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I spent $140,000 to look like Jordan!

I spent $140,000 to look like Jordan!

Hollie Henderson made a big boob when she spent $140,000 on turning herself into UK glamour model Jordan.

Ever since Jordan, aka Katie Price, split with her Aussie husband, singer Peter Andre, last May after three years of marriage, her popularity has slumped – and so has Hollie’s.

Now the single mum-of-two is spending thousands to get her old look back, because she’s fed up with being under attack.

“When Jordan and Peter split, the problems started,” Hollie, 32, says. “I’d be called a slag and have drinks thrown at me. It was a nightmare.”

Hollie’s obsession with Jordan started in 2002, after she was mistaken for a boy.

A friend, trying to cheer her up, told her she looked like Jordan.

“I couldn’t see it myself,” she says, “but I seized upon her look as something I could achieve.”

First, she hit the gym and went on a diet to whittle down from a size 14 to a 10. Then she used credit cards to have her10B boobs boosted to a 10DD.

Read the full story in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 17, 2010.

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My 40-year-old son is trapped in a child’s body

I spent $140,000 to look like Jordan!

Western Australia’s Nicky Freeman may hold the secret to eternal youth, but his mum tells John Parrish the secret to happiness is just as important.

He’s a 40-year-old who looks and acts like a 10-year-old, but man-child Nicky Freeman could help unlock the secrets of near-eternal youth.

Nicky has a virtually unknown condition that sees him age only one year for every four, trapping him forever in the body of a boy.

“If the average life span is 70, it means Nicky could live to be 280,” says his mother Kayleen, who lives in Western Australia.

But while Nicky may hold the secret to the fountain of youth, he has paid a tragic price for his condition. Unable to see or speak, Nicky, who began going through puberty at 30, lives in a home for disabled adults.

Doctors can give his mother very few answers and there is little hope of a cure. Kayleen fears Nicky’s rough entry into the world may have played a key role in the symptoms her eldest child began to exhibit.

“During pregnancy, I developed a strong allergic reaction to eggs,” Kayleen, a former nurse, recalls. “If I was in a kitchen when an egg was cracked, my eyes would swell.

“My GP prescribed a strong anti-histamine which, 40 years ago, I didn’t think anything of. Then, during the birth, the obstetrician fumbled with a scalpel, slicing deeply into Nicky’s fontanelle [the soft crown of a newborn’s skull].

“Later, I wondered if the medication or the injury could have affected my son.”

For the next year-and-a-half, Nicky seemed much like any other baby, but there were two differences that stood out in his mother’s mind from an early age.

“He was incredibly strong – I could barely hold him down,” she remembers. “And he wouldn’t reach for toys like other kids.”

Concerned her son may have an eye condition, Kayleen consulted a specialist.

“Tests showed Nicky was blind. His optical nerve had atrophied,” she says. Also, her son’s pituitary gland, which helps control a child’s growth, was found to be operating very slowly.

Read the full story in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 17, 2010.

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Bec and Lleyton’s joy: We’re having another baby!

Bec and Leyton's joy: We're having another baby!

The baggy pants and loose-fitted shirts can no longer hide the fact Bec Hewitt is expecting her third baby, writes Dylan Howard..

The first signs were apparent as early as February, when Woman’s Day spotted the normally svelte Bec Hewitt with a telltale bump on a shopping trip with the kids. Hubby Lleyton was sweating it out at the Australian Open in Melbourne at the time.

Fast forward two months – and the passing of the vital first trimester – and there is no mistaking it…the bubbly young mum is clearly at least four months pregnant with her third child, and over the moon to be so.

With her mum-to-be glow on show to the world, Bec was spotted last week piling her two cherubic tots, daughter Mia, 4, and son Cruz, 17 months, into a golf cart and buzzing around the streets of her home in Nassau.

Bec looked relaxed and casual – her hair loosely tied back and a baseball cap protecting her from the hot Bahamas sun – as she happily stopped to show off her swollen belly to passers-by, while Cruz and Mia looked on excitedly.

“Bec popped up to the local shops and while sitting in her golf buggy, she took great pleasure in showing off her bump to a friend,” says an onlooker in the upmarket Old Fort Bay community Bec and Lleyton have called home since late 2008.

The former Home And Away actress has also been seen making two separate visits to the private medical clinic, The Ladies Medical Centre in Nassau, for check-ups with her obstetrician.

Her mum and dad, Darrel and Michele, were by her side when she went for a recent check-up – a 90-minute appointment from which Bec emerged with a relieved smile and a copies of her ultrasound scans in hand. Not that Bec’s a prima donna, as the staff at Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital, where Cruz was born, will attest.

“We see plenty of household names here and they’re not always as nice as Bec,” says one.

To read more about Bec and Leyton’s baby joy see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 17, 2010.

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Nicole and Jen: The ex-wives club

Nicole and Jen: The ex-wives club

The pair have become best mates on the set of their new movie by talking about their star ex-husbands. Heidi Parker reports.

Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt had better watch their backs now their former spouses have become best friends.

That’s the word from multiple on-set sources, who say the pair have quickly bonded by dishing the dirt to each other about their exes.

The pair of famously jilted women have become inseparable as they film their new movie, Just Go With It, in Hawaii. It’s not just their shared sense of humour that has them in constant gales of laughter – but also their mutual experiences as dumped wives.

“I don’t know why that beautiful woman doesn’t do more comedies,” gushes Jen. “She is absolutely hilarious; the easiest person to hang around, and fun and funny.”

At the Four Seasons Resort Maui at Wailea gym last week, fellow gym goers say Nicole and Jennifer enjoyed a very enlightening heart-to-heart as they worked out together.

“They realised they had a lot in common,” reveals one witness. “They got to talking about their lives and, before they knew it, they had gabbed away for almost two hours.”

The main topic of discussion: their famous exes.

“It seemed so therapeutic. Nic and Jen were doubled over with laughter making fun of the guys’ quirks,” the source says. “Nothing was off limits.”

Reports say the women even discussed what went on with their exes in the bedroom.

To read more about how Nicole and Jen really feel about thier ex-husbands see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 17, 2010.

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Joh Griggs and Gary Sweet: Our 10 year feud is over!

Joh Griggs and Gary Sweet: Our 10 year feud is over!

Sharing a proud moment, TV host Johanna Griggs and her actor ex Gary Sweet bury the pain of their split for the sake of their son. Jonica Bray reports.

Laughing together in the Autumn sunshine, TV host Johanna Griggs and her ex-husband Gary Sweet presented a rare united front last week as they watched their son’s football match in Sydney’s Centennial Park.

The high-profile former couple, who have been bitterly divided since their three-year marriage ended more than a decade ago, were finally at ease together, with the spotlight firmly on their son, Joe, 13.

But regulars at the rugby match said they were surprised to see Logie-winning actor Gary, 54 – who recently bared his body for TV’s The Pacific and is about to begin shooting the Nine Network drama Cops LAC – in the flesh.

“He’s not someone you ever see at the games, so we were all pretty surprised when Gary showed up to this one,” says one parent.

Gary’s evergreen acting career has meant long separations over the years from sons Joe and Jesse, 14, the children of his third marriage.

“The last match he came to watch was over a year ago – it’s easy to remember because he’s a loud and enthusiastic spectator, always hooting and hollering and clapping his hands,” the parent reveals.

“He stays close to the action and is a very vocal supporter who enjoys the whole scene. With his own boy he’s very focused – he makes it clear he’s keen for Joe to kick goals and stand out on the sporting field.”

To read more about Joh and Gary’s new found friendship see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 17, 2010.

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Retro glam from Cannes

As the festival gains momentum each year, we’ve taken a moment to pause and reflect on some of the biggest red carpet moments at Cannes Film Festivals of years past.

From Hugh Hefner and his girls to a barely dressed Mila Jovovich, a bikini donned Bridget Bardot to the gorgeous Grace Kelly, these pictures span decades of glamour at the Festival de Cannes.

Elizabeth Taylor and Mike Todd in 1957

The beautiful Italian actress, Sophia Loren poses for photographers at the 1958 Cannes Festival.

Classic icons of the ’60s, Warren Beatty and Natalie Wood, pictured at the Cannes Film Festival in 1962

Gorgeous French starlet, Brigitte Bardot suns herself on the beach during the Cannes Film Festival in 1953.

Actress Kim Novak with Cary Grant at the Cannes Film Festival in 1959.

Yoko Ono and John Lennon with French director Louis Malle and French actress Jeanne Moreau in 1971

Legendary actor Michael Caine, star of the film *Alfie* poses with models during the 1966 festival

Legendary actor Michael Caine, star of the film Alfie poses with models during the 1966 festival

English actress Vanessa Redgrave with Italian actor Franco Nero at the premiere of her latest film *Blow Up* in 1967

English actress Vanessa Redgrave with Italian actor Franco Nero at the premiere of her latest film Blow Up in 1967

Iconic French actress, Catherine Deneuve waves to the crowds at the Cannes Film Festival in 1966.

Easy Rider stars Dennis Hopper, Feliciano, Peter Fonda, J. Jefferson and Jack Nicholson in 1969

Jayne Mansfield and husband Mickey Hargitay smile for cameras at Cannes in 1958

Jean Pierre Aumont and Grace Kelly in 1955

Alfred Hitchcock and Princess Grace of Monaco in 1972

Kim Novak at Cannes in 1956

Jerry Lewis with his wife Patti Palmer stroll through Cannes in 1979

Prince Charles and Princess Diana are greeted by the Lady Mayor of Cannes at the 1987 festival

Supermodels Kate Moss and Claudia Schiffer add a touch of glam to the 51st Cannes Film Festival in 1998.

Bruce Willis, Demi Moore, French director Luc Besson and Milla Jovovich before a showing of *The Fifth Element*

Bruce Willis, Demi Moore, French director Luc Besson and Milla Jovovich before a showing of The Fifth Element

Brooke Shields arrives at the Palais des Festivals for the screening of the film *General* in 1998

Brooke Shields arrives at the Palais des Festivals for the screening of the film General in 1998

Sharon Stone battles the elements as her skirt gets caught by the wind at the screening of *Unzipped* in 1995

Sharon Stone battles the elements as her skirt gets caught by the wind at the screening of Unzipped in 1995

Hugh Hefner with playmates on the steps of the Palais des Festivals before the screening *Entrapment* in 1999

Hugh Hefner with playmates on the steps of the Palais des Festivals before the screening Entrapment in 1999

Nicole Kidman attends the film premiere of *Moulin Rouge* at Cannes on May 2, 2001.

Nicole Kidman attends the film premiere of Moulin Rouge at Cannes on May 2, 2001.

Hot Hollywood diva Jennifer Lopez exudes style and glamour on the Cannes red carpet in 1998

Danny Devito gestures to the cameras as he arrives for the gala screening of *LA Confidential* in 1997

Danny Devito gestures to the cameras as he arrives for the gala screening of LA Confidential in 1997

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Cannes 2010

Last year it was Inglourious Basterds, this year it’s Robin Hood. Each Festival de Cannes has a film that the mainstream media is gagging to see. But each year there is another certainty, and that is that the glittering array of stars who attend will be dressed in their finest.

This year Eva Longoria Parker, Naomi Watts, Selma Hayek, Kate Beckinsale, Cate Blanchett and many more have sashayed their way up the famous stairs at Cannes, giving the fashion world (and the rest of us) something to talk about.

Eva Longoria looking lovely in Pucci at the *Robin Hood* premiere

Eva Longoria looking lovely in Pucci at the Robin Hood premiere

Eva Longoria in a Naeem Kahn gown at the *On Tour* premiere

Eva Longoria in a Naeem Kahn gown at the On Tour premiere

Kate Beckinsale looked beautiful in her Marchesa gown at the *Robin Hood* premiere

Kate Beckinsale looked beautiful in her Marchesa gown at the Robin Hood premiere

Kate Beckinsale, a member of the jury this year, in a Gucci dress

Naomi amps up the wattage of her red lipstick at the Vanity Fair/Gucci party

In Gucci Première, at the premiere of her new film *You Will Meet a Tall And Tall Dark Stranger*

In Gucci Première, at the premiere of her new film You Will Meet a Tall And Tall Dark Stranger

More Gucci Première, this time on Salma Hayek

Diane Lane at the Vanity Fair/Gucci party

Jennifer Lopez, in Gucci, and husband Marc Anthony

Camilla Belle wore Gucci Première and Cartier jewels at the premiere of *Il Gattopardo*

Camilla Belle wore Gucci Première and Cartier jewels at the premiere of Il Gattopardo

At the Vanity Fair/Gucci party, Camilla Belle sparkled in (of course) Gucci

*Robin Hood* star Cate Blanchett in Alexander McQueen

Robin Hood star Cate Blanchett in Alexander McQueen

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I’m the reason mum tried to commit suicide

Depressed mother

Image source: Getty - posed by model

When I was 14 I turned from a good, if not naÏve, child, and into my parents’ worst nightmare.

I think I’ve always been a bit of a loner and although I had friends in primary school, I was never the most popular and looking back I remember feeling different and lonely most of the time.

Once I started high school I found it even harder to be noticed in the crowd and it didn’t take me long to discover that I had something all the boys wanted and I thought that the way I acted gave me an edge on the other girls and made me popular with the boys.

The problem was, I was never respected, and I was never the girlfriend. I would be the one the boys looked to for a good time before choosing a girlfriend, or going back to their girlfriend.

Upon realising this, I became even more unhappy and lost respect for myself, as everyone else had already done. Tough girls that used to call me a slut and pick on me relentlessly must have picked up a vibe from me and started to invite me out with them.

I started smoking pot, drinking and staying out for days without calling home. I thought my parents were really square and were trying to make my life miserable for making me follow all their rules and curfews.

The more they tried to lay down the law the less I went home. My parents had me drug tested, sent me to therapists and once had me admitted to a psychiatric hospital for a month, I think just for the peace of mind that they knew I would be safe.

Little did they know, the hospital was full of teenagers like me, who introduced me to even more than I already knew. Around the time I was 14, I started using speed, and medications that had the same effect.

A girlfriend a year younger than me had 3 older brothers, one of whom was prescribed a medication I took for fun. Her house to me was heaven. There was drinking, drugs and drag racing every night, and the parents didn’t care, and even joined in.

We’d walk to a service station and buy chips and pies when we wanted to eat, no-one ever had a curfew or had to clean the house, and my friends mum wasn’t too fussed whether we went to school or not. I thought it was the most fantastic place ever.

I stayed there and even told my parents I wanted to move there and that I wanted my friend’s mum to be my guardian. My friend’s mum agreed, which now seems totally unbelievable to me and I’m not even a parent.

In reality, my friend’s house and family were everything that would now disgust me. It stank, was dirty, the people were dirty and disrespectful and they’re probably still living in the same squalor all these years later.

A mediation session was arranged for my friends mum, my mum, dad and myself to meet at my parents house with a counsellor and I went there staunchly determined that I was going to hold my ground and leave there free of my parents and their rules.

For over an hour I put forth my case, my parents put forth their case, and my friend’s mum sat in my parents immaculate home in silence, listening to my parents break down in tears and tell her how they worried whether I was safe, where I was when they had calls from school to say I hadn’t been there and wanting to know what they’d done to deserve this and why hadn’t my friends mum ever contacted them to discuss the fact that their 14 year old daughter had moved into her home without their consent.

The counsellor asked that my friend’s mum leave and I stay for a while to discuss everything further and that the counsellor would drop me back around to my friend’s house when we were done.

When it was just my family and the counsellor, I was asked if I knew that my mum had tried to commit suicide the week before. I hadn’t known. My mum had asked that I not be contacted because I didn’t care. I was sickened. It honestly wasn’t until that moment that I realise that my parents cared about me that much and had been that worried and desperate. I was in shock.

I did get a lift back to my friend’s house. But I was there less than an hour before I packed my bag and said I was going home. I wasn’t even offered a lift, I walked all the way home with my bag and just hugged my mum and dad when I got home.

I have never forgiven myself for that, even 10 years on, I know it’s my fault my mum and dad are separated, and my mum has an addiction to prescription medication she was put on for depression, sleep problems and anxiety.

I was still not a model daughter after that. I left home at 16 after meeting a really dangerous man who introduced me to an even worse lifestyle. The upside to my story is that the dangerous boyfriend led me to meet my now wonderful husband, and together we have worked step by step to build for ourselves what we like to call a normal, respectable life.

In the years since I turned 18, my parents have frequently told me how proud they are of me and how wonderful I’ve turned out. I have a fantastic younger sister who is now 17 and remembers most of the bad times, but all of the good, and says I’ve been a great sister.

My family are probably more relieved than proud, because I know that whatever I may have done right, can never make up for what I put my parents through in those few years. And when my dad says to me, “I can’t wait until you have children so you they can terrorise you”, he may be joking, but a shiver runs down my spine.

If you need support or information about suicide prevention contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or SANE Helpline on 1800 18 SANE (7263).

Picture posed by a model.

Your say: Have your say about this true confession below…

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The Hand That First Held Mine

Read our review of Maggie O’Farrell’s The Hand That First Held Mine then tell us what you think on the form below for a chance to win a copy of the AWW Cooking School cook book and have your critique printed in The Australian Women’s Weekly books pages.

Two women born 50 years apart are the pivotal characters in this compelling and multi-layered story by award-winning Irish author Maggie O’Farrell, in which the secrets of the past are never escaped completely.

Every very family has secrets that have been swept under the carpet. This beautifully written novel about motherhood, love and jealousy exposes the dangers of papering over unpalatable truths and the devastating impact this can have on generations to come. It is a brilliant novel, subtle and intriguing. Pivotal are two English women born 50 years apart. Their stories unfold in layers that seem to shift and move, so that you can never quite get a handle on the truth.

There is the likeable and feisty Lexie Sinclair, who is battling against the stifling constraints placed on women in the 1950s. Her key to freedom is a chance meeting with the irresistible Innes Kent. The second woman is present-day Elina, struggling through a fog of pain and tiredness after the traumatic birth of her first child, and reading about her state of mind in the early stages is not always a comfortable experience. Ted, Elina’s film editor husband, is feeling dislocated, not only by the high drama surrounding the birth of his son and the stranger his wife has become, but by flashbacks to memories and scenes that don’t tally with his background. As this alluring plot switches back and forth between the two women, there is the feeling that there is a connection – but what is it?

Occasionally, there is a glimmer of what might have really happened, a tiny clue, a flicker of a possibility, but you’re never quite sure and the tension mounts like a rising barometer. Only when there is an astonishing revelation does the final piece of the puzzle fall into place and when it does, it is deeply, richly satisfying – and very, very surprising.

Read The Hand That First Held Mine and in 30 words or less, tell us what you think of it. The best critique will win The AWW Cooking School cookbook, valued at $74.95, and be printed in the July issue of The Weekly.

Please ensure you leave an email address you can be contacted on in order to be eligible for the prize.

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Beat the yeast

Getty Images

Getty Images

Thrush is a vaginal infection caused by an excess of candida albicans, a fungal yeast which normally inhabits the intestines. Symptoms include intense burning, itching, and a discharge.

Anything which disturbs the normal balance of “good” bacteria in the gut can trigger it, including stress, antibiotics, spermicides, synthetic oestrogens, such as those in the contraceptive pill, and hormonal changes. Try these drug-free solutions to get rid of this annoying condition.

Send sugar to the sin bin

A diet rich in sugar and refined carbohydrates — eg: white pasta, bread and rice — can make you more susceptible to thrush because yeast feeds on sugar in the body.

Forgo fungi

It stands to reason that if you eat fungal foods like mushrooms, pickles, wine, and blue cheese, that you will encourage the growth of candida in your body. You also need to avoid foods that have invisible fungi in them, like nuts and dried fruit. Eat yeast-free rye or wholegrain bread, oats and quinoa, and avoid fermented foods, such as soy, vinegar, and malt.

Pucker up

Herbal bitters encourage digestive secretions, which may help to restore balance to gut microflora. Take one teaspoonful in a small glass of warm water before each meal.

Pop probiotics

Reach for yoghurt with live active cultures or a probiotic supplement to help repopulate your system with healthy bacteria and boost your immune system.

One group of women with recurrent thrush reported a dramatic 300 percent decrease in infections when they ate yoghurt containing Lactobacillus acidophilus for six months. Probiotic pessaries can be helpful, as increasing the number of healthy bacteria in and around the vagina seems to keep thrush at bay.

Pick a herb

Goldenseal (Hydrastis canadensis) contains the alkaloid berberine, which inhibits the growth of Candida. Olive leaf (Olea europaea) provides oleuropein, a bitter phytochemical which attacks fungi and prevents its replication. Pau d’arco (Tabebuia avellanedae) contains antifungal and antimicrobial compounds called napthaquinones.

Echinacea (Echinacea purpurea) helps stimulate production of white blood cells to attack the candida yeast. Grapefruit seed extract is another helpful over-the-counter remedy.

A naturopath can give you a professional-strength preparation of these herbs — visit the Australian Traditional Medicine Society at www.atms.com.au to find a practitioner.

Try homoeopathy

Borax and kreosotum are said to be effective for vaginal itching and discharge with a foul odour. However, it is important to get individualised treatment from a qualified homoeopath rather than to self-medicate; to find one near you, visit www.homeopathyoz.org.

Swim in cinnamon

This spice has strong antifungal properties. Add six broken sticks to four cups of boiling water and simmer for 10 minutes. Remove from the heat, cover and allow it to brew for one hour. Strain and use the lukewarm liquid in a sitz bath to ease irritation and soreness.

No cinnamon handy? Add up to 20 drops of antiseptic, antifungal, and antimicrobial neem or tea tree oil to four cups of water and use that instead.

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