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Demi Moore’s daughters consider restraining order

Demi Moore’s daughters consider restraining order

The three daughters of troubled star Demi Moore are considering taking a restraining order out against her.

Previous reports have suggested that the relationship between the 49-year-old and the daughters she had with Bruce Willis had reached “breaking point” with numerous fights.

“Rumer, Scout and Tallulah are seriously considering taking out a restraining order against Demi to stop her from contacting them,” an unnamed source told RadarOnline.

“They made it clear to her weeks ago that they do not want to talk to her right now but she is still trying to contact them.”

Demi, who is “beside herself” over the loss of contact has tried time and time again to make contact with her daughters, but they refuse to speak to her.

“Demi has been calling them incessantly and emailing them, leaving them tearful messages and begging them to call her and the girls are sick of it,” the unnamed source said.

“It is a really drastic measure and not something they are considering lightly but they just feel like they want some peace and quiet.”

Her daughters supported her through her break-up with Ashton Kutcher and rehab, but now they don’t want to “deal with the drama” surrounding their mother and feel that they need time out.

“Demi is just being very needy right now and the girls are tired of it. They want a mother not another little sister,” the source said.

“They are all concerned that she is going to relapse and head back to rehab and they can’t deal with the stress and worry of it.”

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Suri left in tears after Katie refuses to buy her a puppy

Suri left in tears after Katie refuses to buy her a puppy

Suri Cruise was left in tears over the weekend after mum Katie Holmes turned down her request for a puppy.

The mother and daughter were seen looking at dogs at high-end pet store Citipups in New York.

But after seeing just two particularly cute canines, including a French bulldog and a morkie (Yorkshire terrier/Maltese cross) the pair left empty-handed.

Suri certainly wasn’t happy with her mum’s decision to leave the puppies behind, shedding a tear as they left the pet shop and hysterically crying once in their car.

The six-year-old and her mum have been spending a lot of time together in New York following Holmes’ speedy divorce from Tom Cruise, which took just 11 days for the pair to settle out of court.

Meanwhile, Holmes is doing everything she can to keep Suri away from Scientology, enrolling her in a Catholic all-girls school.

Up until now, Suri has been home schooled but will soon attend Manhattan’s prestigious Convent of the Sacred Heart school, the UK’s Daily Mail reported.

The $38,000-a-year school requires students to attend church every Thursday and has been attended by a number of celebrities, including Lady Gaga, Nicky Hilton and Caroline Kennedy.

While the details of the pair’s divorce proceedings are private, reports claim that Holmes has been granted sole custody of Suri, with Cruise having considerable visitation rights.

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Miley Cyrus keen to start a family “quickly”

Miley Cyrus keen to start a family "quickly"

They’ve only been engaged for just over a month, but there are already reports suggesting that Miley Cyrus and Liam Hemsworth are talking about babies.

The 19-year-old singer is reportedly hoping to start a family “quickly” with her 22-year-old Hunger Games star fiancé.

“Miley and Liam really want to have a baby quickly,” an unnamed Cyrus family source told Us Weekly.

It seems Liam is a little clucky after his older brother Chris welcomed daughter India in May with his wife, Spanish actress Elsa Pataky.

And when the pair finally do tie the knot and begin adding to their family, which currently includes the pair’s five dogs, they will have the support of their families. “They are both mature and ready for this. Miley is 19 going on 40,” the unnamed source said.

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Bea and Eugenie beg Fergie: ‘Get help now!’

Bea and Eugenie beg Fergie: 'Get help now!'

The Duchess of  York’s girls aren’t the only ones alarmed by her behaviour – Oprah is too.

Sarah Ferguson’s daughters are said to be living in fear for their mum, as the Duchess of York lurches from crisis to crisis. Royal insiders say Princess Beatrice, 23, and Princess Eugenie, 22, have had a succession of “heart-to-heart” talks with her in recent months, pleading with her to get help – and they have repeatedly told their dad Prince Andrew how worried they are about her.

A source close to the young princesses tells Woman’s Day that last weekend Eugenie tearfully confessed to her father that she has started to avoid speaking to her mum because she is struggling to cope with her meltdown. Eugenie apparently sobbed as she told Andrew, “When I see it is her calling I don’t answer and then she leaves voicemails or she writes me these long emails. But I can’t keep trying to solve all her problems – I’m her daughter. She should be the one helping me.
She needs to see a proper therapist.”

And Bea and Eugenie aren’t the only ones advising the troubled duchess to seek professional help confronting her demons. When Oprah Winfrey had four missed calls from Sarah in 24 hours, she knew something was very wrong and she had little choice but to get in contact with her immediately.

When she finally reached her, she was shocked to discover that a frazzled and frantic Fergie was begging for a chance to build a TV career on the Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN). Oprah listened in disbelief as the 52-year-old launched into a rambling explanation of her plan to “save us both”.

Read more about why Fergie needs help in this this week’s Woman’s Day on sale Monday July 16, 2012.

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Why Tom Cruise let Katie Holmes win

Why Tom Cruise let Katie Holmes win

Despite the couple reaching a settlement at breakneck speed, the battle is only just beginning.

Katie Holmes may have already won the battle to keep her daughter – but she hasn’t won the war against her ex-husband Tom Cruise. As Hollywood prepared for the fiercest courtroom divorce in history to get underway, the couple had secretly been locked in tense, round-the-clock negotiations over Katie’s bid for sole custody of their daughter, Suri. Just 11 days after Katie announced she’d filed for divorce, it was revealed that Tom and Katie had reached a private settlement.

When Katie emerged from her lawyer’s New York office after six hours, she gave a tight smile to waiting onlookers. It was an indication that reports she had won primary custody of the six-year-old were correct. It’s believed Tom will have “generous visitation rights” and pay “massive” child support.

Also, he’ll avoid his career and Scientology being publicly dragged through the mud. In fact, at face value, it appears Catholic Katie has agreed to disagree with Tom over his controversial religion. “We are committed to working together as parents to accomplish what is in our daughter Suri’s best interests,” the couple said in a joint statement. “We… express respect for each other’s commitment to our respective beliefs.”

But according to sources, Katie, 33, is desperate to prevent Suri being exposed to the controversial religion and has stipulated in their agreement that whenever Suri visits Tom, 50, she will be accompanied by Katie- approved minders to ensure her father and his team keep their Scientology beliefs to themselves.

Read more about Tom and Katie’s divorce in this week’s Woman’s Day on sale Monday July 16, 2012.

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Lisa Wilkinson’s cancer scare: How my husband saved me

Lisa Wilkinson's cancer scare: How my husband saved me

Trouble was staring Lisa Wilkinson right between her eyes – but it was her husband Peter FitzSimons who spotted it.

Today show host Lisa Wilkinson is on a mission to raise skin cancer awareness after discovering a mark on her face she’d always assumed was “just a freckle” turned out to be a potentially cancerous melanoma. “I probably noticed it 20 years ago and just saw it as part of what my face looked like,” Lisa tells Woman’s Day. “It’s laughable that I could have a camera trained on me for 3.5 hours a day, five days a week, and I could not spot trouble right between my eyes.”

It was Lisa’s hubby, broadcaster and writer Peter FitzSimons, who first noticed all was not right and urged his wife to visit a doctor to get things checked out. And for a man who Lisa admits “wouldn’t notice if I put on 20kg overnight”, his keen skills of observation might have saved her life. “I came home from work one day and, typically, coming off the set of the show, I had a full face of make-up on. Pete looked at me and said, ‘What’s that between your eyebrows?’, and I, thinking it was a bit of dirt or misplaced mascara, said, ‘My freckle? That’s been there for years!’” explains Lisa.

“God love him, he never looks at me with a critical eye. He would love me in any shape that I come in, thank heaven. But, importantly, he just noticed this freckle for the first time, and I tried to convince him that it had been there for a long time, and he said, ‘Well, if it’s been there for a long time and I haven’t noticed it, it must be getting darker.’”

After weeks of Peter’s nagging, Lisa gave in and went to see her GP, who then referred her to a dermatologist. “He [the dermatologist] had a look under this specialist microscope and said, ‘The cells do look irregular’,” Lisa recalls. “He said, ‘I need to cut it out and do a biopsy.’” Doctors removed the freckle while she was on a production break from Today over Christmas. The presenter ended up with four stitches and had to endure a tense wait before she got the results back. The news wasn’t good.

Read more about Lisa’s cancer scare in this week’s Woman’s Day on sale Monday July 16, 2012.

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Single ladies: Katie Holmes and Suri Cruise hit the town

Divorce drives many women into hiding, but Katie Holmes and Suri Cruise have been out on the town nearly every day this month.
Katie Holmes and Suri Cruise

A messy public divorce has sent many leading ladies into hiding, but Katie Holmes has refused to let her split from Tom Cruise turn her into a recluse.

Katie, 33, and her daughter Suri, six, have been out and about in New York almost every day since the actress filed for divorce, visiting museums, going for ice cream and shopping.

Being single certainly seems to agree with Katie, who has swapped her daggy outfits and frowns for glossy locks, glamorous dresses and a satisfied smile.

Suri also looks happy and healthy and seems to love spending so much one-on-one time with her mother.

Katie and Suri looking pretty in pink yesterday.

Suri and a friend visiting the Children’s Museum of the Arts.

Suri looking thrilled to be at the Central Park Zoo on July 11.

Katie and Suri at their favourite icecream parlour on July 3.

Katie held her daughter very close on their excursion.

Mother and daughter visiting Central Park Zoo on July 11.

Katie’s mother joined her and Suri at the zoo.

Katie and Suri at the zoo.

Suri after a shopping expedition on July 5.

Mother and daughter walking the streets of Manhattan.

Katie hugs Suri after they picked up some groceries on July 8.

Suri on July 12.

Suri at her gymnastics class on July 12.

Katie and Suri.

Katie and Suri arriving at Chelsea Piers on July 10.

Katie looking very much the movie star on July 14.

Katie flashes her petticoat as she gets coffee on July 14.

Katie and Suri leave an Italian restaurant on July 13.

Looking lovely in yellow on July 7.

Katie looking glamorous on July 5.

Katie giving Suri a cuddle on July 10.

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Why we should leave the body image debate to teens

Why we should leave the body image debate to teens

Dolly model search winner Kirsty Thatcher, 13.

When it comes to certain issues there is one person a 13-year-old girl won’t hear a word from, no matter how sound or pertinent, and that is her mother, or anyone who could be.

Being 23 now, it hasn’t been too long since I was a teenager ignoring mum’s tips on the dos and don’ts of school dance attire and plotting schemes to get away with seeing a MA15+ movie, but I’d hazard a guess that the body image debate that has permeated media commentary from mummy blogs to mainstream newspapers this past week would be another of those issues a teenager might not seek maternal advice on.

When 13-year-old Brisbane girl Kirsty Thatcher was announced the winner of the newly resurrected Dolly Model Search competition earlier this week, the criticism erupted.

Related: Dolly wins inaugural Positive Body Image Awards

Commentators came in with the best intentions and were not unqualified. Those who voiced their outrage highlighted genuine concerns for young girls and their body image issues. Some of them were mothers of teenagers themselves and many had worked in the magazine industry and had first-hand experience in modelling competitions.

Former Dolly editor Mia Freedman’s post on Mamamia.com.au about why the she axed the competition during her reign exploded with more than 130 comments from the sites loyal 21- to 49-year-old female audience.

Their concerns weren’t invalid. With sexual pressure on young girls starting earlier than ever before and young people ranking body image as their greatest concern, it has never been harder being a teenage girl. But does having grown-ups bicker over these issues and criticise teen mags, making an example of Kirsty and her peers, make it any easier? At least for Kirsty Thatcher, it probably doesn’t.

She was selected as an ambassador for Dolly’s teen readers. In Editor Tiffany Dunk’s words “we are not just looking for a fashion model, but also a role model who can be a positive ambassador for Dolly.”

But from now on whenever Kirsty’s name is Googled – and this will happen every time someone scouts her for a modelling job, befriends her on Facebook, or does a quick check before every first date for the rest of her life – it won’t be messages of positivity that dominate the hits, but highlights from a vicious debate criticising the competition that brought her into the public eye, and attacking the magazine for not choosing a “more suitable” role model for positive body image.

That would hardly do wonders for a young girl’s self-esteem.

As many of the critics highlighted, Dolly magazine was given an award of its own last month when it was announced the winner of the Government’s inaugural Positive Body Image Awards.

And as the Awards panel chairperson, Australian Women’s Weekly Editor-in-Chief Helen McCabe has pointed out, the judging panel did not have the luxury of a wide range of choice as there are simply not enough businesses taking initiative in this area, but the awards went to deserving recipients.

In the interest of full disclosure, I worked closely with the panel and was involved in the Awards, and like the rest of the judging panel was pleasantly surprised and impressed with the entrants that came in, particularly from teen magazines Dolly and Girlfriend.

While the Model Search wasn’t considered as part of its application (it fell outside the eligibility period), Dolly’s retouch-free policy, its use of readers over models, inclusion of a diverse range of real girls in the magazine’s fashion and beauty pages, and the positive body image messages in its articles were refreshing and impressive. Girlfriend was recognised for similar initiatives.

More impressive was Tiffany Dunk’s declaration that the reason such policies had been imposed was because the readers were demanding them. Young women are conscious of the negative body images they’ve been fed and they are driving a positive change.

There is an active conversation surrounding the pressing issue of teen body image, but it’s not the one that former magazine editors and grown women who have already dealt with their body image issues are fighting over.

Related: Why airbrushing can’t be banned

It’s being pioneered by the teens living these issues and casting a critical eye over the body image messages they’re presented with.

We should leave the conversation to the teens rather than squabbling over it amongst ourselves. If they don’t want to listen to their elders, they listen to each other, and magazines have no choice but to listen to them. From the changes being implemented in teen mags demanded by the young women who read them, it looks like they’re doing a pretty good job of it already.

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What to do with your tax return

Before you head out on a shopping spree, there are a few smart financial strategies that could see you get more bang for your buck.
Australian currency

Many people eagerly look forward to receiving their tax return, and before you know it that money has already disappeared. Now is the time to really think about your financial goals. Start off by writing down your top five, then move on to assessing your needs and wants, which will help you decide whether it’s best to save, spend, or invest.

Save

Paying off debt is a form of saving because any extra lump sum payments towards your loans can save you significant amounts in interest. It’s a good idea to target high interest debt first, such as credit cards or personal loans. Interest rates on credit cards can be as high as 20 percent, so it’s important to get rid of this debt as quickly as possible.

Another option is paying off a lump sum on your mortgage or you could park the cash in a mortgage offset account, so you’re reducing interest but can still access the money quickly if you need it.

For shorter-term goals, it’s hard to beat high interest savings accounts, which are offered by most banks and credit unions. Term deposits also offer competitive interest rates.

For any savings option, it’s important to shop around for the right product, remembering to compare fees.

Invest

If you don’t have any debt, investing the money is another good option when weighing up what to do with your tax refund.

Investing in your super fund may be a smart idea if you are eligible for the government co-contribution. For those eligible, the government will dollar match non-concessional (personal after-tax) contributions to super up to a maximum of $1000. There are not many other investment strategies that can achieve a 100 per cent return within one year!

Investing in a managed fund or share portfolio is another strategy if saving for medium- to long-term financial goals of five years or more. However it’s a good idea to sit down with your financial planner, as your personal risk profile should always be considered.

Spend

For many people, their tax refund is the only windfall they receive during the year, so it can be tempting to indulge in a little retail therapy.

Some spending is necessary to ensure we have the basics, like clothes, household items or insurance (or sometimes that new pair of shoes!).

Investing in some big ticket items you really need, such as a new washing machine or fridge, is also a good option as it may help you avoid the need to pay for them with credit at a later date.

Dianne Charman is an AMP financial planner and mother of two.

Dianne Charman is an Authorised Representative of AMP Financial Planning Pty Ltd, ABN 89 051 208 327, AFS Licence No. 232706. Any advice given is general only and has not taken into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. Because of this, before acting on any advice, you should consult a financial planner to consider how appropriate the advice is to your objectives, financial situation and needs.

To find your nearest AMP financial planner visit www.amp.com.au/findaplanner.

Video: How to maximise your savings

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When you feed affects your baby’s IQ

When to feed to raise smarter baby

Babies who are fed whenever they are hungry have higher IQs than those who are fed on a schedule, a new study has found.

The research — published in the European Journal of Public Health — suggests a significant difference in the mental abilities of “demand-fed” and “schedule-fed” babies.

Related: Should military mums be allowed to breastfeed in public?

Researchers studied data from a child development study of more than 10,000 children between the ages of five and 14.

On average, children who were demand-fed as babies had IQ scores four or five points higher than those who were schedule-fed.

“This difference between schedule and demand-fed children is found both in breastfed and in bottle-fed babies,” explains Dr Maria Iacovou, who led the research from ISER.

“The difference in IQ levels of around four to five points is statistically highly significant. However, at this stage, we must be very cautious about claiming a causal link between feeding patterns and IQ.

“We cannot definitively say why these differences occur, and more research is needed to understand the processes involved.”

Related: I breastfed my son until he was three

The research is the first large-scale study to investigate the long-term outcomes of schedule-fed versus demand-fed babies.

It was carried out by researchers at the Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of Essex and at the University of Oxford.

Video: Did you breastfeed for long enough?

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