Looking back I didn’t realise the impact that publicly sharing intimate photos of my skin condition would have. It was ballsy but I needed help and it was my way of reaching out.

We are bombarded with images of the ‘perfect’ body or skin type but as more of us are finding out, sharing photos of our ‘non-perfect’ bodies on social media helps challenge the idea of what is considered beautiful and it can be very liberating.

I was diagnosed with psoriasis at 14 and started treatment aged 18 which is when I started taking photos of my skin. I showed them to my family and friends and found that whilst it was nerve-racking, it was also a big release. It was really difficult to communicate what it was like to live with a chronic skin condition so, as well as showing what I was going through physically, the images helped me start a conversation about how I felt emotionally.

A few years later, having unsuccessfully tried many treatments, I felt at an all-time low. I couldn’t find an escape and my only source of information and support, between the sparse dermatology appointments, was online. But everything I read on the internet about psoriasis was negative.

Research by the PsoHappy App tells us that in the UK, sufferers are 24 per cent less happy than the average person and report lower levels of self-confidence so I needed to find way a way to tackle it.

I wanted to share my story, connect and laugh with people, learn and, above all, belong to a community who knew exactly what it meant to bleed all over the sheets at night. That was when I decided to share my photos publicly.

So, in Sept 2015 when I started PUVA treatment, I documented it with my photographer friend. We spent months taking photos, depicting psoriasis as non-medical, personal, humane and a thing of beauty.

I posted the images online, asking people to join in sharing their psoriasis stories by using the hashtag #getyourskinout and was immediately bombarded with words of relief, compassion and empathy. Many related to my journey and shared their own photos and stories. Connecting and sharing with other people this way was – and still is - incredibly liberating.

I’ve now lived with psoriasis for 12 years and although it’s a challenge, it has shaped me for the better making me brave, resilient and empathetic. Even though I do think “oh my god that is my naked body out there in the public eye”, it has helped bring the community together and made everyone living with the condition, including myself, feel empowered and not defined by living with psoriasis.