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Want to live longer? Get some shuteye!

Want to live longer? Get some shuteye!

We all know most of the benefits of getting a good night’s sleep, but new European research has found that it not only benefits our everyday health and wellbeing, it can also help us live longer.

Research conducted by the University of Warwick and the University of Naples Federico II found poor sleepers who get less than six hours of sleep a night were 12 percent more likely to die prematurely.

The research found seven hours of sleep was ideal and those who did get that amount of shuteye would live a longer and healthier life.

Achieving this amount of sleep is a challenge for around 20 percent of Australians who have a disturbed sleep, the late Harry Teichtahl from the Australasian Sleep Association said in a 2007 Pfizer Australia media release.

Teichtahl said 20 percent of Australians reported being disturbed between three and five times every night, while close to two-thirds reported difficulty going to sleep.

The health report also found that two-in-five Australians say they do not wake up feeling refreshed.

“Insomnia is often caused by worrying,” Teichtahl said.

“This, combined with the long hours and stresses of our 24-hour society, is a recipe for leaving the majority of the population living in a constant state of fatigue. Not a healthy, or safe, way to live,” he said.

“Sleep is important because it is a period of rest and recuperation for the body and brain. Using medications to aid insomnia only masks the problem and those people who are in the habit of having an afternoon nap and trying to sleep in on the weekend are only reinforcing the cycle of poor sleeping patterns.”

But the new research findings shouldn’t be taken as an open invitation to sleep in too much, too often. The research found that sleeping more than nine hours a night could indicate a serious underlying illness.

Your Say: Do you get enough sleep? What contributes to your lack of sleep?

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Six ways to keep hair and skin healthy this winter!

Six ways to keep hair and skin healthy this winter!

When the weather changes, so should your beauty routine. Your hair and skin respond differently to cooler temperatures, so with winter coming up, it is important that you adjust your routine accordingly.

The harsh winter elements and colder climates have a harmful, drying effect on skin and hair. But by following these simple tips, it’s easy to maintain healthy, glowing hair and skin all year round.

Braving the winter wind and then moving into a heated environment has a major drying effect on the skin. Exfoliating will remove layers of skin, allowing for new skin cells to develop.

Exfoliating with a formula or a loofer in the shower a few times a week will ensure smoother, softer skin.

2. Moisturise

Moisturising with a hydrating lotion is vital for keeping your skin glowing and smooth. In the colder months it’s a good idea to switch to heavier moisturising creams. It’s also a good time to use lotions which contain ingredients such as green tea, coconut oil, macadamia nut oil, grape seed, melatonin or vitamins C and E.

All of these contain antioxidants which counteract the free-radical damage caused by winter sun.

3. Use a gentle cleanser

In winter it is important to be more selective when choosing a cleanser. Scented, deodorant and anti-bacterial soaps can be extremely harsh and often will strip the skin of essential oils. Mild, soap-free products and cleansers such as Cetaphil are recommended as appropriate choices.

1. Use a gentle shampoo

Basic winter hair care includes using a shampoo that won’t strip your hair of moisture. It is also important in the colder months to cut down on frequent washing, as it will dry out the scalp and hair more easily.

2. Use a deeper conditioner

Richer conditioners and leave-ins allow for more protection, as the cold weather tends to dry out your locks.

The heavy cream consistency provides lubrication which will prevent damage. This will stop the hair becoming too fragile by rebuilding the hair structure which helps it grow and shine.

3. Use a weekly treatment

It is common for hair to experience breakage in the colder weather, so to ensure this doesn’t occur, a protein-rich treatment should be used at least once a week.

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Natalie Bassingthwaighte: My first Mother’s Day!

Natalie Bassingthwaighte: My first Mother's Day!

The multi-talented Natalie Bassingthwaighte hopes to be half the mum her mother and grandmother have been, she tells Lucy Chesterton.

Natalie Bassingthwaighte already has many tender memories of Mother’s Day, but this year she has an extra reason to celebrate – she is about to become a mum herself.

“It’s almost like my own first Mother’s Day,” she laughs as three generations of Bassingthwaighte women gather at a Sydney hotel where they immediately start swapping fresh family news, punctuated by bursts of hearty laughter.

“When I become a mum I want to have the same approach as my own parents, who are loving, supportive and always encouraging creativity,” says Natalie, who’s currently appearing on our screens in Underbelly 3: The Golden Mile.

“My family means the world to me. It’s nice to grow up in such a loving and supportive place, where you feel like anything is possible.

“We are always there for each other, no matter what.”

Within half an hour, the luxurious surroundings seem as cosy as if we’ve gathered in the Bassingthwaighte’s own family home, and as Nat’s mum, Betty, watches her daughter try on a rainbow of gorgeous dresses, it’s clear she couldn’t be prouder.

“I was mum to four wonderful daughters, and while there was a lot of fighting over who was wearing whose clothes, there were many more moments of incredible loyalty and love that I treasure,” says Betty, 57, whose twinkling eyes have been inherited by her photogenic daughter.

“Natalie was a very fussy eater when she was little and she slept all day and played all night long!”

Now Betty’s daughters, Melinda, 35, Natalie, 34, and 28-year-old twins Nicky and Lisa are all grown up, Betty is happy to sit back and enjoy everything her daughters have achieved, including careers in writing and teaching for Nicky, and careers in accounting and beauty therapy for Lisa and Melinda, respectively.

For the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 3, 2010.

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The Newton clan fight to save Matt

The Newton clan fight to save Matt

Bert and Patti Newton are relieved their troubled son Matthew is finally facing his addiction problems and seeking help – just like Bert did when his world fell apart 40 years ago. Phillip Koch reports.

As he battles his demons in a Melbourne clinic, Matthew Newton is not alone.

Even in his darkest hour, the troubled actor knows he can count on the love and support of parents Bert and Patti Newton.

TV’s golden couple is – yet again – ready to move heaven and earth for their wayward son: a son who has caused them untold heartache and distress with his erratic and dangerous behaviour.

“We’re with him and we hope for the best and I’ve got a feeling that will be what happens,” insists Bert. “He’s our son, we love him. It just happens that he is also a very talented boy and I want to make sure I carry out his wishes. There’s nothing to hide.”

But Bert and Patti, who last week visited Matthew in the clinic, have for years been hiding their fears for their only son. They’ve bailed him out of many disasters, relentlessly using their star-power to protect the 33-year-old actor.

And they’re not the only ones supporting him. Matthew’s sister, Lauren, is also doing her best to help her only sibling through his troubles. She’s also visited him at Melbourne’s Malvern Private Hospital, where he’s undergoing treatment, reportedly for drug and alcohol addiction.

Lauren’s visit, the day after Bert returned to Sydney to honour his stage commitments in Wicked, ahead of hosting the TV Week Logies, came as an important reminder to Matthew that he retains his family’s full support as he approaches the halfway mark of his 28-day residential rehabilitation program.

The close-knit Newton clan is fiercely loyal, but friends say this time, what is privately referred to as “the Matthew problem” has them deeply worried.

For the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 3, 2010.

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Sonia Kruger: Mum’s the real star!

Sonia Kruger: Mum's the real star!

If it wasn’t for her devoted mother, Sonia Kruger may never have danced her way to fame and fortune, as Phillip Koch reports.

Dancing With The Stars host Sonia Kruger cringes when her mum, Margaret, mentions that she still holds dear a poem her daughter wrote for her when she was just eight years old.

“It was so precious that I’ve kept it for over 30 years,” explains Margaret, who is proud of everything Sonia has achieved and can still quote the simple poem she wrote in primary school.

“She cooks, she cleans, she vacuums in between,” recites Margaret to howls of protest from her daughter.

The poem was probably never going to launch a writing career for Sonia, but it was music to Margaret’s ears.

“I’m very proud of what Sonia has achieved because it has not been easy for her,” she says. “It has been very stressful at times and it’s not as glamorous as a lot of people think. And she has done it all on her own – except at the beginning, where I helped.”

Sonia admits she has only recently come to fully appreciate the sacrifices her mum and dad, Adrian, made to help her follow her dream of dancing on the world stage.

“I probably didn’t appreciate Mum as much as I should have – just like most children,” she smiles. “And that’s why Mother’s Day is great because it makes you stop and think about all those sacrifices your mum made.”

Margaret would spend her spare time taking Sonia to dance classes and competitions, as well as raising Sonia’s older sister, Debbie, and younger brother, Adam.

“She taught us to dance in the lounge room,” Sonia says. “We did a barn dance to ABBA’s I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do. Mum was a huge fan of old movie musicals, so Debbie was named after Debbie Reynolds and I was named after (ice dancer and actress) Sonja Henie.”

For the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 3, 2010.

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Exclusive: Sandra Bullock loving Louis

Exclusive: Sandra Bullock loveing Louis

In an exclusive interview, the star reveals the secret she kept during the toughest months of her life: she’s become a proud new mum by J.D. Heyman and Alexis Chiu.

Sandra Bullock has been the subject of many headlines lately, but today there’s only one newsflash she cares about. “Louis rolled over—twice!” she gushes on a recent afternoon. “It’s astounding to watch a human being grow right before your eyes.”

That would be Louis Bardo Bullock, the three-and-a-half-month-old son that the star, 45, has been quietly raising since January. Amid all that has happened to Bullock in the last few months—winning an Oscar and enduring the breakup of her marriage to Jesse James—the biggest change in her life has been a happy one: She became a new mum.

It’s been the mother of all secrets. With the help of loved ones, including stepkids Sunny, 6, Jesse Jr., 12, and Chandler, 15, Bullock has been in seclusion since her split with James, 41, and is savouring new parenthood. “You wake up, you feed, you burp, you play, you do laundry,” she says. “I’m still in that stage where I’m just amazed with him and at life.”

Four years ago she and James began the adoption process. They learned in January that they had been matched with a newborn from New Orleans.

They brought Louis (whom Bullock calls “Louie”) home but decided to keep the news to themselves until after the Oscars. “I don’t know how we got away with it,” says Bullock, who won’t discuss details of the adoption to protect her son’s privacy. In March she found out James had cheated, and she left their home, taking Louis with her. Now she confirms she has filed for divorce and will adopt as a single mum.

When did you decide to adopt?

I don’t recall the big “aha” moment of when we decided. We spent so much time in New Orleans after Katrina, and one day it was just a feeling that came that instead of bringing another life into this world, that we wanted to reach out and find our child in New Orleans. There were so many children alone after Katrina, and for some reason we knew that someone would want to come into our lives.

So we began the process of adoption about four years ago, never thinking about what [the child] would look like, whether it was a girl or a boy, what background – it didn’t matter. We somehow knew the right little person would come. And out of the blue one day, Sunny proclaimed to me that we shouldn’t have another baby, that we should adopt. I froze.

I had no idea where she got this, so I asked her why, and she said, “Because there are so many little babies that have no home, and we can share our things with them.” Profound for a [then] 4-year-old, but I didn’t want to get her hopes up, so I just diverted the conversation.

For more exclusive pictures and the full in-depth interview with Sandra where she reveals why she kept the adoption a secret, how she found out about Jesse’s infidelity and what her plans are for the future, see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 3, 2010.

Your say: What do you think about Sandra’s secret adoption? Are you happy for her? Share your thoughts below.

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Katie’s torment: Why I can never leave Tom

Katie's torment: Why I can never leave Tom

Katie Holmes lives a bizarrely regimented life ruled by oddball rituals, and surrounded by Scientologists who report her every move to husband Tom Cruise, according to a former top member of the controversial cult.

Author Amy Scobee – whose scathing book, Scientology: Abuse At The Top, has sparked threats of legal action by Tom – says Katie is living in a gilded cage. “Based on what I know first-hand of Tom and how I saw him with Nicole Kidman, I can totally imagine what Katie’s life is like right now,” Amy last week told US magazine Star, amid reports Katie has had enough of the stifling atmosphere of her marriage due to the religion.

“I hope she has some sense left in her to push back on all this.”

Amy says it would be very hard for anyone in the Cruise household to step out of line, with so many of Tom’s minions keeping a close eye on everything.

“Tom is surrounded by Scientologists; their staff are all given the OK by church leaders,” claims Amy. “And everyone reports back on what they see.”

Katie has already felt Tom’s disapproval for a series of “transgressions”, all reportedly communicated to him by the network of employees that surround the actress every day.

“She realises how he found out about her smoking, her eating habits and her flirting with co-stars,” one person connected to the actress told Star.

“She’s so mad at herself because she’s now cut off from many of her old friends and instead is mostly surrounded by Scientologists. And they’re just spying on her. Katie’s routine is heavily influenced by Scientology. If she deviates, someone tells Tom and she gets scolded.”

Indeed, Katie’s lifestyle is reportedly so regimented that her routine includes a Scientology approved diet, and daily auditing sessions – a bizarre process that involves being hooked up to a machine, a bit like a lie-detector, that’s claimed to pinpoint emotional problems.

For the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 3, 2010.

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Actress tells: My Scientology nightmare

Actress tells: My Scientology nightmare

Carmen Llywelyn, the ex-wife of My Name Is Earl star Jason Lee, lifts the lid on Scientology and its celebrity members’ secrets. Alan Smith reports.

When Nicole Kidman publicly rebuffed former husband Tom Cruise’s Scientology religion, she was labelled a “suppressive person” by the cult and the couple were required to divorce.

That’s just one of the shocking revelations by former Scientologist and actress Carmen Llywelyn – the ex-wife of My Name Is Earl star Jason Lee, who remains a member of the controversial church.

In an exclusive interview, Carmen has pulled aside the veil of secrecy surrounding the religion, revealing for the first time how the church caters to its world-famous celebrity members including Tom Cruise, John Travolta and Lisa Marie Presley.

Carmen joined Scientology in 1995 after marrying Jason, but quit during their bitter divorce in 2002 and claims her association with the church still haunts her. “I have never spoken about Scientology before but I still have nightmares about these people,” she says. “They ruined my life and my career. I ended up addicted to pain-killers and it took three rehabs to get me straight.

“If I see a Scientologist now, I cross the street. I was shopping recently when [former Dharma & Greg star] Jenna Elfman, who’s a staunch Scientologist, approached me. She spouted statements like a robot and treated me like dirt because she knew I’d broken free.”

Carmen says Jason insisted she join the church if they were to have a future together.

“His message was that if I didn’t join, I wasn’t going to be with him,” she explains. “So I joined, but it was like a cult and I foolishly allowed it to take root in me.”

Before becoming a star thanks to My Name Is Earl, Jason appeared in the Oscar-winning drama Almost Famous and played Tom Cruise’s best friend in the 2001 thriller Vanilla Sky.

Carmen – who is most famous for her role in the hit comedy Chasing Amy – recalls meeting Tom and his then-wife Nicole in New York.

For the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 3, 2010.

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Plastic surgery: When stars go too far

Plastic surgery: When stars go too far

When it comes to “cosmetic surgery gone horribly wrong”, socialite Jocelyn Wildenstein takes the fake cake.

The human pincushion, 64, has reportedly spent more than $3.3 million being pulled, nipped and tucked into absurd proportions.

“As everyone can see, she’s had too much of everything,” says Sydney cosmetic surgeon Dr Anoop Rastogi. “She’s been pulled too tight, and she’s had too much work done to her mouth, eyes, cheeks, brow and lips.”

Now, sadly, a new crop of famous folk – including Carla Bruni, Kylie Minogue and Jennifer Grey – are unknowingly vying for the title of Brides of Wildenstein. According to Dr Rastogi, the problem often lies with a distorted sense of self.

“When we look in the mirror, what we see is not always what others see,” he says. “The most obvious case of this is anorexia. But many people have a less extreme version of body dysmorphic disorder [being excessively preoccupied with a perceived physical flaw].”

He says if a patient requests a procedure that’s unlikely to enhance his or her looks, it is up to the surgeon to refuse.

“Regularly I have patients coming in for, say, Botox, and they ask me to top up their lip enhancement at the same time. I say, ‘No, next time.’ They lose sight of how they once looked and just want a little more.”

Once a natural beauty, Jocelyn began a vicious cycle of cosmetic surgery after discovering her billionaire art dealer husband, Alec Wildenstein, had been cheating on her.

She underwent a facelift and eye procedure in a bid to appear cat-like for Alec, who adored wild cats – but sadly, the couple still split.

Thankfully, Dr Rastogi says cases such as Jocelyn’s are few and far between these days.

“Patients have become savvy about what looks over-done,” he explains. “The mistakes of the past are becoming less common.”

For more plastic surgery celebrities see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 3, 2010.

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Masterchef’s Sarah: I’m pregnant!

Masterchef's Sarah: I'm pregnant!

Sarah Carmichael stunned fellow contestants and viewers alike with her decision to sacrifice her spot on MasterChef for the sake of her children last week, but even she admits she is blown away by her next surprise revelation – she’s pregnant!

Despite making the final 24 by impressing judges with her coconut snapper, Sarah says she hung up her apron after an emotional trip home during a break from filming.

Speaking from the Melbourne home she shares with husband Nick and children Harry, 4, and Sam, 12 months, policewoman Sarah explains she simply couldn’t imagine leaving her family behind again.

“Leaving the show was a big decision, but the crunch came when I went home for a brief break before the top 24 announcement, and my children didn’t recognise me,” Sarah, 30, tells Woman’s Day.

“They wouldn’t have understood where I was or what I was doing, so in a way, they were testing me to see if I was going to go away and leave them again.”

And, ultimately, that made the decision for her. “My family is my world and their health and happiness are paramount,” she says.

Sarah is now focusing her attention on impressing the three most important judges in her life – her family – and preparing for another one, due in five months.

For the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale May 3, 2010.

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