
Credit: Fearne Cotton’s Happy Place
Pete Doherty made a comment during a recent performance in Munich that instantly altered the atmosphere. His doctor told him to stay off his feet or risk losing his toes, he told the audience.
It wasn’t exaggerated. Type 2 diabetes was the sobering diagnosis that led to this. Pete had noticed that his feet had become numb months before. Two of his toes had already turned black by the time he saw a doctor.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Name | Pete Doherty |
| Date of Birth | March 12, 1979 |
| Profession | Musician, Singer-Songwriter |
| Known For | Co-founder of The Libertines and Babyshambles |
| Health Issues | Type 2 diabetes, long-term effects from past substance abuse, foot complications |
| Spouse | Katia de Vidas (married in 2021) |
| Children | Three: Astile (21), Aisling (14), Billie Mae (born 2023) |
| Source | Daily Mail |
This moment was especially significant for a musician who was once renowned for racing across stages in an unpredictable blur. It was not a theoretical risk. It was serious, medical, and imminent.
Pete describes his relationship with health over the last few years as “a hell of a ride.” Once a tabloid mainstay for all the wrong reasons, he was enmeshed in heroin, crack, cocaine, and alcohol addiction during the 2000s. He made no effort to conceal it. He actually appeared to lean into it quite a bit.
However, when he relocated to rural France, something changed. The chaos subsided there. He eventually stopped using drugs, married Katia de Vidas, and concentrated on music in more subdued environments. It happened in late 2019. He was clean for the first time in years.
However, healthy does not always equate to clean. Although his way of life in Normandy wasn’t as careless as it once was, it brought a new kind of excess. He added sugar, cheese, and wine to his tea. long mornings spent in bed. Not necessarily a better pace, but a slower one.
“You are looking at a very sick man,” Pete said to Louis Theroux in 2023, and it stuck with me. He didn’t say it out of sympathy. It was just an honest assessment. His voice was one of realism, perhaps even exhaustion, rather than bluster.
But there was still hope.
His diabetes scare was a “wake-up call,” as he put it. He has changed significantly since then. With the exception of a rare gin and tonic, most alcohol has been consumed. He has stable blood sugar. Amazingly, his toes are getting better. It’s a form of atonement rather than merely following medical advice.
His wife shared a video of him playing a guitar game at an arcade with obvious happiness in recent months. Pete appeared more relaxed and leaner. Something had subtly changed, and that one clip felt like a chapter break.
Watching him smile while pounding plastic notes in a seaside arcade is incredibly comforting to someone who once required six days of sleepless chaos to feel alive.
His weight loss has been especially noticeable. Not spectacular, but unquestionably noteworthy. Fans took notice when he performed at The Great Escape Festival wearing regular shoes for the first time in months. They applauded the man who was still present to play the music as well as the music itself.
Pete has changed for more than just himself. Being a father has introduced a new level of responsibility. He has been candid about missing out on certain aspects of his kids’ lives, particularly his daughter Aisling, whom he doesn’t get to see. Billie Mae, his youngest child, was born in 2023, and he is determined to avoid repeating the past.
In an interview with comedian Rob Beckett, he stated that he would not go on tour with his daughter if she wasn’t comfortable. He remarked, “I don’t want to miss this one.” That sentence was remarkably clear.
To be honest, this Pete Doherty was not the same as the one who broke into his bandmate’s apartment and took a laptop. A different Pete than the one who claimed to have been high on drugs and regret for days. This version is more purposeful and grounded.
Not everything is neatly resolved, of course. He continues to smoke. He continues to make jokes about how he stayed in France in part because of the “good cheese.” Now, however, his awareness—and the decisions that follow—make a difference.
He has been warned not to walk too much because poor circulation can make even minor injuries dangerous. That risk alone highlights how brittle progress can be and how discipline is now necessary rather than optional.
Tabloids have frequently appropriated Pete’s story and reduced it to a well-worn plot of rise, fall, scandal, and repeat. Beneath all that cacophony, however, lies a more profound and human arc—one of recalibration and, now, resilience.
He continues to give erratic performances. That hasn’t altered. However, they now arrive with the silent realization that this—being here, alive, and performing music—is no longer a given. Every day, a decision is made.
Amazingly, that decision appears to be sticking.
Many of his admirers, who grew up watching him soar to fame while holding a cigarette in one hand and a microphone in the other, are now witnessing a man making an effort to live a better life. Better, but not flawless. Such honesty is uncommon and incredibly successful in fostering trust.
Pete Doherty remains on stage as of right now. still producing. still opting to remain. And what else is worth mentioning if that isn’t?

