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Brange brood settle in France with baby No. 7

Brange brood settle in France with baby No. 7

Their globetrotting days are at an end – and a new child is on the way, reports Sebastian Van Der Zwan.

After years travelling the world, never in one place long enough to put down roots, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are giving up their jetsetter lifestyle in order to base their rainbow tribe in the South of France.

But although the brood will finally have a permanent home in the shape of their $56 million estate, Chateau Miraval, family life is about to become even more chaotic with the addition of a seventh child.

Brad and Ange are reportedly in the final stages of adopting a four-year-old orphan from Haiti, a little girl named Leah who lost her entire family in last year’s devastating earthquakes. The actress is said to have fallen in love instantly with the child during a recent humanitarian trip to the Caribbean nation.

Touched by her plight and desperate to give her a better life, Ange is doing all she can to have the wide-eyed young girl join their family.“Angelina’s lawyers are in the process of getting an authorisation so Leah can spend some time with her,” an insider tellsthe UK’s Daily Mirror. “That’s standard procedure – basically, they need to make sure Leah will adapt well.”

If Leah settles in with the Brangie bunch, she could be living with them by the end of the year. But there’ll be no special treatment for Ange. “A lot of observers from groups such as the Red Cross are ensuring that Angelina is treated like anybody else and not fast-tracked,” the source explains.

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Glenn and Sara’s baby plans

Glenn and Sara’s baby plans

The happy couple have a final fling without the kids before making their dream of a baby together a reality.

One year ago, Glenn McGrath used his 40th birthday to officially introduce the new love of his life, Sara Leonardi, to family and close friends during a lavish party at his Cronulla home in Sydney’s south. Last week, the cricket legend marked the occasion with a far cosier celebration, whisking his now wife off for a romantic first trip away together without his children.

After attending the Laureus World Sports Awards in Abu Dhabi with fellow cricket icon and best friend Steve Waugh last Sunday, Glenn and Sara returned home briefly before jetting back to the Middle East shopping haven.

For the loving couple, who wed in November, the vacation comes as a belated honeymoon, with them finally revelling in some much-yearned for alone time after the whirlwind romance of the previous 12 months.

While they took their first holiday as a married couple last month, venturing to the ski-fields of Canada, they were accompanied throughout by Glenn’s two children to late wife Jane – son James, 11, and daughter Holly, 9.

And they should make the most of this intimate interlude because it may be their last for a while. Speculation is rife Glenn and Sara are planning to add to their young family this year.

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Princess Mary’s sisters – What we’re fighting for

Princess Mary’s sisters

Patricia Bailey and Jane Stephens talk to Glen Williams about what inspired them to become ambassadors for Ovarian Cancer Australia.

Princess Mary and her sisters Patricia Bailey and Jane Stephens know first-hand how illness can devastate a family. When the women lost their beloved mum, Henrietta, suddenly to heart disease 13 years ago, they were distraught.

But Henrietta’s legacy has had a lasting effect on the Tasmanian-born siblings – it’s made them understand just how vital it is for families to talk to each other about their health issues.

Determined to encourage women to be open and supportive of each other’s wellbeing, Patricia and Jane jumped at the chance to become ambassadors for another serious women’s health issue – ovarian cancer. “Our joint involvement shows the importance of families sticking together,” says Jane, who is a community ambassador. “It’s so important to talk to your family members about each other’s health.”

When the stunning sisters meet up with Woman’s Day, Patricia, who works as an anaesthetic and recovery nurse at the Royal Hobart Hospital, reveals ovarian cancer is a cause particularly close to her heart.

“It’s a horrible disease,” she says of the illness that claims the life of one Australian woman every 11 hours. “I’ve been a nurse for 22 years and during that time I’ve cared for women with ovarian cancer throughout the various stages of the illness. From being newly diagnosed, to having chemotherapy, to complications during their treatment… the impact it has on the families is just heartbreaking. You become so involved with the families, it can’t help but have an emotional impact on you. It is for this reason I was honoured to accept the role of official State Ambassador for Tasmania.”

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Oprah’s yo-yo dieting through the years

Oprah’s dieting

To reach her goal weight in 1988, Oprah followed a liquid diet for about four months and did not eat any solid food. She went from this, to…

Oprah’s dieting

…this! Oprah shed 30 kilos with the liquid diet. She took to the stage of her show wearing a pair of size 10 skinny Calvin Klein jeans wheeling a wagon of fat to represent her weight loss.

Oprah’s dieting

In 1989 Oprah admitted that she had regained 7.7 of the 30 celebrated kilos she had lost the previous year.

Today, the talk show host now admits that this was her biggest mistake.

“I had literally starved myself for four months, not a morsel of food, to get into that pair of size 10 Calvin Klein jeans,” she said.

“Two hours after that show, I started eating to celebrate, of course, within two days those jeans no longer fit!”

Oprah’s dieting

Since that point the talk show host’s weight has fluctuated over the years.

Oprah’s dieting

Oprah reached her heaviest weight of 107.5 kilos in 1992 at age 38.

Oprah’s dieting

After hitting more than 100 kilos Oprah began a weight loss regime, however she wasn’t able to shift the extra kilos.

Oprah’s dieting

The talk show queen soon thought it was time to lose the extra weight and set out to bring her weight back down.

Oprah’s dieting

In 2005, she stepped out at a toned 72.5 kilos and appeared on the January 2005 cover of O Magazine.

“I thought I was finished with the weight battle. I was done. I’d conquered it. I was so sure, I was even cocky,” she says now of the weight loss.

“I had the nerve to say to friends who were struggling, “All you have to do is work out harder and eat less! Get your 10,000 steps in! None of that starchy stuff!”

Oprah’s dieting

Oprah managed to hold onto her trim figure in 2006 but the weight slowly started to creep back on.

Oprah’s dieting

At age 53 in 2007, Oprah said she started to have some health issues.

“At first I was unable to sleep for days. My legs started swelling. My weight started creeping up, first 5 pounds, then 10 pounds. I was lethargic and irritable,” she said.

Oprah’s dieting

Throughout 2008 Oprah’s weight continued to climb.

Oprah’s dieting

Then in 2009 the talk show host revealed in O Magazine that she had fallen off the weight loss wagon.

She was pictured on the cover of the January 2009 issue next to a picture of a thinner version of herself from the 2005 cover which read: “How did I let this happen again?”

Oprah’s dieting

Today, Oprah says she isn’t setting out to be thin, but to be healthy.

“My goal isn’t to be thin. My goal is for my body to be the weight it can hold—to be strong and healthy and fit, to be itself. My goal is to learn to embrace this body and to be grateful every day for what it has given me.”

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Do you need to see a shrink?

Woman speaking to psychologist

We all need someone to talk to about life’s ups and downs, and most of the time friends and family are there to listen and help. But sometimes it pays to seek professional advice.

“A psychologist is objective – someone who has no vested interest,” says Amanda Gordon, a Sydney-based practicing clinical psychologist and President of the Australian Psychological Society.

“And rather than simply offering an opinion, a psychologist will offer solutions based on evidence.”

Here Amanda explains some of the more common reasons we might need to speak with a psychologist.

Related video:

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Valentine’s Day — the new ‘break-up season’?

Valentine’s Day – the new ‘break-up season’?

A new relationships survey has revealed statistics on Australians’ thoughts on Valentine’s Day. The survey has found that for some, Valentine’s Day is more likely to be seen as a cynical marketing exercise than a day of romance and for many of Australia’s 2 million singles it can be a day they dread. Many couples also see it as a time to re-evaluate their relationships.

The Galaxy Research survey, commissioned by the National Australia Bank, quizzed Australian singles and couples from all cities on their thoughts on the so-called “most romantic day of the year”.

It found that almost a million people have taken the opportunity to end a relationship around Valentine’s Day with the main reasons for breaking up being that the partner cheated or had come to the realisation their partner was “boring” or wasn’t right for them.

According to the research, the majority of young Australians don’t like February 14 or don’t want to celebrate the day.

The survey, which was launched as part of a campaign to encourage people to evaluate their relationships, revealed some interesting insights into the country’s views around relationships and Valentine’s Day. The study of young Australians from 18 to 39 years old showed that more than half (57 percent) do not like the day.

The study also found that for many, it’s not just a day of wining, dining and romance, but a marketing exercise to make us buy things (44 percent), and for many of Australia’s singles it can be a day of dread with one in four (25 percent) seeing it as a time that makes single people feel bad about themselves.

When couples take stock of their relationship around Valentine’s Day some key areas of consideration will be the levels of trust, honesty and respect. These are key areas that define a bad relationship, young people responded.

The survey found the most common reason for terminating a relationship was the realisation that they were not compatible (60 percent). Other relationships were ended because of the belief that their partner had changed (43 percent) or the spark had gone (43 percent).

The survey also found that as many as one in three unmarried couples used Valentine’s Day to evaluate their relationship and determine if it is what they wanted. While up to one in four young people admitted to having stayed in a relationship over Valentine’s Day even though they felt they were going through the motions in a relationship that had lost its spark.

Relationship commentator and author, Zoë Foster, said in a NAB media release that while for some young people in a relationship the day can be filled with romance, it is also a time when couples assess the health of their relationship, and look at their options.

“Between new year and February 14 is a time when many evaluate whether their relationships are right for them,” Foster said.

“Almost half of young people will actually break up with their partner around Valentine’s Day — it’s almost what you could consider ‘break-up season’.

“Trust, respect and honesty are all of incredible importance. So, if you partner has cheated, or you’re feeling [the relationship has] run its course, or you just don’t bring out the best in each other, perhaps it’s time to move on.”

Hard isn’t code for ‘passionate.’ It’s just hard. So, you know those people who attribute the 14 percent of bliss in their relationship to be reason enough to endure the 76 percent of unhappiness? They’re crazy! Don’t be those guys.

Do you change around your partner? We all know someone who becomes more reserved or more hostile, more competitive or just duller when their partner is around. It’s a bit sad, isn’t it? Sure is. A loving relationship should bring out the best in you both not the worst.

Love it, leave it or change it. If you don’t love it, and you’ve repeatedly tried to change it (to no avail), sometimes the best option is to leave it.

Are you at 40 watts, or 100 watts? The simplest way to evaluate how happy you are in your relationship is to check your voltage. Are you walking around beaming at a dazzling 100 watts, being your best self, helping and inspiring your partner to be their best self? Or do you feel more muted and down at 40 watts, with just barely enough light for you, let alone enough to shine on them? Simple question; telling answer.

And when you have finally made the big decision, remember — it’s called a break-up because it was broken. Of course, this doesn’t stop a lot of us from (having 526 tubs of ice-cream and) constantly debating calling our ex to ask for another go at things (whether dumpee or dumper). But do your best not to ramble down that grubby little path. Engage a friend to be your SMS or email border control.

Your say: What do you think about Valentine’s Day? Have you ever been involved in a realtionship break-up at this time of year?

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I caught my husband cheating, but never told him

Woman and husband

Picture posed by models

Being married for almost forty years is regarded as a huge achievement, something many people envy. If they only knew the truth about my relationship.

Tony and I are the textbook case of childhood sweethearts. We met in the middle of high school and have not left each other’s side since.

We married young and started a family, having the first of four children at only eighteen.

We bought a small business together and worked extremely hard, watching it grown steadily. Our one business quickly turned in to two, then three; before we knew it we owned an entire franchise accumulating wealth beyond our wildest dreams.

We purchased a gorgeous family home, put our children through private schools and enjoyed overseas holidays twice a year.

Although we co-owned the business, it was all in Tony’s name – that is just the way things were in those days. I had to pinch myself sometimes reflecting over the amazing life Tony and I had made from ourselves, considering we both came from little.

Until one day I received a call at home.

Almost immediately the woman began sobbing down the line gasping for air. “Sarah?” she finally croaked “I have been having an affair with your husband Tony. I didn’t know he had a wife and children – I broke it off as soon as I found out. I am so sorry. I think you have the right to know”.

I almost dropped the receiver. I contemplated for a brief moment trying to organise my racing mind. Holding back the tears I said sternly “If there is one thing you can do for me, do not let Tony know you rang”.

I hung up and I never heard from her again.

Although I was devastated beyond belief at Tony’s betrayal, when I put my children to sleep that night, I thought of a reality far worse. Having to confront Tony, leave our family home, penniless and heartbroken. Not to mention the years in court fighting over the custody of our children and assets.

I wasn’t materialistic but I wasn’t ready to let go of everything I had worked so hard for. Back then no laws existed to protect spouses, especially women, in these sorts of situations, I had actually never even heard of a pre-nuptial agreement until the time of my predicament. I realised I could lose everything – not just my cheating husband.

With the advice of a close friend who was a solicitor and summoning all my courage, I decided to stay – mainly for my children, to preserve the life that they so enjoyed and deserved.

I have never breathed a single word to Tony about the call I received that day. I do not know if their relationship stopped there or continued. I don’t know if he has had other affairs since, I suspect he has.

Over the years things between my husband and I remain strained on my end. I find I can’t enjoy his company and I have no interest in being intimate with him.

However, every time I think of his affair almost thirty years ago I remind myself this is the decision I made and the life I choose to live. I don’t have a loyal husband but I have more than I could have ever asked for.

Your say: Have you ever discovered an affair or been caught out? Share your thoughts below.

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Is green the new black?

This year’s award season has seen a sea of green frocks hitting the red carpet and it’s hard to miss the big names who are embracing the new colour from emerald green to florescent shades.

Angelina Jolie, Catherine Zeta Jones and Mila Kunis are just some of the stylish celebrities who stepped out in different shades of the colour and all looked effortlessly striking.

TODAY stylist Henry Roth has labelled the colour the best, most forward-thinking colour on the red carpet, so expect to see more of it at the upcoming Oscars!

Angelina Jolie at the Golden Globes

Mila Kunis at the Golden Globes

Kathy Griffith at the BAFTAS

Kyle Richards at the Golden Globes

Hayden Panettiere at the Golden Globes

Claire Danes at the Screen Actors Guild Awards

Elizabeth Moss at the Golden Globes

Catherine Zeta-Jones at the Golden Globes

Rose McGowan at A Night Of Red Carpet Style event

Rebecca Cresskoff at the Golden Globes

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Valentine’s Day Recipes

Melt the heart of your loved one this Valentine’s Day with some of these delicious and tantalising treats!

Why not start your Valentine’s Day off with a bang by surprising your sweetheart with an aphrodisiac-infused breakfast in bed of Honeyed figs with toasted fruit bread? Figs are a known aphrodisiac!

If you’re staying in for a romantic night at home, why not try spicing things up with some delicious tasting plates or finger food you can feed to each other? Try these on for size…

Chocolate fondue

Oysters natural and Venetian-style

Tropical fruit with ginger wine syrup

Cheese fondue

Tempura garden vegetables with salsa verde and chilli oil

Yellowtail sashimi

Sushi

Celebration lobster with vanilla butter

Chocoloate Valentines cupcake

Valentine heart biscuits

Or if you’re going ‘all out’ to wine and dine your special someone this Valentine’s Day, go for those time-tested favourites to win the heart (and stomach!) of your sweetheart! These will do the trick everytime…

Grilled lobster

Asparagus with tomato vinaigrette

Chocolate brownie with warm chocolate sauce

Silky chocolate mousee

Decadent chocolate pots

Grilled orange vincotto

Mini lamb roasts in prosciutto

Rocket, avocado and macadamia salad

Asian lamb salad with lime dressing

Hazelnut creme caramel

Tell us what you have planned for Valentine’s Day this year [email protected]

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Improve the way you spend, not just how much

Hey big spender, here's how to manage your finances, avoid interest and get closer to your monetary and material goals.
woman with piggy bank, getty

EVERY year is “the year”, when we think we’ll be swept up by an exotic summer holiday, driving away in that new car from the dealership we jog by, or finally getting the keys to the bigger home of our dreams. However, “the year” always seems to become “next year” when our savings accounts tell us the grim truth, so here’s how to make this year, “your year”.

About one in three women plan to make a major purchase in the coming months, but one quarter of those women will delay this purchase for money reasons, according to debt research data from Dun & Bradstreet. It’s no surprise many of us spend more time thinking about big-ticket spends throughout the year than we do planning how to save for it.

You can probably name three big things you wish you could buy off the top of your head. But if you were asked how you would save for each of these items, would you give the same answer for each?

Take a car for example. If your goal is $20,000, think about ways to save on fuel efficiency, costs of repairs and your insurance. You can also tailor your savings plan by reducing your spend on petrol and maintenance, and putting the spare cash away to boost your savings while achieving healthier spending habits.

In 12 months, saving $400 a week will get you over the line with a nice interest return of almost $700.

Saving for a home will need the same level of focus and discipline, but you can consider incentives such as the First Home Saver Account and the First Home Owner Grant to skyrocket your savings potential.

For example, saving for a $30,000 deposit over four years with a First Home Saver Account at 5.5 percent by ME Bank will require you to save $525 per month, and you’ll be rewarded with almost $4800 in interest and government contributions.

It’s also important to remember savings as anti-debt. With only one in five women paying for their big purchase in interest-free terms, improving the way you spend (not just how much) can also help make sure that when you have ticked off your savings goal, you won’t be crawling in debt from your other purchases in the new year.

Michelle Hutchison is a consumer advocate at RateCity. RateCity is a privately owned company in partnership with ninemsn, publisher of the Australian Women’s Weekly website. The above information is general only and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation or needs.

Your say: Do you have any big purchases planned? Do you have any saving secrets? Email us on [email protected]

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