de Good Health Magazine Australia.
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Esta historia es de la edición February 2020 de Good Health Magazine Australia.
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