
Hearing Sandi Toksvig talk about her illness has a subtly potent quality. With the clarity of someone who understands how nearly she lost her footing, both literally and figuratively, rather than with drama or despair.
In late 2022, while on a comedy tour in Australia, she received a diagnosis of bronchial pneumonia, which sounded more clinical than disastrous. However, there was a horrifying experience hidden behind the diagnosis. Her lungs started to malfunction. One fell apart in part. Walking, something that most of us do without giving it much thought, turned into a task that required maximum effort and two sticks.
| Name | Sandi Toksvig |
|---|---|
| Profession | Broadcaster, comedian, writer, political activist |
| Notable Work | Host of QI, co-host of Great British Bake Off (2017–2020) |
| Health Incident | Severe bronchial pneumonia in Australia, December 2022 |
| Recovery Approach | Woodland restoration project and outdoor rehabilitation |
| Current Project | Sandi’s Great British Woodland Restoration (Channel 4) |
| Reference Link | https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/sandi-toksvig-illness |
The New Zealand leg of her show, which was supposed to be filled with “silly jokes” and “curiosities,” had to be canceled. One of its own had been offered by life. In a moment of grim humor, doctors treating her in a hospital in Sydney, far from home, wondered if she might have contracted a strain of chlamydia pneumonia that is spread by koalas. Although the theory was ultimately disproved, she found it to be more of a joke than a prediction.
After recovering enough to fly, she returned to the UK with a new sense of uncertainty and restricted mobility. However, she chose to go to the woods rather than hide away from the spotlight or take an extended break. In a literal sense.
Sandi purchased a small area of unused forest with her spouse. Her visits were short at first, only five minutes of quiet effort and fresh air. However, the walks got longer every day. The sticks were no longer as important. Then, one afternoon, she became aware of a change. She held a chainsaw in her hand instead of her walking aids.
There is a subtle charge in that sentence, which is delivered with her characteristic dry wit. The line is more than just witty. That’s when she realized she was getting stronger again. Not in a big way. Not all at once. But convincingly and steadily.
She was repairing herself by devoting time to fixing something that had broken. She didn’t miss the symbolism, and it served as the basis for Sandi’s Great British Woodland Restoration, her new series on Channel 4. She examines how underutilized green areas can be recovered and revitalized in it, demonstrating how nature, which is incredibly powerful in its own subtle way, can also heal us.
I recall seeing her on QI years ago; she was incredibly articulate and quick-witted. She turned difficult facts into entertaining trivia for a dinner party. Since recovering from her illness, her humor has become more nuanced and her pace more deliberate.
Her statement, “There’s no doubt in my mind the woods acted as a nurse to my improvement,” from a recent interview stuck with me. It was straightforward but profoundly meaningful. I nodded as I considered how unexpected settings, like a garden, a forest trail, or a peaceful patch of soil, can often aid in recovery rather than just medicine.
Sandi’s journey from illness to health did not adhere to a hospital chart or checklist. It followed the steady rhythm of natural cycles, the light, and the leaves. Although it may not be found in every medical manual, that method—which is especially novel in its simplicity—is unquestionably real.
“Getting back to normal” is not the goal of her comeback to public life. It’s about incorporating that vulnerable time into her present self. She uses it as an anchor and isn’t hiding it. Her laughter now has the understated seriousness of someone who has experienced dyspnea but decided to speak despite it.
This development might seem surprising to viewers who are already familiar with her politics or comedy. It’s a continuation, though. She has always advocated for the reclamation of ideas, space, and voice, whether she is hosting radio programs, writing books, or starting the Women’s Equality Party.
It was her body that she regained this time.
She is now giving viewers something uncommon: a resilient person with dirt under their fingernails rather than a polished one. One that starts out slowly, picks up speed, then replants trees and clears undergrowth.
Once frightening and confusing, her illness has now become a chapter in her life, one she considers with humor and unwavering honesty rather than quickly forgetting. It’s a noticeably better healing blueprint for anyone following her story, especially those going through recovery themselves. Not very dramatic. Not glitzy. But very human and very effective.
Sandi Toksvig reminds us through chainsaws and saplings that strength comes back, sometimes with rain and roots rather than fireworks.
