Ex-Model On Addiction And Homeless Life: ‘I’m In A Lot Of Pain’

Fitness model who got homeless after becoming an addict Loni Willison is blaming her ex-husband, “Baywatch” actor Jeremy Jackson, for her mental health deterioration.

In an interview that X17 Online published on Friday, the 39-year-old Willison—who has been spotted looking through dumpsters in California throughout the years—was asked where her life went wrong.

“My former spouse. Getting hitched. I got divorced, at least,” she answered.”He arranged for this to happen to me.”

After less than two years of marriage, the couple suffered a painful breakup in 2014.

During an apparent drunken altercation, Jackson allegedly attempted to choke Willison. The Post reached out to Jackson for an answer.

Willison formerly modeled for magazines like Flavour, Iron Man, and Glam Fit. She disappeared from the public view for over four years, until 2018.

Ex-Model On Addiction And Homeless Life ‘I’m In A Lot Of Pain’

Instead of her beautifully bronzed physique and gorgeous blonde hair, Willison had become disheveled, had short hair, and had lost her top teeth when she resurfaced.

During the interview on Friday, Willison said that her stomach hurts “really bad” and that she is “in a lot of pain.”

She said that she “can’t live inside anywhere” and that she is no longer allowed to be near power because she was “electrocuted” every day for about a year.

I believe that in addition to sensing electricity, I also detect other substances such as wire, various metals, fuses, batteries, and specific compounds. Therefore, I believe that my body even filters that kind of stuff,” she said.

I wouldn’t know for sure; I’d need to use a sonogram machine or a large X-ray machine to find out. It’s fairly intense.

When asked whether she had asked the city of Los Angeles for help, Willison replied, “There’s nothing that anybody can offer me.” There is nothing we can do to help.

She claimed to have received offers of help but never made a request for it.

She acknowledged that she’s “not necessarily” satisfied with her life’s course, saying, “There are good parts and there are bad parts, but whatever.”

The interviewer also noticed that she had serious injuries on her fingers. When he suggested that she have them checked out, Willison comforted him, saying, “I’ll be fine.”

In a 2018 interview, Willison discussed her energy issues with the Daily Mail. She said at the time that she was “getting tortured in my home, my apartment” due to her crystal meth addiction.

The 42-year-old Jackson has been open about his own battles with alcohol, drug, and steroid addiction.

In order to serve time in prison for allegedly stabbing a woman in Los Angeles in 2015, Jackson accepted into a plea deal in 2017.

He was also kicked off “Celebrity Big Brother” in 2015 after it was alleged that he had stolen model Chloe Goodman’s robe.

Vinyl Treasures: A Nostalgic Reminder of Home Elegance!

It is replaced by a thin, metal object in the warm, inviting atmosphere of a 1970s living room with bright shag carpeting mixed with earth tones. Tucked away from the vinyl record sleeve, this simple curtain hook holds memories of carefree afternoons spent watching curtains billow in the soft wind from an open window. Despite its seeming simplicity, this object was essential to the fabric of family life.

Think back to a period when windows were dressed with their finest clothes, such as proudly hanging pleated drapes that framed the alluring appeal of city life or contented suburbia views. The curtain hook was a silent backstage worker that was frequently disregarded. Families laughed, wept, and fell in love in these spaces as a ballet of light and shadow was created by the fabric’s graceful folds and sleek design.

But as these commonplace objects are tucked away within the pages of a time that honored both the remarkable and the commonplace, it’s easy for them to disappear into the realm of recollections. The curtain hook, which was formerly ubiquitous, has been superseded by more contemporary devices. However, it is a subtle reminder of the fastidious attention to detail that was previously lavished upon our homes—a period in which the tiniest elements spoke a great deal about the homeowner’s taste and attention to detail.

Holding one of these curtain hooks in the present takes us back in time to a time when vinyl records provided the soundtrack for a fun-filled evening. For those who remember, it brings back fond memories, and for those who have never heard of its significance, it piques curiosity.

This tiny metal fragment is more than just an item; it is a thread woven into the fabric of a past way of life, softly capturing the spirit of a period when things were simpler and more important than they seemed.

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