
We can’t imagine what it would feel like to be in Candice Warner’s shoes right now.
To carry your crying toddlers through an airport terminal, screaming reporters and lights flashing in their faces.
To have an entire country – your country – calling the man you love and the father of your children a traitor and a disgrace, and to feel like it’s your fault.
To have your past, your character, your grief dragged through the mud, attached to the same cart pulling your husband’s indiscretions.
To be at a loss for what to say when your daughter asks ‘Mummy, why are you and daddy crying?’.
But Roxy Jacenko can, because she’s lived through this kind of hell too.
Holly Wainwright makes the important point we all need to remember while we’re outraged over cricket’s ball tampering saga. Post continues after audio.
In 2016, we watched the 37-year-old PR entrepreneur’s life implode as her husband Oliver Curtis was convicted of insider trading and sentenced to two years imprisonment.
We saw the Instagram lift selfies on her way to court, with oversized black sunglasses and designer handbags. But what we didn’t see was how harrowing it was raising two children and fighting breast cancer without her partner by her side.
We weren’t there for the conversations she was forced to have with Pixie and Hunter about why their dad wasn’t around and what to do if other kids at school called their father a ‘baddie’.
And we weren’t there for the quiet moment she had to herself when she thought, “what the f*ck has my life become? How am I even in this frickin position?” Roxy told Mia Freedman in her honest No Filter interview.
There are many things we’re yet to see, and should not be privy to about what this ball tampering saga is doing to Candice, David and their two young daughters Ivy Mae and Indi Rae.