Peaches Geldof’s final interview: ‘Mum is living through me all the time’
Just weeks before her death, Peaches Geldof spoke of the hopes she harboured for her two young children, but revealed she had not fully made peace with her own childhood.
In a final interview the TV presenter, who died on April 7, said it was through being a mum that she had reconciled herself with her memories of her mother, Paula Yates, who died in 2000 at 41 from an accidental heroin overdose.
Mother-of-two Peaches, 25, was found at her home in Wrotham, Kent. Police have said her death is being treated as a “non-suspicious, unexplained sudden death”.
A post-mortem examination proved inconclusive.
Any inquest is not expected to be opened by the coroner until after the results of toxicology tests are known. Her body has been released back to her family to arrange her funeral.
In an interview for Aga Living Magazine, published in the Sunday Times, Peaches said she felt her TV presenter mother was “living through me all the time because we are just so similar”.
Explaining that being a mother to her two sons - Astala, 23 months, and 11-month-old Phaedra - had allowed her to achieve a new understanding, she said: “I’m not sure I've yet fully made peace with my childhood, but with my mum I have come to terms with everything.
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“She had a really difficult time. There are so many parallels between us. Now I can understand everything. I think you have to experience hardships and pain yourself to fully understand people who have been through it and also you can never really experience happiness unless you’ve had that down feeling, too.”
“Sometimes it’s enjoyable to be a bit depressive, I think.”
Peaches spoke of how being a mother had “anchored” her in place, changing her life for the better. She said: “It meant that I had to take care of someone properly, which I wasn't doing for myself.”
She revealed that she would love to have another child, a girl, “purely to dress her up” as her own mother had done with her.
Peaches also described the home she home she wanted to build for her children, where they could “express themselves and not feel stifled in any way”.
She said: “I want it to be a progressive household where they can come and talk to us about anything. The way I’ve been raising them is with pure love. I just have a lot of hopes for them, really, and I hope when they’re older they get to have a bit of the youth that I lost out on when I had them.”
And she described how being a mother had given her a new perspective on her own childhood.
She said: “Now I am a mum, I can correct those awful parts of my childhood and it’s a really healing process. Before, I was not at peace with myself about it because I was just traumatised.
“That’s why I was living a chaotic lifestyle. But now I have the kids I can heal the situation. It’s so good in every single way, really.”