Geordie Shore icon Vicky Pattison and her new husband Ercan Ramadan have officially tied the knot after five years of dating
Geordie Shore icon Vicky Pattison looked hopelessly in love as she emerged from the registry office after tying the knot with husband Ercan Ramadan.
The 36-year-old TV personality got married in front of 150 of their closest friends and family at London’s Old Marylebone Town Hall this weekend.
The happy couple were among a long list of stars who got married there, including Sir Paul McCartney and Nancy Shevell and Liam Gallagher and Nicole Appleton.
She looked out of this world in a white minidress for the legal ceremony and was all smiles as she walked out of the registry office.
Vicky wore stunning platform heels and finished the look with a simple short veil. Ercan looked handsome in a black suit and black bowtie.
Their friends and family cheered and threw confetti on them as they beamed with joy outside the office. Fellow reality star Pete Wicks was seen proudly grinning as he clapped for the newlyweds by the stairs. Following their intimate wedding, they will be jetting off to Puglia, Italy, for a lavish ceremony which will appear on her Channel 4 programme, Vicky Pattison: Destination Wedding.
It comes after Vicky opened up about feeling “hopeless” and “exhausted” before her special day. The star took to social media to share a series of photos as she talked about struggling with her mental health. She has premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), which is a very severe form of premenstrual syndrome (PMS).
According to charity Mind, it causes a range of emotional and physical symptoms every month during the week or two before your period. Vicky told her fans: “Believe me, in the week before my wedding I didn’t want to be this person… you imagine being excited & happy, having little dickie birds pop your dress on for you… instead, I’ve been depressed, anxious & self-critical filled with feminine rage, hopelessness & exhaustion. That’s what PMDD does.
“PMDD is like building a sand castle of good habits, positive moods, & a loving personality then watching it all get swept away to leave depression, anger, hopefulness, & anxiety in its wake. The wave recedes. You begin to rebuild, just as a new wave crashes. And you know the REALLY annoying thing? Is just as your period ALWAYS seems to fall when you’re going on holiday.. that spicy PMDD week always manages to be when you have something significant going on, something where you could really do with being your bright, shiny, BRILLIANT self.. rather than this anxious, suicidal little shell of a woman.”
She added: “We can’t control when that wave crashes. I’ve had messages from women saying that PMDD has robbed them of loads of things.. it’s shown up on birthdays, graduations, job interviews, it’s stopped them being the mother they wanted to be a lot of the time, it’s made relationships strained, it’s stolen moments that should have been happy.”
She said there wasn’t an ‘upbeat conclusion’ to her post and added “I see you” to those who suffer from the same thing
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Source: New York Post