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Australia’s oldest driver!

Australia's oldest driver!

Molly Conroy first learnt to drive in 1926, when she was 14. Needless to say, things were a little different back then.

“When I turned 16, me and my dad just walked up to the local registration office. You just said you wanted a licence, filled out a form, handed over 10 shillings and the licence was yours,” says Molly, who at a spritely 97, is Australia’s oldest driver.

A teenage Molly took the wheel of a Model T Ford, learning to drive it in the paddock of her family home in Sefton Park, near Adelaide, South Australia. She had to stand to reach the pedals.

“There was no test then. Mind you, there wasn’t the amount of cars there is on the roads today,” she goes on to explain.

“There were only two other cars in my village back then. The speed limit was just 25 miles [40km] per hour! I’m simply amazed at how things have changed.”

Molly upgraded to a £150 Morris Minor in 1948. She’s since owned a Holden, a Honda and even a BMW, before settling on her beloved Toyota Corolla.

And, amazingly, through all the cars and all the years, she’s never had a brush with the law, or even parking inspectors.

“I’ve never been in an accident, never had a speeding ticket and never had a parking fine,” Molly says, proudly. “I hate drivers who tailgate and those who don’t keep to the left – and it’s the older drivers who are often to blame!”

Molly thinks it’s important that everyone over the age of 70 retake their driving test.

Read the full story in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale April 26, 2010.

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I Sedated My Mother In Law

Image source: Getty - posed by models

Image source: Getty - posed by models

My husband – James – and I have been married for nigh on a decade. My Mother In-Law – Jasmine – has had it in for me from day one and her feelings have barely softened in almost a decade.

She made it pretty clear not long after meeting me for the first time that I wasn’t good enough for James, stating to her son that I was the kind of ‘pretty girl’ who was just after money. James laughingly said that I would have to ‘win her over’ and I initially tried to take this with good humor.

I come from fairly humble beginnings but I have worked hard all my life and I now make a good living in the executive end of the cosmetics industry. My successes have never cut it with Jasmine however.

James’ family are all legal professionals in some form or other and they have amassed a formidable empire. I love James because he is kind, strong and generally doesn’t behave like someone with a small fortune to his name.

James’ Father is one of those men who has been gradually beaten into submission by his dragon-lady of a wife and therefore says very little in my defense or otherwise.

One of Jasmine’s favorite pass-times is ‘popping in’ unannounced. She often brings with her little things that she says I ‘might have overlooked buying’; things like – you know – soap?!

She will often send a house cleaner through at her own expense to ‘pick up the slack’ (yes this an actual quote) and she often wears the expression of someone who has just stepped in ‘doggy doo-doo’ when she walks into our house – and thanks to James’ income our house is very respectable indeed.

She treats me like I’m very stupid and – get this – brings dinner for her little boy at least three times a week. I heard her say (whilst eavesdropping on a phone conversation one night) that I ‘couldn’t cook to save myself’ and at that point I fumed.

The worst thing about her making dinner for James is that 2 out of 3 times she stays to eat with us. In the past, whilst we were all having diner she would take the opportunity to reminisce with her boy about ‘the good times’ i.e.: the period before I entered the scene.

She would list all the relatives she could think of, laughing about all the funny and witty things they would say and then use these examples as a way of denigrating me. For example ‘Uncle Jo Jo was such a card, he would always have a hilarious response for any insult anyone could throw at him – maybe you should write some of these down Harriet (this is not my name but a ‘pet name’ Jasmine had given me). It couldn’t hurt to sound sharp once in a while.’

I had become so tired of being put down. James would always stick up for Mummy whenever I aired my feelings so of course I felt utterly alone. I didn’t want to confront Jasmine as a) she is a very domineering character and I’m a wallflower and b) James has always been protective of his Mother and it would almost certainly cause a rift between us.

My parents were miles away across the other side of the country so although they tried to empathise with me it just wasn’t the same as having someone there with me, someone to be on my side.

One Friday night, dreading the promised appearance of Queen Jasmine, I sort of snapped. It had been a dreadful day at work and I just had nothing left in the tank. My Doctor had prescribed me some sedatives a year or so ago when I had told him of my feelings for my home situation. I was fearful of sinking into a depression and he prescribed some anti-anxiety medication.

I was sort of in a haze and I found myself setting the table and pouring the wine that I knew Jasmine would spend the evening complaining about. I crushed a sedative (okay maybe a couple) up between two teaspoons and gently tipping the powder into Jasmine’s wine glass.

James was in the bathroom shaving for the second time that day (Mummy likes her boy to look clean) and so I had some time. I poured the wine into the glass (I selected red to be safe) and stirred the hell out of it. There were still some floaty bits in it (this I can tell you is nothing like it is in the movies) and so I ran it from one glass into another through a tea strainer. Success! The wine looked quite innocent and I couldn’t wait until the deed was done.

It wasn’t until Jasmine arrived that I started feeling nervous. She breezed in kissing her hellos and I secretly wondered whether she had an allergy to this kind of medication. What if she died?! I couldn’t go to prison I just couldn’t! I couldn’t kill James’ Mother no matter how much I disliked her.

I decided to abandon the plan when before I could even make it to the kitchen, Jasmine floated in, grabbed the glass and downed it in one fluid motion. “Oh mercy did I need that!” she blurted with the usual air of drama.

“A bit young though Harriet, I like it aged way more than that”, she added. Blow it all, I was then glad that I had gone through with my scheme.

We were about halfway through Jasmine’s hand-made crab ravioli when she started to nod. It looked like she was just sleepy at first. James asked whether she was okay and when Jasmine answered she sounded a little drunk. James shot me a private glance and I made the ‘drinky drinky’ motion with my hand. James made a face that indicated he understood and agreed.

Jasmine nodded again and again and then – to my delight and mild horror – her face fell smack down into her ravioli. There was a wet thud and I panicked. Was she still alive?

James dived to her aid and felt her pulse. She was okay.

‘I’d better call a Doctor’ James said almost in tears. My heart was in my mouth.

While James was cooing over her I had a sudden moment of clarity. I called out that I would grab a cloth from the bathroom for her face. I quickly bolted to the wet bar and poured out about three quarters of a bottle of scotch into the bathroom sink. I poured a tiny bit into a tumbler also and when I returned to the kitchen with said washcloth and also the ‘evidence’ I had staged. I slammed the scotch bottle and tumbler down in front of James and quickly began wiping Jasmines’ face, saying nothing all the while.

‘Oh Jeez’, exclaimed James in a weary sort of way. Jasmine had been known to overdo it now and again with the booze and this all just fit together as another one of those occasions.

We lay Jasmine down on the day-bed and went back into the kitchen.’We really should keep this low-key’, I said to James.’We don’t want to embarrass your poor Mum’, I added.

‘You’re right’, James said after some thought.

‘Thank you for being so good about this – it’s not the kind of thing I ever wanted you to see and I know Mum’s hard to get on with sometimes’. This was the understatement of the century but I took it. I felt pretty bad seeing as how James thought I was being so very understanding.

We kept an eye on Jasmine that night and the old girl only woke the next day at 2pm when James’s father came to pick her up looking quite hard done by. She was very sheepish and her memory was scratchy so she believed James when he said she had ‘taken liberties’ with the scotch bottle. I almost felt bad for her when she kissed me on the cheek and whispered that she was ‘so ashamed’.

She didn’t bring dinner over for several months after that and when she did finally, she rarely stayed.

I have never told James about what I did that night and I have never repeated it, although I have to say I have been very, very tempted on occasion.

Names have been changed. Picture posed by models.

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

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Katie Holmes to play stylish first lady

Katie Holmes and Jackie O

She has come a long way from Dawson’s Creek and now actress Katie Holmes has been chosen to play one of the world’s most stylish women: Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

She will star alongside Little Miss Sunshine‘s Greg Kinnear who will play US president John F Kennedy in the television miniseries based on his life to air in 2011 on the History Channel, People magazine reported.

The 31-year-old actress’ return to the small screen will see her play out the rise and fall of the Kennedy family, including the assassination of the president in 1963.

But is Katie a good choice for the role? According to president of the History Channel, Nancy Dubuc, she certainly is.

She told Us magazine the role of Jackie Kennedy is “a role that Katie’s demure elegance will bring to life”.

Your say: Do you think Katie Holmes would make a good Jackie O?

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Sandra’s secret adoption

Oscar-winning actress Sandra Bullock has been through some blissful highs and devastating lows this year, but she has been keeping her greatest joy a secret.

The star has revealed in an interview with People magazine that she secretly adopted a baby boy in January this year with her husband Jesse James before they split.

The 45-year-old secretly adopted Louis Bardo Bullock from New Orleans and has revealed that after a four-year adoption process she will now adopt the child as a single parent.

“He’s just perfect, I can’t even describe him any other way,” she told the magazine.

For Sandra’s exclusive interview and pictures see next week’s Woman’s Day on sale May 3, 2010.

Sandra Bullock with her adopted son on the cover of People Magazine

Sandra’s golden moment at the Oscars this year

Sandra shopping with Jesse’s daughter Sunny the day after the Oscars

Sandra and Jesse together at the Golden Globes

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What comes first, chocolate or depression?

What comes first, chocolate or depression?

It’s a common assumption that chocolate is a positive mood enhancer but a new US research raises the question: Does chocolate stimulate happy feelings or depression? A study published this week in the Archives of Internal Medicine attempted to answer that question.

Researchers from the Davis and San Diego campuses of the University of California found people who screened positive for depression ate significantly more chocolate than those who didn’t. But researchers were still unable to determine whether the chocolate was causing the depression or if it was simply used by depressed people as a “coping mechanism”, the UK’s The Times reported.

The researchers studied 931 people who were not using antidepressant medications to examine the relationship between chocolate and mood. Those who were found likely to be suffering from depression ate an average of 8.4 servings of chocolate per month, compared with 5.4 servings among those who didn’t show signs of depression. Those who were found to have the symptoms of major depression ate even more chocolate at 11.8 servings per month.

“Our study confirms long-held suspicions that eating chocolate is something that people do when they are feeling down,” researcher Dr Beatrice Golomb said.

“Because it was a cross-sectional study, meaning a slice in time, it did not tell us whether the chocolate decreased or intensified the depression.”

The increase of chocolate consumption in depressed people led the researchers to three possible conclusions.

“First, depression could stimulate chocolate cravings as ‘self-treatment’ if chocolate confers mood benefits, as has been suggested in recent studies of rats,” the researchers wrote.

“Second, depression may stimulate chocolate cravings for unrelated reasons, without a treatment benefit of chocolate. Third, the possibility that chocolate could causally contribute to depressed mood, driving the association, cannot be excluded,” they wrote.

“Future studies are required to elucidate the foundation of the association and to determine whether chocolate has a role in depression, as cause or cure.”

The researchers said there was no correlation between general increases in fat, carbohydrate or energy intake with mood symptoms but there was a strong association with chocolate specifically.

It has long been assumed that because chocolate tastes good, it stimulates endorphin production (which gives a feeling of pleasure). Chocolate also contains serotonin (which acts as an antidepressant) and theobromine, caffeine and other substances which are stimulants, suggesting that chocolate stimulates positive feelings of wellbeing. But there have been few scientific studies into this theory.

One thing’s for sure, if you want a chocolate hit with powerful mineral and antioxidant health benefits go for dark chocolate made from raw and unprocessed organic cocoa, not it’s highly processed, additive-laden cousin, milk chocolate.

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*Beautiful Malice*

Beautiful Malice, by Rebecca James, Allen & Unwin, $24.99.

Rebecca James has been hailed as the “next J.K. Rowling”, not because her book has anything to do with wizards, but because it was the subject of a frenzied, worldwide bidding war that pushed advances past $1million.

Often, things don’t live up to the hype, but this novel delivers in spades. Not only has the mother of four, from rural NSW, written a terrific thriller with some great twists, it is outstanding for its masterful plot and atmosphere, with every page saturated in pure malevolence. The story revolves around a friendship between two 18-year-olds, Alice and Katherine. Alice is the popular one, Katherine the outsider. The suspense sets in when Alice, who is all love and light at first, shows her true colours and begins to weave her sinister web around innocent Katherine. And there’s nothing you can do about it.

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*Secret Daughter*

Secret Daughter, by Shilpi Somaya Gowda, Morrow , $23.99.

A fabulously turbulent family drama set in two great cities, Los Angeles and Mumbai. The two settings are almost characters themselves, the smog, the traffic jams and the teeming, chaotic nature of the East alongside the clipped lawns and somewhat antiseptic, sliced-white-bread nature of the West – so bland you want to spice it up with chilli.

Wherever it is, east or west, slums or air-conditioned palaces, the one universal element is the incredible ease with which families misunderstand one another. This is the unforgettable story of two families in particular who live worlds apart yet are linked by an adopted child called Usha whose confusion and self-doubt as a child raised in America but born in India is relayed with great poignancy, honesty and humour. The role of women and their strength in anchoring their families through all sorts of maelstroms, the raw emotions involved in having to give up a child – and the inability to have one – are movingly conveyed without a shred of sentimentality. A rattling good yarn taken to another notch entirely by writing that has intensity and depth and a great cast of characters. Provocative and wonderfully real, the perfect book for reading clubs.

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*The Winter of Our Disconnect*

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The Winter of Our Disconnect, by Susan Maushart, Bantam $34.95.

The author’s three children didn’t remember a time before email or instant messaging or Google. They didn’t just use the media, they “inhabited” it.

And so Maushart embarks upon The Experiment, to live without any of it; pull the plug on the family’s entire armoury of electric weaponry and live in self-imposed exile for six months. The short answer is that yes, life was “infinitely” better – eventually. But it’s what happens along the way that makes this witty, very well written, sharply observed account of that experience a compelling and highly entertaining story of our times.

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*Trust*

Trust, by Kate Veitch, Penguin $32.95.

Life can change at any given minute, so watch out. And you may think you know those you love, but you don’t. Not really. Susanna, the central character in this gripping emotional drama, learns this as her life goes into a tailspin.

Not even her 20 plus years rock-solid marriage is safe, for behind the slick mask of a handsome, talented, loving husband, lurks a cheating narcissist. Fault lines begin opening up everywhere and then there’s a terrible accident. Terrific dialogue, the overarching theme of a woman trying to reclaim her life and her creativity after a lifetime as a doormat and the suspense of a small child in danger, makes this a raw, real and hugely entertaining read by one of this country’s rising star novelists.

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*Gran’s Kitchen*

Gran’s Kitchen, by Natalie Oldfield & Dulcie May Booker, Hardie Grant Books, $45.

Ninety-five-year-old Dulcie May Booker’s recipes and cooking tips have the wonderful whiff of a bygone era.

Dulcie grew up in a rural farming community in Weymouth, Auckland, and started cooking as a child on her family’s coal range, winning prizes for her scones at just 18. What’s great about her recipes are their practical simplicity. It’s easy to see how Dulcie’s passion has been passed down through the generations – she’s a born teacher.

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