has revealed he has been left after falling out with his family following his recent stint in rehab.
Jack Fincham Claims Hes Homeless After Rehab Struggles
Jack Fincham has revealed he has been left homeless after falling out with his family following his recent stint in rehab.The former Love Island winner, 34, wen...
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The former Love Island winner, 34, went to rehab for the second time earlier this year after he had a 'selfish' relapse into drinking and drugs that nearly killed him.
Jack, who received £32,000 of treatment at Rainford Hall, Merseyside, has now opened up on Instagram about struggling with life post rehab and backlash from family which has left him living in a hotel with his dog.
He said: 'I tried living in Liverpool, unfortunately the person I lived with it just didn't work out. I thought I'd be getting more support from people close to me that haven't shown that support.
'Listen I'm a 34-year-old man you can't rely on your family all the time.'
'One thing they told me in rehab and it's true, you're not gonna walk out of rehab to a red carpet rolled out for you because it's stuff you should have been doing anyway.'
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Jack explained that he hasn't got 'much left' and is currently homeless and trying to figure out 'what to do' next as life 'can't get any worse'.
Jack Fincham has revealed he has been left homeless after falling out with his family following his recent stint in rehab
The reality TV star added: 'In case anyone is wondering where I am, I'm staying a hotel with the dog. I'm just gonna reset and work out what to do and where I wanna live.
'Got my beautiful dog Elvis, without him I probably wouldn't even be here to be honest.'
Jack said he has found leaving rehab 'scary' but thanked the staff for showing him, a 'level of kindness I wasn't used to for a while, I found it quite alien.'
Determined to get back on track, the TV personality said he is 'starting from zero' but looking to get back into acting.
Jack said: 'There's been a few struggles along the way and look I'm starting again from zero. I'm a very optimistic person and I just think it can't get any worse than this.
'I'm gonna do my acting and get back into TV work I'm gonna do all the things I said I was gonna do.'
It comes after in an emotional Good Morning Britain interview last week.
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The reality star admitted that he was there 'for the wrong reasons' during his first stint, but is finally 'living a life he doesn't want to escape from'.
Jack - who shot to fame on the fourth series of Love Island in 2018 - appeared on the ITV programme to chat to Susanna Reid and Ed Balls about his progress.
Ed asked the boxer: 'Were there things that you found out during the period of rehab that were a surprise, shock, revelation, challenge?'
Jack said: 'The stopping drugs part was the easy part.'
He continued: 'I went in there, I did a detox of benzodiazepines and pregabalin, prescription drugs.
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'I had a six week detox of prescription drugs. It took me quite a while, I knew that needed to go. But that was the easy part. That was clinically done to the T.
The former Love Island winner, 34, went to rehab for the second time earlier this year after he had a 'selfish' relapse into drinking and drugs that nearly killed him
Jack, received £32K of treatment at Rainford Hall, Merseyside, has opened up about struggling with life post rehab and backlash from family which has left him living in a hotel with his dog
He said: 'I'm staying a hotel with the dog. I'm just gonna work out what to do and where I wanna live. Got my beautiful dog, without him I probably wouldn't even be here to be honest'
Back in January, Jack told the pair ahead of going to rehab: 'Without wanting to go [to rehab], also, without wanting to help yourself, it's not going to work.
'This time around, I often sit there and think about the thousands of opportunities that I've ruined, this time around, I want to help myself, I want to live my life in abundance and more importantly, a happy, healthy and get back thousands of opportunities and new opportunities that are going to come my way being sober.
'None of that is going to happen if I carry on the way I am going. It's not going to happen.
'It's like having two people on your shoulder. One would go: "You can get this under control this time".
'This is not a new thing. This is not a new thing, this has been going on since I was 18/19.
'I'm 33 now, this is a long long time, this isn't something new that has come up. Obviously, I've had points where its been under control, points where it's not been under control.
'Then I think Christmas day, I just thought mate, this is just, speaking to, I haven't actually told anyone this, I took myself into hospital because I might have to taken too much of something here.
'They said because of boxing, I do my boxing camps, before I fight, your body has time to repair, training from a young age, boxing rom 13, a strong heart, without that, you probably would have ended up dead in your bed at this point.
'So to hear that, and someone say without having them points of letting your body repair, having a strong heart from training from so young, you probably would have woken up dead in your bed is quite sobering.'
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