Candace Cameron Bure opened up about telling husband Valeri Bure she was suffering from an eating disorder. Cameron Bure, 49, got emotional while discussing her bulimia battle during the Tuesday, February 10, episode of her podcast. While chatting with Bachelor Nation's Madi Prewett, the actress recalled a time she had to "confess" something and felt "scared" to do so. "The easiest thing that comes to mind is being a bulimic and hiding that for so long and for several years," she explained. "And living with my husband and hiding it from him - we're in the same house." "The day I was like, 'I can't do this anymore. I don't wanna do this anymore.' I have tears coming to my eyes [thinking about it]. It's so embarrassing," she continued. Candace Cameron Bure Still Calls Herself 'Bulimic' After Battling ED at 18 The Full House alum added, "It makes you want to hide and isolate yourself, and yet the bravest thing you can do is confess it." When she decided to tell Bure, 51, what she was going through, she felt nervous. "I took a deep breath and walked over to him, and then I'm like, 'Can you sit down? I gotta tell you something,'" she recalled, noting she felt "relief" afterwards. "I have an awesome husband. It was met with such compassion. I don't know why I was thinking that if I ever told anyone, they would say to me, 'How dare you? How dare you treat your body that way? You're gross.'" Through tears, Cameron Bure explained that her husband gave her a hug and asked how he could help her. "It felt like such relief," she said. "And the ability to take the next step forward." Robert Mora/Getty Images Later in the episode, Prewett, 29, explained that she is not defined by her "scars" and asked Cameron Bure whether she is ever reminded of her past or feels "shame" creeping up. "Sure, and for me, that sin in my life, it's never left me," she replied, referring to her eating disorder. "It's gotten a whole lot easier to battle through. I know that when those thoughts creep into my mind, I know how to handle it and how to ward them off because it's not a part of my life anymore, and I don't want it to be a part of my life." She added, "I've chosen for it not to be, but that doesn't mean those thoughts haven't crossed my mind. I have the power to slay it." Cameron Bure previously opened up about suffering from bulimia during a July 2025 episode of her podcast. At the time, she shared that she "developed an eating disorder when [she] was 18." Candace Cameron Bure's Candid Comments About Body Image and Confidence "It was binging and purging. I'm a bulimic. And I still say I'm a bulimic," she shared, noting that the thoughts "never leave" her. "I had cheeks and I had thicker arms and I was, like, a normal 12-year-old, you know? I really was a normal 12-year-old, but I had a little bit more fat on me than other kids on TV," she said. If you or someone you know struggles with an eating disorder, visit the National Alliance for Eating Disorders website or call their hotline at (866) 662-1235. Text "ALLIANCE" to 741741 for free, 24/7 support.