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The hairdresser who left her husband and 3 children for a Masai warrior, after a holiday in Kenya. How did the story end

A woman from the UK, who left her husband and three children for a “holiday husband”, warrior Masai, revealed the regret he feels for his bizarre love story.

Cheryl Thomasgood and the warrior Masai Photo: X

Cheryl Thomasgood and the warrior Masai Photo: X

Cheryl Thomasgood was 34 when she became in love with the tribe member traveling to her hotel as part of a group that had traditional dances for tourists.

A few weeks after he met the beautiful warrior, Cheryl left his second husband, Mike Mason, and their three children, to be with her new lover, according to The Sun.

1.80-meter high warrior Kenyan was ten years younger than Cheryl when they met and started an intimate relationship. After meeting the elegant warrior, Cheryl flew home to tell her husband, Mike, that their marriage ended, before returning to the Sambuu region of Kenya to live with her new man.

Cheryl and her new partner have held the front page of newspapers around the world, with people being amazed by her decision to give up comfortable life for a new home and a partner in Kenya.

Cheryl Thomasgood and the warrior Masai Photo: Captura YouTube

Cheryl Thomasgood and the warrior Masai Photo: Captura YouTube

The life of the woman now consisted of helping her to cook, cleaning and hunting, sleeping on goat skin and surviving a diet of cow's blood and cabbage in a mud hut.

Cheryl and Daniel finally decided to leave the hardships of life in distant Kenya and planned to have children in the UK.

The bizarre couple returned to the island of Wight in 1995 and married Valentine's Day, both wearing traditional Masai clothes. Their marriage produced a daughter, Mitsi, who is 27 years old.

The warrior Masai became obsessed with money

Cheryl spoke for the first time, more than 30 years later, after the couple's relationship broke out, when her spiritual husband became obsessed with wealth.

In an emotional interview with Mailonline, she describes that she felt used.

Reaching an age she wants to reflect on her life, Cheryl chose to talk about her relationship “tormented ” with the warrior Masai Daniel.

“I made a huge mistake, I have a lot of regrets, especially about how it affected my children.” said the woman.

Cheryl broke up with Daniel in 1999, just four years after they were married a year after their daughter's birth.

Currently, Cheryl, 65, lives alone in a town on the seaside in Somerset, where she is well known among the local community.

Cheryl said that Daniel quickly became moroccan, wishing more money and more possessions, changed by life in the United Kingdom. The couple began to quarrel often.

Daniel would have begun to want a bigger house, company clothes and money to send to Kenyene relatives.

Cheryl remembers that the only time Daniel was happy was when warrior Kenyan jumped in the garden and did his traditional Masai dance.

“He said he was preparing to fight and wanted to jump as high as an elephant. The children liked it, but it annoyed me after a while.”the woman told.

Cheryl began to question Daniel's reasons to be with her after witnessing his transformation and his new obsess for material richness.

Asked what regrets most of the time spent with her warrior, Ceryl said “The impact that all these had on my children.”

Ceryl said that because of his relationship with Daniel and the disintegration of his first two marriages, her children did not have an adequate paternal figure in their lives.

Despite the fact that she has no contact with Daniel, the woman claims she still has good relationships with all her children, referring to her daughter Mitsi as to “The only good thing” which came out of the strange and difficult marriage between her and Daniel.

Her eldest son Steve is 43 years old, while her brother Tommy is 41, her daughter Chloe is 34, and Mitsi is 27 years old.

Ashley Davis

I’m Ashley Davis as an editor, I’m committed to upholding the highest standards of integrity and accuracy in every piece we publish. My work is driven by curiosity, a passion for truth, and a belief that journalism plays a crucial role in shaping public discourse. I strive to tell stories that not only inform but also inspire action and conversation.

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