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Why modern women can’t find love

Why modern women can't find love

Women are neglecting their ‘feminine side’, says Australia’s longest-serving matchmaker.

Yvonne Allen, who started her agency in the 1970s, has told The Australian Women’s Weekly that modern women are losing the skills of attracting and keeping love.

They are also too fussy, and are demanding perfection from men even though they are far from perfect themselves, she says.

“In 36 years, I’ve witnessed huge changes,” Yvonne says. “The things that have been happening with women — there are huge changes, the business professional women are a very different being.

“I think we’ve taken on a Maggie Thatcher-style model in terms of doing things like a man and beating them at their own game,” she tells this month’s magazine.

“With the focus on that, we’ve often not tended to the feminine aspects. Certainly the way we operate as men and women has changed and our expectations are so high … there could be the ideal man in front of them and they’re not recognising him.”

Romantic comedies, magazines and books have given women an unrealistic idea of love and relationships, Yvonne says.

“A lot of women who are really lonely are lonely because of how they think they should be … People look at each other often to see what’s missing rather than seeing what’s there.”

Some also demand high standards from a partner but fail to ask what they could bring to the relationship.

“We had a woman recently, 46, demanding to meet a man who wants children,” says Yvonne. “Not realising a man who wants to have children is not going to want to meet a 46-year-old.”

Yvonne is so concerned about this that she intends to start workshops to teach women how to get in touch with their feminine side.

Her tips include taking a break between work and a date so you don’t arrive in corporate/mother mode. Another is to avoid having specific “shopping lists”, and be realistic about what you’re bringing to the table.

Where women go wrong in the dating game:

  • Arriving at dates in work/mother mode. Try to take a break or change outfits so you don’t take the day with you.

  • Holding high expectations. Unrealistic expectations will end in disappointment.

  • Having specific “shopping lists”. Ask yourself how lists are going to make a relationship work.

  • Failing to look at what you’re taking to the table. What needs of your own are you expecting him to meet and are you being realistic about that?

  • Failing to understand that, rightly or wrongly, men judge women on their sexual behaviour.

  • Demanding constant proof of his affection. Men don’t function like women and if he doesn’t call every day, it’s not a reflection on how much he cares.

Read more of this story in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you think modern women are neglecting their femininity?

THE PERFECT GIFT! Subscribe to 12 issues of The Australian Women’s Weekly for just $64.95 (that’s a 21% saving off the newsstand price) and go into the draw to WIN a trip of a lifetime to Italy, valued at over $25,000.

Video: Australia’s millionaire matchmaker

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Paper Giant Asher Keddie

Paper Giant Asher Keddie

She mastered Australia’s most famous lisp and now Asher Keddie’s lead role as Ita Buttrose has made her a household name. Asher has the knack of picking a great role — her portrayal of Ita in ABC TV’s hit Paper Giants: The Birth Of Cleo pulled in more than 1.3 million viewers.

Now working on the second season of Network Ten’s Offspring, the Gold Logie-nominated actress speaks about her choice of roles, love of horses and the question of children.

In pictures: Beauties who have banned airbrushing

You are being lauded for your role as Ita in Paper Giants. What was it like first meeting the legendary publishing dynamo?

I think it was a little uncomfortable for both of us at first. Ita is a very private person and I respect that about her because I am very similar myself. It is hard when you meet someone you are going to play, as you want to be authentic and true, and respectful to who they are.

I had to ask her what she was going through emotionally at the time she was starting Cleo. I mean, she was pregnant, her husband had left her and she had a toddler. It couldn’t have been easy. But on our first meeting, after half an hour or so I cracked a few jokes and from then on we got on well. She is very engaged, very in control and has so much energy.

Were you aware when you met her of claims she’d had an affair with her boss, Kerry Packer?

It was left up to me as to whether or not I would ask her about that and I decided I didn’t think it was relevant. She hasn’t spoken about it before and I didn’t think it was my place to ask her now, especially as it wasn’t relevant to the period of time we were covering.

Could you have coped with being yelled at by Kerry Packer the way Ita was?

I found that scene very difficult and I’m sure Ita did, too, as she actually lived it. But I think she understood what was going on and put it into perspective. She is incredibly professional and powerful in her own right.

Did you read Cleo as a girl and open up those controversial sealed sections?

Oh yes, I was obsessed with Cleo. We all were. I have great memories of lying on the beach with my girlfriends and poring through the magazine.

Do you feel the pressure to be red-carpet skinny and perfect?

You know, the fact is that I really just don’t care. I don’t care about what I’m wearing or the pressure to be thin and everything else. Don’t get me wrong, I like to look good, but I think I went through all that insecurity and self-questioning when I was younger. These days, I just don’t give it any time or energy. Life is too short and I have so much else to think about and do.

In acting terms, 37 is considered old. Do you feel pressure to look younger than you are?

I don’t give it any thought. I mean, I like all of this [creasing her frown lines]. This is all of who I am, what I have achieved and how I’ve lived. Again, I think it’s part of getting older and embracing it.

I’m so lucky to have come from a family where I was told from birth that I am beautiful and talented, and can achieve anything I want. I think it really helped because I just don’t waste time anymore on what I’m not and try to be the best at what I am.

Related: Karl Stefanovic wins the Gold Logie

Read more of this story in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Did you enjoy watching Asher Keddie in Paper Giants?

THE PERFECT GIFT! Subscribe to 12 issues of The Australian Women’s Weekly for just $64.95 (that’s a 21% saving off the newsstand price) and go into the draw to WIN a trip of a lifetime to Italy, valued at over $25,000.

Video: Paper Giants trailer

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Lunch with Jeffrey Archer

Lunch with Jeffrey Archer

In the first in a new series, our Editor-In-Chief Helen McCabe savours some fine food and conversation with best-selling author Jeffrey Archer.

Sydney is your second favourite place on earth — what’s your first?

Related: Join The Weekly’s book club

We are at Quay restaurant in Sydney, but if you could have lunch anywhere in the world, where would it be?

Do you have a second favourite?

Have you always loved the company of women?

What do you know about women that you didn’t know in your 20s?

You have sons. Did you want a daughter?

Do you have any regrets?

What about your wife, Mary?

You were 26 when you married and Mary was just 21. Why so young?

There is the profile, the pressure, the years in prison, the money, the fame. How did your marriage survive it all?

In pictures: The world’s smallest bars

You are friends with everyone, but tell me about Diana, Princess of Wales?

Read more of this story in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Who would you like to see The Weekly have lunch with?

THE PERFECT GIFT! Subscribe to 12 issues of The Australian Women’s Weekly for just $64.95 (that’s a 21% saving off the newsstand price) and go into the draw to WIN a trip of a lifetime to Italy, valued at over $25,000.

Video: Lord Jeffrey Archer discusses his new book

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The secret life of a baby killer

The secret life of a baby killer

Keli Lane outside court in 2010

The strange case of Keli Lane, the mother who murdered her two-day-old baby 14 years ago, is one of the most bizarre and perplexing crimes ever to happen in Australia. Sue Williams delves into the mind of a baby killer and the mystery she unleashed.

There were always two Keli Lanes. On the outside, there was the golden girl — the successful teacher adored by her pupils, the top water polo athlete who’d played for Australia and the outgoing party girl, carefree, smart and just fun to be around.

Related: Keli Lane jailed for a minimum of 13 years

Then there was the Keli Lane that only she knew, the one inside her head, carefully creating intricate webs of secrets and lies, terrified that just one slip would lead to humiliation, disapproval and the destruction of the whole fragile edifice her life had become.

Last month, her worst fears were realised. She was finally jailed in the NSW Supreme Court for a maximum term of 18 years for murdering her baby. It ends one of the saddest, most baffling and compelling psychological dramas ever to be played out anywhere in the world.

The mystery of missing Tegan spurred the biggest police search ever to have been conducted in Australia, an exhaustive coroner’s investigation and a four-month trial, during which the 36-year-old blonde — who dyed her hair black for her final court appearance for sentencing — resolutely refused to speak.

Yet we now know so much more about Keli than she’d ever dreamed would be found out. We know she managed, incredibly, to conceal five pregnancies, have two terminations, secretly adopt out two children and kill her second baby, Tegan, all without initial suspicion.

We know that her greatest terror wasn’t being accused of murder, it was that her ex-police officer father would be disappointed, her friends would turn their backs on her and she would miss out on a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to compete in the Sydney Olympics in her beloved water polo.

Australian research reveals that up to 50 per cent of women who kill their babies shortly after birth concealed the fact they were pregnant. And Keli is an almost textbook fit with the archetypal profile of a baby killer — young, unmarried and deeply fearful of the repercussions of admitting a pregnancy.

It was easier for her to commit the worst crime any of us can imagine — killing her own child — than to contemplate telling her family, friends and colleagues that she’d fallen pregnant. It appears the primal instincts to nurture and protect her baby took second place to her desire to live her golden life unblemished and without distraction.

So many questions remain. What finally drove a woman who seemed to have it all to murder? How could she have given birth to a perfectly healthy baby daughter, named her, cuddled and breastfed her, then carried her out of hospital and killed her? And what happened in Tegan’s final hours?

One of the most fascinating aspects of the case is how Keli managed to hide three full-term pregnancies from everyone, even her long-term boyfriend, former Manly rugby union star Duncan Gillies, who was named in court as Tegan’s most likely father.

Now married to the woman he eventually left Keli for, he was embarrassed by revelations the couple regularly had sex even when she was heavily pregnant, but he didn’t have a clue what was going on. He remembered having sex in the spooning position as Keli had said she was worried by some weight she’d put on.

Keli hid her true state by dressing carefully in layers, wearing sloppy joes tied round her middle and having a towel round her waist at the pool, dropping it only as she slid into the water. Only a few of her water polo mates ever suspected, taking a closer look at her belly underwater. They said nothing to her, believing it wasn’t their business.

In August 2010, almost 14 years after Tegan disappeared, Keli was put on trial for murder. With her marriage over and her job lost, she turned up day after day in a tightly belted trench coat, refusing to say anything. Occasionally, she would weep a little in the dock, but mostly she remained stony-faced, confident that, in the absence of any direct evidence of Tegan’s death — only her disappearance — she would be acquitted.

Finally, however, Keli broke that silence, to scream the word “No!” as she was pronounced guilty. She collapsed to the floor as her mother screamed from the public gallery.

Related: Keli Lane collapses in court at ‘guilty’ verdict

Yet there were some who welcomed the verdict. John Borovnik, the social worker who first noticed Tegan has disappeared, wept. “At last, we have justice for Tegan,” he said. John later had the name “Tegan” tattooed on his arm.

“That was always the aim. My work is all about protecting children and it was terrible to think this child had been born and then no one noticed that she’d disappeared.

“I wanted justice for Tegan, whatever the outcome of the case itself. I wanted her to be recognised and acknowledged as every child in Australia should be.”

Read more of this story in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you think Keli Lane deserves her jail sentence?

THE PERFECT GIFT! Subscribe to 12 issues of The Australian Women’s Weekly for just $64.95 (that’s a 21% saving off the newsstand price) and go into the draw to WIN a trip of a lifetime to Italy, valued at over $25,000.

Video: Keli Lane sentenced to 18 years

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What next for Catherine Middleton?

What next for Catherine Middleton?

From this moment on, Catherine Middleton is a member of The Firm, whether she and Prince William wish it or not. Even though the royal couple has stated their desire to live relatively normal lives, free from many duties during the early years of marriage, security, duty and responsibility will mean that respite will be short-lived at best.

In pictures: Prince William and Catherine Middleton’s fairytale wedding

William, a search and rescue pilot for the RAF, based in Wales, will spend the next few years completing his military service, so the couple will begin married life in rural Wales.

They have asked the media to respect their privacy and stated that Catherine, when it is time to step into the royal job, will not take on engagements by herself, but only in the company of her husband.

Yet that is not to say her path will be easy. Far from it. In fact, while her husband is on active service, Catherine will spend much of that time on her own.

“I can see Catherine doing more thumb-twiddling and eating more home delivery pizzas than any royal in history,” says royal historian Robert Lacey. “I am sure there will be times ahead when she is bored and miserable. But at the same time, she will have the most loving and supportive husband the royal family has produced in generations.

“Her challenge will be to create a distinct role for herself and at the same time to establish the marriage. If she gets it right, as I’m sure she can, she will become every bit as much of a people’s princess as Diana.”

And now the pressure to produce “an heir and a spare” will be enormous. Given time, every outing, every dress will be scrutinised for signs of an expanding stomach, any hint of illness interpreted as an indication of pregnancy. Yet many royal commentators believe the couple will wait until at least the end of Prince William’s term in the air force before they even consider children.

Ingrid Seward, editor-in-chief of Majesty magazine, says Catherine can manage the transition, as long as she doesn’t allow her image to threaten her husband’s.

“If she continues as she is, Kate will survive well,” says Ingrid. “Regal demands, the monotony of engagements and the protocols will suit her well-ordered, controlled nature.

“By putting the natural, more impulsive William first, she can make her own niche gently and gradually. There will be no escape from the paparazzi’s lenses and no more carefree bikini holidays. From now on, Kate will have to think about how everything she does and wears will be reflected in the media.”

During the lead-up to the wedding, Catherine got a taste of what it is like to be part of the royal family with the media attention, the round-the-clock bodyguard team, the need for security checks and the pressure that comes from trying to be perfect, even when you’re not.

So how will they maintain the “normal life”? “I think they will develop things gradually. Being stuck in the back end of Wales will actually help,” says Richard Kay. “They’re not going to have a butler, a cook or a valet. It’s a truly radical departure.”

Following their engagement, the couple had some freedom. They lived at Prince William’s rented cottage, spending time at local pubs and riding William’s red Ducati sports motorcycle. According to staff at The White Eagle pub, on the northern tip of Anglesey, the prince prefers burgers and chips, while Catherine likes fish and salad.

They may be able to preserve some of that quiet life in Wales, but the partying in London’s exclusive nightclubs that they became famous for early in their relationship may become a thing of the past, though they will most likely have use of an apartment at St James’s Palace in the city.

When William completes his stint with the RAF, he and Catherine are expected to move into a six-bedroom house Prince Charles had built at Harewood Park in Herefordshire. The 365-hectare estate is owned by the Duchy of Cornwall, which provides Prince Charles with his annual income.

Related: Where to date like Will and Kate

Like any bride, Catherine wanted to look her best on her wedding day and maintained a regular exercise regimen at an exclusive London gym, the Harbour Club.

The palace quickly moved to quash gossip she was too thin, saying, “She’s not been trying to lose weight. She’s a healthy girl who loves her food and doesn’t count the calories. Because she’s always been rather sporty, her metabolism is naturally quite high.”

Read more of this story in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.

Your say: Do you think Catherine will struggle to adjust to royal life?

THE PERFECT GIFT! Subscribe to 12 issues of The Australian Women’s Weekly for just $64.95 (that’s a 21% saving off the newsstand price) and go into the draw to WIN a trip of a lifetime to Italy, valued at over $25,000.

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William and Catherine to visit Australia next year?

William and Catherine to visit Australia next year?

Prince William and Catherine depart Buckingham Palace for their mini-honeymoon

Prince William and Catherine are reportedly planning a tour of the Commonwealth next year.

The newlywed Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are expected to visit Australia, New Zealand and the Caribbean to help Queen Elizabeth mark her Diamond Jubilee. Clarence House has confirmed the couple will ‘support’ the queen, but says it is too early to confirm their itinerary.

In pictures: Prince William and Catherine’s official wedding photos

“We would never confirm [engagements] this far in advance,” a Clarence House spokesman told the UK’s Daily Mail. “The Duke and Duchess will offer any necessary support to the queen.”

William and Catherine married at London’s Westminster Abbey last week, while more than 2 billion people watched on television worldwide.

The couple spent the weekend at a mystery location in the UK, but were back in their rented farmhouse in Anglesey, Wales, by Sunday night.

William was back at work as a RAF search and rescue pilot on Monday morning. He and Catherine are expected to depart on their honeymoon at the end of the week.

“He’s back at work,” a Ministry of Defence spokesman said. “It’s business as usual for William. It is a normal working day, well, as normal as can be expected.”

The destination of their two-week holiday has not been announced, but there have been reports of a “secret hideaway” in the Seychelles.

Lizard Island in Australia, Kenya and Mustique are other rumoured honeymoon destinations for the couple.

William and Catherine have asked the media for two years of privacy to enjoy married life. They will attend a limited number of royal engagements in the next few months, and Catherine will only attend engagements with her husband.

They are expected to appear at Prince Philip’s 90th birthday celebrations next month and the Trooping of the Colour parade several days later.

Related: Kate Middleton wants to be a housewife

At the end of June they will depart for an eight-day tour of Canada, followed by two days in the US.

The royal couple will also be forced to spend 10 weeks apart next year, when William is posted to the Falklands next September.

Your say: Do you think William and Catherine have made the right decision asking for two years of privacy?

Video: Is the royal couple Hollywood bound?

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Fructose linked to gout

Fructose linked to gout

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By Pamela Allardice

You already know the risks of consuming too much fructose. It’s usually found in the form of high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which is added to many processed foods, sweetened fruit juices and soft drinks, as well as to sauces and condiments. And an increasing body of research has already linked it to obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, to name a few.

Now a study of more than 78,000 women, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association has also found that an increased intake of fructose-rich beverages — which was defined in the research as being one serving per day — is also linked to a 76 percent higher risk of gout among women.

In pictures: Ten bad things that are actually good for you

The researchers suggest that this effect is probably due to the fact that fructose can increase serum uric acid levels, which is a trigger for the disease.

Video: Train your tastebuds to enjoy healthy food

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Some trans fats could improve heart health

Some trans fats could improve heart health

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Trans fats are bad for you, right? Yes — and no.

Trans fats (those fats that are a by-product of the manufacture of partially hydrogenated vegetable oils and that are used in some margarines and commercial baked goods) have had plenty of bad press over the past few years, being linked with a variety of inflammatory conditions, such as heart disease and diabetes.

However, a type of natural trans fat found in whole milk, cheese, yoghurt and butter, called trans-palmitoleic acid (TPA), may have the opposite effect.

In pictures: Low-fat and delicious recipes

Researchers at Harvard University’s Public School of Health tracked 3736 men and women over a period of 20 years, and evaluated their risk factors for cardiovascular disease, such as levels of blood glucose, insulin, and fatty acids.

At the end of the study, those participants who had the highest blood levels of TPA had healthier levels of blood cholesterol and insulin, lower inflammatory markers, and a 60 percent reduction in their risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

Video: Train your tastebuds to enjoy healthy food

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Review: Thor

Review: Thor

Thor is the latest Marvel superhero movie to hit our screens and what a force of special effects to be hit with. The movie has a surprisingly fine array of talent, including Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins and Rene Russo, with Kenneth Branagh as director.

The film opens on the dark plains of the US, where a cosmic disturbance drops Thor (Aussie Chris Hemsworth) onto our unsuspecting astrophysicists. We are thrown into a flashback and another galaxy, where Thor’s tale is told: He is a headstrong young heir to the throne of Asgard who is keen to throw his hammer around and take on the Frost Giants.

Movies: Rabbit Hole review

The fight scenes feature some brilliant special effects with giants who can spout ice and a Thor wields a hammer that can bend earth. But it all comes to an early end thanks to Odin, regally played by Anthony Hopkins, who banishes him to a hellish place called Earth to learn some manners (he obviously hasn’t done his research).

All humour takes place on modern-day Earth, with “fish out of water” comedy. Thor is stun-gunned, hit by a four-wheel drive twice and strides into a pet shop and says “I need a horse”. His buddies and jealous brother Loki (Tom Hiddleston) try to change Odin’s mind but things take a turn for the worst and Loki ends up on the throne. But Thor has a few twists that are more biblical than understandable.

There are too many undeveloped characters, as if they are being introduced in preparation for a sequel or two (stay tuned). Thor’s cohorts are lifted straight from the comic book and given glib lines, while Rene Russo (who plays Thor’s mother) has even less to do. Hopkins sleepwalks through this role — and still impresses — which is ironic given Odin spends half the movie sleeping.

Portman shines and grabs every moment and Chris Hemsworth manages his Shakespearean delivery and transition from ego-driven war monger to comical humble hero quite well. You still suspect he is cast more for his height, looks and incredible body than his acting skills, but he does have talent.

Kat Dennings (Darcy) and Stellan Skarsgard (Dr Erik Selvig) are the strongest of the supporting cast.

Related: Chris Hemsworth on his role in Thor

Director Branagh has seized on the central brotherly love story as the driving force, let the special effects work their magic, and paid little attention to anything else. The romance is only carried by the acting talents of Portman and I’m still wondering why they bothered with 3-D. There is next to nothing that warrants it.

But this is still a movie with heart, some great fight scenes and brilliant special effects that will dazzle your vision and you will feel rumble through your seat. The problem is, once you leave it, there is little else that will resonate for much longer.

Your say: Why do you think comic book movies have been so popular in recent years?

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Should Rob Lowe be forgiven?

Should Rob Lowe be forgiven?

Rob Lowe on the red carpet, and on the cover of the May 2011 issue of Vanity Fair

Rob Lowe appears buff and topless on the cover of the May issue of Vanity Fair magazine, looking like the perfect sex symbol.

But in 1988, Lowe was embroiled in a sex scandal so sordid it almost ended his career for good.

Scandalous: Celebrity playboy Shane Warne

Lowe was filmed having sex with two women, one of whom was 16. He claimed he didn’t know the girl was underage at the time.

Another part of the same video showed Lowe and a male friend having sex with another young American model in a hotel room in Paris. This portion of the tape was sold as one of the first celebrity sex tapes, destroying Lowe’s public image.

The actor checked himself into rehab for sex addiction and alcoholism soon afterwards, and his career eventually rebounded.

He has since poked fun at his sex tapes on US sketch show Saturday Night Live.

Related: Rob Lowe still looks good with his shirt off

Now, Lowe is 47, back on top and being marketed as a sexy leading man. In his Vanity Fair interview, he says he as “no regrets” about his troubled past.

“The Brat Pack is timeless,” Lowe told the publication. “We should all be so lucky in our lives to create things that we’re still talking about 25 years later.”

Your say: Do you think Rob Lowe and other troubled celebrities should be forgiven for their past indiscretions?

Video: The biggest scandals of the decade

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