Michelle Elman has admitted âliving a long life is overratedâ, a week after undergoing her 19th surgery.
The This Morning expert, 33, was rushed to hospital for emergency surgery last week, amid her battle with hydrocephalus.
Michelle was born with the condition. It causes an excess of cerebrospinal fluid on the brain. Doctors later discovered that she was also born with a brain tumour. Now, sheâs shared an update, revealing the intense amount of physical pain sheâs in.

This Morningâs Michelle Elman ânot sure sheâll make it out of thisâ
Posting a video to Instagram, Michelle shared: âMaybe living the longest isnât the goal. Excuse my morbid mindset but itâs been five months of this and I think if Iâve learnt anything itâs that living a long life is overrated.
âThere have been multiple moments where Iâve been near death or emergency surgeries and the last thing I said to my best friend, my dad, my sister, whoeverâs been out here before Iâve gone into surgery is I donât want to live if I canât do the things I love.
âI want my brain and my body to work. And if Iâm confined to a hospital bed, I donât want it. And if this is all the time I have left, then I am happy with that.â
Michelle went on: âFrankly Iâve had more time than I ever thought I would get because I thought I wouldnât be here past the age of 21. And the longer this goes on, crossing the five month mark now, Iâm not sure Iâll make it out of this.â

âLiving a long life is not the goalâ
The life coach also spoke about the trolling sheâs had âas a plus-size womanâ. âBut what I do know, especially as a plus-sized woman whoâs had comment sections full of the fact I am going to die young even though my health problems started long before I was plus sized, is that living a long life is not the goal.
âThere are many people who live a long live hating on others, being judgmental, being cruel, being mean. So 90 years on this earth doesnât mean you get the most amount of life if you have spent most of that life just taking it for granted. And thatâs one thing I have never done. I have not taken one second for granted.â
âDyingâ as a child
A near-death experience when she was a child has made Michelle unafraid of death, she said. âMaybe itâs because I had the fortunate moment at 11 years old of flatlining, floating above my body. Ever since that moment Iâve believed that death is peaceful. Donât get me wrong, the moments before dying are incredibly painful. But just as you float out of your body, that peacefulness, that calm, itâs the literal embodiment of the feeling of relief.
âI think being aware of my mortality my whole life means that over the last five months I have come to terms with my mortality. So if this is it for me, I have lived a good life and itâs been an honour to be surrounded by so much love. And I do hope I make it out of this. Iâm going to give it all Iâve got. But this idea of fighting to the very end, I canât imagine anything worse.
âAnd sometimes your fight being gone is not a bad thing, it is just replaced by peacefulness, calm and acceptance.â

Michelle Elman admits âa body can only take so muchâ
She shared more on her Stories, saying: âIâve done the fighting, pushing through and enduring. And Iâve reached the stage where I want ease. And if I canât have it, I want life on my own terms.â
Michelle continued: âA body can only take so much. If you look up babies with hydrocephalus, you will see the extreme stress your body is put under where your head grows. Iâm an adult so my skull canât grow. So instead it feels like your skull is crushing your brain. Itâs now happened twice for over three months and you are just trapped in your body with no escape to the extent when they cut into my body, water came gushing out because it had nowhere to go.â
She added poignantly: âAnd at some point, Iâm not sure itâs moral for someone to endure that extent of trauma.â


