Mettle Monday - The Real Me

Written By Steve Cottam
I was born in 1978 and grew up on a council estate in Lincoln, and was raised by my Mum as my Dad was an abusive alcoholic and we didn’t really have anything to do with him after I was the age of around 6 or 7. I was the youngest of 5. Three sisters and one brother. Being the youngest was a pain in the arse. I was constantly beat up by my older brother, but I guess that what they are for. I was also very different to the rest of my siblings, I liked sport and fitness and excelled in football with trials at Oxford Utd. and Doncaster. Unfortunately, at around 15 or 16, I finally realised I wasn’t good enough to be a professional footballer.
At school, I was a terrible student and only went to school for sports and my lunch. I played truant or “legged it” as we called it on a regular basis. I just couldn’t stand education and the relentless bore of class. All I wanted to do was play football. Once my harsh reality of not becoming a professional footballer was realised, I focused my energy on joining the Military. I tried to join at 16 but failed the medical with a heart murmur. I then went back at 17 and failed the medical on hearing. It was a nightmare. I had an operation on my ears and I finally joined up when I was 19 years old and it was the best thing that could have happened to me. Finally, I could earn money, not much but my own money and start my career. I used to come home on leave and see the same faces doing the same things. Drugs, thieving on the dole. It was like time stood still. My best friend from growing up was now addicted to heroin. It was the harsh realities of staying on the estate.
For a number of years, the Military was just football, Phys, mates, and drinking until 2003 when Iraq kicked off. From then on it was a constant operational slog. Three tours of Iraq in as many years.
I then volunteered for special intelligence operations and was lucky enough to pass the long and arduous course. I deployed to Afghanistan shortly after in 2009 and experienced what war was really about. 2009 in Afghanistan was the bloodiest year of the whole conflict. I remember watching a 19-year-old soldier lean on a compound wall for a rest, only to initiate an IED. It killed him instantly.
The fighting was as intense as the heat and relentless. After a long 6-month tour I returned home uninjured, but the scars were deep within and not yet known. I returned for another tour in 2010 only to be struck by shrapnel by a Taliban hand grenade. It was only a small wound on the knee, so I carried on with the tour. I left the military for a 2-year period and worked back in Afghanistan as a contractor where I trained and mentored a specialist Afghan Army unit. This was the first time in my life I decided based on money and financial gain. Contracting was big money. I cracked on at this for just over 18 months then decided I’d had enough as my wife had just given birth to my son.
I got back to the UK and to be honest I was totally lost. I had no plan or no idea what to do for a living so for a period of time I did nothing. It was then I began to lose control of my mental health.
I decided to move back to where I grew up and took a Full Time Reserve Role out of necessity. The wheels came off very quickly after that. My mother died of cancer 6 months after I returned back to Lincoln and a year or so after that my older brother died of a drug overdose. I had totally lost myself and my family and we soon realised that Afghanistan destroyed me as a man, a father and a human being, it ruined my life, my marriage and a lot of friendships. I was medically discharged from the Military after 16 years with PTSD.
In 2014 I was interviewed for the TV show, HUNTED on Channel 4. As always, I kept the real me a secret and they wanted me on the show. I remember telling a producer director over a beer on series 1 and I also remember the look of horror on his face, he was so concerned I could lose control at any time and that I was a danger to everyone. It was a typical reaction I suppose when you tell someone you have PTSD. That reaction stopped me telling anyone else. I couldn’t afford to be judged like that as It did and would have an effect on job prospects. The next day he apologized for his reaction and we became very good mates. I don’t know why but I was embarrassed that I had this problem. I felt weak and pathetic and that took a long time to get over.
Hunted was a great adventure and focal point for me, it helped me focus and concentrate again. It also helped me feel myself, feel like I was worth something again. I have been involved in the show now for 5 series and 3 celeb series.
I will never forget my time in the military and I’ll never forget Iraq and certainly not Afghanistan. I’ll also probably never be the same bloke that I once was. There is a piece of me that’s gone and will never come back. It remains in the harsh environment of Helmand Province. I can’t change anything, and I can’t re-write what’s happened. It’s how you test and adjust and move on from it. To this day like most, I have good and bad days, I also have very bad days but I’m now learning the control measures that help me get through it. Fitness is my therapy and that’s what I have to do to enable myself to operate and function without hinder.
I still live in Lincoln in a small house by myself. I live close to my amazing 7-year-old son George, who is without a doubt my savior. I honestly believe it’s because of him that I’m alive today. My wife of which I’ve separated from is an amazing person and supports me in many ways and has put up with so much over the years, sometimes to the detriment of her own mental health. She remains my best friend and my rock and I’ll always be in her debt.
I now look forward not backwards and into the future. Whether there is TV involved or not, I’ll always keep fighting.
Steve Cottam served in the British Army for 16 years conducting special intelligence operations across the globe. Steve is one of the elite hunters on Channel 4's hit show - Hunted.








