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Jessica Watson says school can wait

Jessica Watson says school can wait

She’s far too busy, with a book to promote, a world full of fans to meet and a new sailing adventure on the horizon, Jess tells Jonica Bray.

She spent seven months battling the high seas and mastering knowledge of complex charts and tides, but unfortunately for Jessica Watson, these skills won’t appear on her school report card.

While she succeeded at age 16 in becoming the youngest sailor to circumnavigate the globe solo and unassisted, Jess admits her mammoth achievement has come at the cost of her studies.

“That’s been a bit hard,” Jess, now 17, tells Woman’s Day. “I’ve hardly been home but I’ve been doing distance education.”

Jess admits she won’t complete her studies this year, but isn’t worried with everything else she has going on, joking that she has blisters from signing autographs.

“I’m a bit behind with my skills and it’ll take me a bit longer to finish it,” says Jess. “But it’s not something that worries me too much. I’ve got a book that’s just been the bestseller in the country so that’s quite incredible.”

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Exclusive: Olivia Newton John: I’ve survived the storm!

Exclusive: Olivia Newton John: I've survived the storm!

The singer has emerged from a rough ride stronger and happier than ever. And it’s all thanks to love. Glen Williams reports.

After a tumultuous few years, Olivia Newton-John is glowing with joy. Her once troubled child, Chloe Lattanzi, is back on track, and Olivia is hopelessly devoted to her new husband, John Easterling. “This is the happiest I’ve ever been,” she tells Woman’s Day in an exclusive interview on a recent return home to Australia.

Over the past few years Olivia has frequently felt the glare of the spotlight for all the wrong reasons, with Chloe, 24, waging a very public battle with anorexia, and her erratic behaviour at nightclubs across LA making headlines.

Add the 2005 disappearance of Olivia’s then boyfriend Patrick McDermott, who some believe faked his own death, and you have enough drama to last anyone a lifetime.

But when Woman’s Day catches up with Olivia – who returned to home to receive the prestigious Medal of the Order of Australia from Governor General Quentin Bryce this month – we’re met with a woman who not only looks back in control but content with life. And it’s all thanks to love. More specifically, to her husband of two years, John Easterling.

“Married life is fantastic,” the 61-year-old star says with a girlish giggle, looking over at her doting husband, who has travelled home with Olivia to share her special day.

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Inside Mary’s Aussie family reunion

Inside Mary's Aussie family reunion

Surrounded by family, the princess enjoyed a typically laid-back Aussie break, report Glen Williams and Frank Thorne.

It was the most joyous of homecomings. The Tasmanian winter was blasting a chilly wind across the Derwent, but it was all sunny smiles from Princess Mary.

And the moment she laid eyes on her siblings – Patricia, Jane and big brother John – there were tears of joy. Mary, blissfully pregnant with twins, was finally home.

Smartly dressed in a long grey jacket over a loose white blouse, Mary left enough of a gap to display a telltale glimpse of her growing tummy.

“Mary looked so fresh as she stepped down from the plane,” an enthusiastic royal watcher remarked. “Despite this being a private visit, the news of her twins is really causing a buzz.”

With excited fans calling out her name, Mary chatted to security staff before being whisked off in a silver Honda to enjoy her family reunion in the privacy of her sister Jane Stephens’ West Hobart home. Here in her home town, this glamorous European princess is still Mary Donaldson, the youngest of the Donaldson clan.

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Baby number 7 for Ange?

The actress has been fuelling rumours of a pregnancy with her latest wardrobe choices and gushing interviews.

When Angelina Jolie took her kids Shiloh and Maddox to a toy store in Japan last month, the tight pants, close-fitting knits and designer heels she usually favours had been replaced by a loose dress and comfortable thongs.

For Angelina watchers, it was a sure first sign. Since then, the stunning 35-year-old Salt star has done little to dismiss rumours she is pregnant with her fourth biological child, bringing her total brood to seven.

All the tell-tale signs are there: the glowing skin, the eye-popping cleavage…and then there are the dramatic floaty evening dresses she’s been wearing on the red carpet as she makes her way around the world promoting her new movie.

Read the full story in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale August 23, 2010.

Angelina Jolie

Angelina with four of her six children in Japan recently.

Ange and Brad with Zahara and Maddox when their kids were much younger.

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Halle Berry: I’m glad I’m an older mum!

Halle Berry: I'm glad I'm an older mum!

Despite struggling to fall pregnant and a punishing round of fertility drugs, Halle says she’s glad she waited until her forties before becoming a mother.

She might have won an Oscar for her role in Monster’s Ball, but ask Halle Berry what her greatest achievement is, and there’s no hesitation in her reply – being mother to two-year-old Nahla.

The 44-year-old actress struggled to fall pregnant with Nahla, undergoing fertility treatment with then-boyfriend Gabriel Aubry.

But, in a surprise admission, Halle says she’s glad she waited until later in life to become a first-time mum. Despite enduring months of heartbreak and raging mood-swings due to fertility injections, Halle told US Vogue she’s better mother material now she’s in her forties than she would have been in her twenties.

“Nature has got it all wrong,” Halle says. “When you are younger, it should be harder to get pregnant, and as you get older it should be easier. When you are ready, you can’t do it to save your life. And when you are 21, you are so not ready, but you are as ripe as could be.

“I’m lucky and grateful that I waited until an age when I can be really present. I saw my mother in her early twenties having two little kids and I don’t think she enjoyed me at two the way that I enjoy my daughter. She didn’t have that luxury.”

Your Say: Do you agree with Halle Berry, has nature got it all wrong? Share your thoughts below.

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Our dream wedding on a wing and a prayer

Our dream wedding on a wing and a prayer

A spectacular guest swooped in to make this couple’s big day truly magical, writes Glen Williams.

It may not have taken an eagle-eyed observer to spot the true love shared by Belinda Brown and Shannon Eckstein, but it didn’t stop one swooping in to help them celebrate their big day. When the couple married on the Gold Coast recently, their special guest was a performing wedge-tailed eagle called Soren.

Belinda’s mother Kerrie, wanting to make her 25-year-old daughter’s wedding extra special, initially thought a flock of white doves would add a unique touch and be a moving tribute to Shannon’s father, Billy, who had recently died.

“We thought doves would be a nice touch, as they represent love, peace and heaven,” Kerrie says.

But then she saw the magnificent Soren – a perfect specimen of the endangered Aussie bird – at a wedding expo. “When we were told Soren was trained to swoop down the aisle, circling over the guests, to deliver the wedding rings to the best man or groom, we knew we had that extra magical ingredient that would set our daughter’s wedding apart,” Kerrie says.

“There was no question that we had to have both the doves and the eagle at Belinda and Shannon’s wedding.”

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Exclusive: Kate Ritchie: How I got my best body ever!

Exclusive: Kate Ritchie: How I got my best body ever!

As she counts down to her wedding, Cops L.A.C. star Kate Ritchie is in top shape thanks to a diet of love, fresh food and exercise, Jackie Brygel writes.

She walked down the aisle three times on Home And Away, but when it comes to her own wedding day, bride-to-be Kate Ritchie is determined her “intimate” ceremony will be perfect in every way.

And while she continues to put the finishing touches to her “dream wedding”, Kate is looking the best she ever has after months of slimming down and toning up before her marriage to hunky former rugby league star Stuart Webb. Kate remains tight-lipped about her wedding plans, but she told Woman’s Day that her special day will be a private and intimate family event.

“I’d like to think I will be a bride who, at the end of the night, can say she’s spoken to everyone individually,” reveals Kate, who was recently spotted shopping for a wedding gown with sister Rebekah.

“I think that will be the advantage of it being small and intimate. I share so much of my life with everyone else that it’s important the day is about Stuart and me. We’re concentrating on it being the day we want it to be.”

Kate, 32, laughs off suggestions she may have an inner-Bridezilla, but it is clear she is working hard to look her best on the big day, exercising and watching her diet.

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How can you cut diabetes risk?

Up to 275 Australians develop diabetes every day, but new research in the UK suggests cutting diabetes risk can be as easy as munching on some spinach.

A new study by the University of Leicester has found that eating green leafy vegetables can significantly cut your risk of type 2 diabetes.

Diagnosis of type 2 diabetes has dramatically increased over the past two decades with 6.4 percent of people worldwide and about 900,000 Australians now affected.

The study revealed that eating an extra one-and-a-half serves of good greens such as broccoli, kale, spinach and sprouts every day can cut your risk by up to 14 percent.

This is down to the high amount of antioxidants found in green vegetables and the high amount of magnesium found in spinach in particular.

The research team, lead by Dr Patrice Carter, found that although the relationship between high-volume fruit and vegetable diets and cancer and heart disease had been recognised, the link with diabetes was unclear.

“Our results support the evidence that ‘foods’ rather than isolated components such as antioxidants are beneficial for health,” Dr Carter wrote in a recent issue of the British Medical Journal .

“Results from several supplement trials have produced disappointing results for prevention of disease.”

However, in an editorial published in the same issue, Professor Jim Mann from New Zealand’s University of Otago, and Imperial College London’s Dagfinn Aune, argued for caution about the results.

They wrote it may be too early to suggest vegetables can reduce the risk due to the limited number of studies on the subject.

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I Faked My Daughter’s Illness

Image source: Getty - posed by models

Image source: Getty - posed by models

My daughter – Jade – is 5 years old and is starting to get invited over for sleepovers by her school-friends. She has a very good circle of friends at school and she desperately wants to spend as much time with them as possible.

The problem is that I’m paranoid and maybe a little overprotective. I’ve met most of the parents of Jade’s friends and they seem nice enough but I’ve learnt the hard way that appearances can be deceiving.

We don’t live in the wealthiest of suburbs – we’re not exactly in a rag-tag suburb either – but you come across the occasional story about certain parents engaging in questionable behaviour and some of the kids at Jade’s school have Daddies in prison which makes my mind race with worry.

The first couple of invites, I just made up excuses on the fly. I said that we had plans for the weekend or something similar.

After I realised that the whole sleep-over / after-school play-date thing wasn’t going to go away in a hurry I started formulating more long-term ways of brushing these people off.

I did a little research online and leafed through a couple of booklets at our Doctor’s surgery and came up with the mother of all excuses.

The next time Jade was invited for a sleep-over, I very solemnly explained to the parent that Jade had Chronic Bladder Myopathy.

I explained that CBM was a rare condition (so rare in fact that the bemused parent hadn’t even heard of it) and that it made sleep-overs an impossibility.

The parent was slowly convinced as I explained more about the mythical illness.

I’m sure that there are similar conditions in the real world but none so specifically targeted towards wheedling out of sleep-over invites.

Soon I was getting out of all manner of invites – not just sleep-overs but dinner invites and the like (which I’m also none too keen on with the exception of close friends and family).

I patiently explained each time that Jade’s symptoms weren’t simply bed-wetting but also very painful spasms which were treated with very specific medication that I always had to be on hand to administer.

I had a couple of bright sparks suggest that I come and stay over too but I shrugged this off by saying that I had too many things to do at home. I did allow Jade’s friends to come and stay over as often as they wanted but I had to stage some ‘medicine administering’ by calling Jade into the bathroom.

Behind closed doors, I gave her some lollies as incentive and told her that she must tell her friend’s she’s having her medicine and not lollies. I figured that the parents of Jade’s friends would quiz them on their return home about what went on.

Jade sometimes asks why she never went over to her friend’s places and a couple of times she did get upset over it which broke my heart. I told her that home was ‘safer’ very emphatically so that if she told her friends that and they told their Mums then it would sound as they this was just how I had to explain things to my young daughter.

I also made it clear to the parents when I brushed them off that I hadn’t really explained the details of Jade’s illness to her as she was too young and it would be too upsetting for her.

One day I will have to come clean with her and I hope she doesn’t hate me. I just want to protect my child. Who doesn’t?

Your say: Have you experienced a similar situation? How did you deal with it? Tell us your story below…

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Catriona Rowntree in the Book Club hot seat

Getaway presenter Catriona Rowntree discusses her favourite books in our new monthly Book Club feature.

What was the last book you read?

After reading a recommendation in this very magazine, I grabbed at the airport, en route to Tuscany, Frances Mayes’ latest offering Every Day Iin Tuscany. To read her colourful description of her beloved region, then look up from the pages to see the very images in front of me was so inspiring. So much so, I made a pilgrimage to her hilltop town of Cortona, just to read the book in her favourite square. Thanks for the top tip!

If you could be any character in a book who would it be?

I love my courageous and charismatic women. Grace O’Malley (born 1530) from The Pirate Queen, takes the cake. One of the most notorious, powerful and remarkable women in recorded history. Admired by Queen Elizabeth I, she ruled not only the sea, but the men in her life too. I love her wild Gaelic spirit.

Review this month’s Great Read and win The AWW Cooking School

What books can you remember from your childhood?

I was obsessed with reading about and then writing my own ghost stories. I just loved to scare myself and my mum thoroughly encouraged it with a never-ending supply of books. At 10 I won a prize at school and the gift was a book that became a firm favourite:… The Phantom Cyclist and Other Stories, by Ruth Ainsworth. Spooked the living daylights out of me! I dare your little ones to read it.

If you could take two characters from different books and put them in one book, who would they be and what would they get up to?

How about we take two of my favourite Isabel Allende characters and see what adventures and possibly passions get stirred up. Ines Suarez, the story of a real- life conquistadora who helped to build the nation of Chile and the swashbuckling hero Zorro. All that Latin Latin blood is sure to lead to some fiery tales!

If you could get your hands on the completely truthful autobiography of any historical figure, who would it be?

I’d dearly love to learn more about the extraordinary life of Queen Hatshepsut. There are so many dry, historical reads about this Egyptian phenomenon, who was clearly one of the most creative and powerful women of her time. I want the juicy goss on this lady and her tips for combining motherhood with running an empire would be most appreciated.

What’’s your favourite word in the English language?

Serendipity — just saying it makes me smile. Derived from the fairy tale The Three Princes of Serendip, who travelled and were always making discoveries by accident. This completely sums up the joy of travel for me, who knows what wonderful discovery each day shall bring?

If you were stranded on an island with only one book, what would it be?

As a former Brownie, I’m thinking Baden Powell’s original handbook Scouting for Boys, which includes everything from adventure tales to advice. Campfire and first- aid tips would have me rocking that island in no time. You can never be too prepared!

Related video It’s not difficult to convince Catriona Rowntree to visit a Pacific Island. This time her mission was to visit the Independent State of Samoa in the South Pacific. It covers the western part of the Samoan Islands archipelago and Savai’i and Upolu are the two large islands

What’s next on your reading list?

Apart from the mountain of research for my next destination, I just grabbed (yep, from the airport again) a rip- roaring tale, The Bark Cutters by Nicole Alexander. It’s Aan Australian family saga that centres on their historic country property. Hello — welcome to my world, I can’t wait for take- off so I can start reading!

If everyone in the world could stop what they were doing for a week and read one book, what would it be?

A tricky question, but I’m thinking that if we could all just understand the basic principle behind The Art of Happiness, which is basically a long chinwag between the Dalai Lama and author Howard Cutler, our world would indeed be a much happier place. The message is simple, treat others in the same manner you expect to be treated and joy is found within you, not your McMansion or flash car. I feel uplifted already!

What do you think of Catriona’s answers? Who else would you like to see in the Book Club hot seat? Share your thoughts below.

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