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Croc tragedy family: Our little angel lives on

By Jo Knowsley

Pictures: Oscar Kornyei

Steve and Sharon Doble were overwhelmed by grief when their five-year-old son Jeremy was taken by a crocodile. In this moving interview they reveal what happened on that tragic day, and why they don’t want the croc destroyed.

When Sharon and Steve Doble moved to the Daintree Rainforest five years ago, they were in search of a better life for themselves and their two young sons. They believed this piece of paradise in Far North Queensland would put their boys beyond the dangers of the modern world.

But, on February 8 this year, their dreams were shattered. Their younger son Jeremy, just five years old, was taken by a crocodile in the family’s backyard as he played with his seven-year-old brother Ryan and their boxer dog Champ, in less than 40 centimetres of water.

Yet as they battle their grief, Steve, 40, and Sharon, 39, both originally from Perth, are determined that their elder son will continue to love and respect Australia’s sometimes deadly wildlife.

Speaking exclusively to Woman’s Day, Steve says, “Do we wish we had never moved to the area? No. Accidents happen anywhere, at any time. We loved Jeremy and his memory will live with us for ever. The most we can wish is that this dreadful accident had never happened.”

Steve wears a pendant of a scorpion that Jeremy had bought just before he died. He carries his son’s tiny T-shirt tucked in the pocket of his shorts as he works around the property, to help carry memories of “the little shadow who is no longer there”.

The family sees Jeremy’s favourite wildlife — blue Ulysses butterflies — every day. In their home, the young boy’s painting of a sunrise adorns a calendar. There are photographs of Jeremy and Ryan playing together, and of the boys with their parents on treasured family outings, everywhere. Yet memories of the fateful day their son was taken remain indelibly etched on their minds.

For the full story, see this week’s Woman’s Day — on sale May 18, 2009.

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Heidi and Seal’s trashy wedding

The couple renew their vows in an over-the-top, tacky ceremony.

Heidi Klum and Seal marked their fourth anniversary by renewing their wedding vows last week in a hilarious, “bad taste” themed ceremony.

Heidi wore an over-the-top lace and glitter dress, braided cornrows, silver false nails and lashings of make-up. Seal wore a mullet wig, a US flag-patterned leather jacket and a camera around his neck.

An Elvis impersonator conducted the ceremony, and the 75 guests were given T-shirts sporting the words “We got trashed!”

The pregnant supermodel sparked controversy when she puffed on a cigarette, but insiders insist the mum-of-three was only pretending to take a drag.

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Kate Middleton’s secret pain: I can’t be a mum

The popular princess-in-waiting is devastated that she might never have the children she so desperately yearns for.

Kate Middleton is riddled with anguish after realising she and Prince William may never have the family she’s always dreamed of.

She is said to be devastated since being told she can’t be a mum, and will have to wait until her late thirties.

While Princess Diana was married at 20 and had produced “an heir and a spare” by the age of 23, Kate, 27, will have to put any hope of motherhood on the backburner until career-driven Wills has fulfilled his desire to become an officer.

With a wait of eight to 10 years before she can even begin trying to have a child, Kate is worried she will miss her chance. Certainly, her “dream family” of several children now seems totally out of the question.

At 26, William has just begun a five-year training course to become a Search and Rescue helicopter pilot. And he has pledged to spend at least three more years with the service after that. With the British Ministry of Defence spending a fortune on his training, William is said to be keen not to waste it.

With reports that the royal family is unlikely to put on a wedding until his training is finished, this means by the time he is free to marry and take on official royal duties in 2017, Kate will be in her late thirties — when a woman’s fertility is on the wane.

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Top Model star Cassi: ‘Our age gap won’t stop our love’

By Jackie Brygel

Pictures: Trevor King

As her career is set to take off, the 17-year-old wants her 25-year-old lover by her side the whole way.

Teenager Cassi Van Den Dungen’s love for an older man has helped make her Australia’s Next Top Model‘s most talked-about contestant, but as far as she and Brad Saul are concerned, nothing will keep them apart.

Only just 17, a forthright Cassi makes no apologies for her unconventional romance with the 25-year-old bricklayer.

“I’ve never really thought about the age difference,” she says. “I was always just more interested in Brad and getting to know him. No-one else could ever change my opinion of him.”

“You can’t help who you fall in love with,” adds Brad. “When I was younger, I had a dream of the ultimate woman and, to me, Cassi is that woman. I don’t look at her age.”

Speaking exclusively to Woman’s Day from the outer Melbourne home they share with Brad’s father Anthony and younger sister Jessica, the loved-up pair hold hands as they chat about the intensity of their relationship and plans for the future.

Contrary to reports they are engaged, Brad reveals he’s yet to “officially” ask Cassi — who moved in with his family shortly before going into the ANTM house — to marry him.

“I said to her over the phone that I was going to buy her a ring and she knew exactly what I meant,” he explains. “I’ll ask her when the time’s right and it’s more personal.

“That’s to show our love for each other.”

Says Cassi, “We want to have a bit of money behind us before we have our wedding and go on our honeymoon. I plan on our honeymoon taking at least a month. My career is only just starting, as well.”

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Wayne Cooper’s wife tells: Why I took him back

By Sarah Blake

Pictures: Andrew Jacob

The fashion designer and his partner reveal the reasons behind their shock reconciliation.

For almost a year, the notion that Australian fashion designer Wayne Cooper and his former partner Sarah Marsh would happily kick around a soccer ball with their two young children has been unthinkable.

Convicted of assaulting Sarah during a heated argument last June, Wayne has also spent months fighting her in a legal battle over the beachside home the couple shared for more than a decade.

Last week came a stunning twist. Sarah has forgiven Wayne and the couple are back together. Here, for the first time, they tell Woman’s Day about how they’ve pushed through the bitterness of the past year and plan to rebuild their lives for the sake of their children, Ruby, 10, and Jude, 6.

**How did you come to be back together?

Sarah** We hadn’t had much contact with each other since separating, but just before Easter my dad had a stroke and Wayne sent a text saying he was thinking of me and hoped I was OK. There was some family and school stuff we had to do together as well, and we saw a bit of each other and spoke, and we still had a connection.

It seemed like we were left with real feelings after all that hurt and anger and poison. We had our time apart, gave things time to settle down. I didn’t think this was something that would happen. I had resolved to myself that this was my life, and I was really surprised that he had those feelings and that I felt that way.

Wayne I said to Sarah, “My feelings for you are the same as they were before we broke up, from the time that we met, they are the same, they haven’t changed.”

Sarah I think we just got bogged down into this cycle of arguments, disappointments and upsets, and then it almost seemed like we needed time apart. We had been together 13 years and it was a fast paced life. We’d been to counselling and it helped a bit, but it didn’t seem to get us there.

Wayne The worry and load it’s put on everyone, when you see yourself together again, you ask “why?”. If I could have my time again, I would not let it happen. I wish that all of this hadn’t happened — for so many reasons.

If you are a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline on 1800 200 526. In the case of an emergency call 000. Wayne Cooper was not paid for this story.

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Kylie Minogue’s surprise engagement

After just six months of dating her Spanish lover, the Aussie superstar is ready to take the next step in their relationship.

Kylie Minogue has finally broken her love curse and looks set to wed her toyboy lover Andrés Velencoso, after receiving a traditional nuptial blessing from his father.

London’s Daily Mail newspaper reports the Spanish hunk’s father presented Kylie with a rose during St Jordi’s Day celebrations on the Costa Brava. “Kylie and Andrés swapped gifts, but his parents each gave her a rose, a custom usually reserved for engaged couples,” a source said. “Kylie was skipping around with delight. It’s clear they are all hoping for an engagement soon.”

Andrés, who is almost 10 years younger than Kylie, has also reportedly impressed her parents, Ron and Carol.

“Kylie is extremely close to her parents and a real family person. She says she is having her best year yet and a lot of that is down to Andrés,” an insider told the Daily Express newspaper. “Ron and Carol welcomed him with open arms. He is charming and witty, but also has a sensitive side and that really shone through. They really took to him.”

“I’m definitely happier than ever before,” Kylie told British Hello magazine last week. “I feel relaxed, happy, excited and just totally content with my life. I’m having a good time. I really am.”

Kylie, who turns 41 next week, and Andrés — who bears a striking resemblance to the singer’s French ex Olivier Martinez — have been dating since October. They were first spotted cuddling up to each other at burlesque star Dita Von Teese’s 36th birthday in Paris.

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Common mistakes investment rookies make

Piggy bank, getty images

Economics is an argument not a science, which means two opposing theories can both be right. So how do we know what’s the right thing to do? We’ve nutted out the common mistakes beginner investors make.

Indecision

Doing nothing- if you are too fearful about investing and so do nothing then you will get no where. It’s not possible for most people to be able to retire comfortably with no risk. So if you don’t invest at all, there is no danger you will lose money but there is also no way you can retire comfortably. Understanding risks and then taking them is vital to your long term financial future.

Following hot tips

To follow someone else’s tips without fully understanding your investment needs; to just blindly follow someone you don’t know is just gambling and even worse than doing nothing. This is taking excessive unnecessary risk. It’s not necessary to just take risk, any risk to learn, taking calculated risk with money you can afford to lose is a way to overcome this problem.

Buying at cycle peaks

This happens because you have heard a buzz generally about the market for a long time now, where not only professionals are talking, so is your taxi driver and your part time dog trainer; bragging about how much money they are making in X. So you buy some X only to watch it fall, it wasn’t a hot tip, everyone was talking about it, but it was still not something you understood. Again, it cannot be overstated you need to understand the risks and be aware of major cycles involved behind investment decisions you make.

Order of debt

You might not pay attention to which debt cost what interest rate and so you paid a lot more money than you needed to because you did not understand some of your debt was at 5% and some was at 20%, so you could have four times less money on the lower rate and still be paying the same amount! This means if you have a credit card debt of $100,000 the payments would currently be the same for a $400,000 mortgage! Paying attention to the cost of debt can save you thousands.

For cash

Many people have cash lying around in low interest accounts when they could have their cash sitting in high interest accounts piggy backed off their normal accounts available at a days notice. It only takes five minutes to change this. With all the fantastic online high interest bank accounts with reputable organizations online there is no reason not to. So Google high interest savings accounts today!

For property

Not enough research is the biggest mistake property investors make; buying the first thing they see in an area they don’t know and haven’t bothered to find out about. If you must be lazy, at least buy something in an area you know and don’t expect much, but better still do your homework it can really pay off! I have seen it many times with my own customers; the ones that did the most research made the most money, and the one that made the greatest profit of all was a 19 year old girl who never made more than $40,000 a year! Research, research, research!

For shares

Not enough research is the same main problem for share investors as property investors. Although with shares according to the government’s recent understanding money report “less than 5% of women know anything about any company they invest in”, this includes what the company does! So all you need to do to be ahead of the rest is find out what the company does that you are interested in investing in and do some more basic homework to get even a better possibility of results. Again here I have seen massive returns from the people who did the most work (I used to work in stock broking) and I have also seen people put in a lot of work and lose money too. The ones that had long term systems and medium expectations did the best.

If you can steer clear of these basic mistakes, who knows – you might end up the next big investor! Even if you don’t, if you already have cash in the bank, live in a rented or mortgaged property or have any superannuation, you already are an investor, so it makes sense to at least consider these pointers. Happy investing!

Your say: Do you have any advice for first-time investors? Email us on [email protected]

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*What Alice Forgot*

What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty

What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty

An exclusive extract from the Great Read in the May issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly: What Alice Forgot by Liane Moriarty (Pan McMillan)

Was that talkback radio she could hear? She hated talkback radio. The callers were so cranky and nasal. They were always appalled by something. Alice said that she’d never been appalled by something. Alice once said she’d never been appalled by anything. Elisabeth had said that was appalling.

She kept her eyes closed and said out loud, ‘Have you got the radio on, Nick? Because I think I have a headache.’ Her voice came out petulant, which wasn’t like her but after all, she was pregnant and her head hurt and she was cold and she didn’t feel quite…right.

Maybe this was morning sickness? Was it even morning? Oh, Alice.

‘Alice, can you hear me? Can you hear me Alice?’ ‘Sultana, can you hear me? Can you hear me, Sultana?’

Every night before they went to sleep, Nick talked to the baby through an empty toilet roll pressed to Alice’s stomach. He’d heard this idea on some radio show. They said that way the baby would learn to recognise the father’s voice as well as the mother’s.

‘Ahoy’ he’d call. ‘Can you hear me, Sultana? This is your father speaking!’

They’d read that the baby was the size of a sultana by now. So that’s what they called it. Only in private of course, they were cool parents-to-be. No sappiness in public.

The sultana said he was fine thanks Dad, bit bored at times, but doing OK. Apparently he wished his mum would stop eating all that boring green shit and have a pizza for a change.

‘Enough with the rabbit food!’ he demanded.

It seemed the sultana was most likely a boy. He just seemed to have a masculine personality. The little rogue. They both agreeded on this. Alice would lie back and look at the top of Nick’s head. There were a few shiny silvery strands. She didn’t mention them. He was thirty-two. The silver strands made her eyes blur. All those wacky pregnancy hormones.

Alice never talked out loud to the baby. She spoke to it in her mind, shyly, when she was in the bath (not too hot – so many rules). Hey there, Baby, she’d think to herself, and then she’d be so overwhelmed by the wonder of it she’s splash the water with the flat of her palms like a kid thinking about Christmas. She was turning thirty soon, with a terrifying mortgage and a husband and a baby on the way but she didn’t feel that different from when she was fifteen.

Except there were no moments of bliss after grocery shopping when she was fifteen. She hadn’t met Nick yet. Her heart still had to be broken a few times before he could turn up and superglue it together with words like ‘besotted’.

‘Alice? Are you OK? Please open your eyes.’

It was a woman’s voice. Too loud and strident to ignore. It dragged her into consciousness and wouldn’t let her go. It was a voice that gave Alice a familiar irritated itch of a feeling, like too-tight stockings.This person did not belong in her bedroom.

She rolled her head to one side. ‘Ow!’

She opened her eyes.

There was a blur of unrecognizable colours and shapes. She couldn’t even see the bedside cabinet to reach for her glasses. Her eyes must be getting worse. She blinked and blinked again and then, like a sharpening telescope everything came into focus. She was looking at someone’s knees. How funny.

Knobbly pale knees.

She lifted her chin a fraction. ‘There you are!’

It was Jane Turner of all people, from work, kneeling next to her. Her face was flushed and she had strands of sweaty hair pasted to her forehead. Her eyes looked tired. She had a soft, pudgy neck Alice had never noticed before. She was wearing a T-shirt with huge sweat marks and shorts and her arms were thin and white with dark freckles. Alice had never seen so much of Jane’s body before. It was embarrassing. Poor old Jane.

‘Listeria, wisteria,’ said Jane. ‘Don’t try and sit up.’ ‘Hmmmph,’ said Alice. ‘Don’t want to sit up.’ She had a feeling she wasn’t in bed; she seemed to be lying flat on her back on a cool laminated floor. Was she drunk? Had she forgotten she was pregnant and got deliriously drunk?

Her obstetrician was an urbane man who wore a bow tie and had a round face disconcertingly similar to one of Alice’s exboyfriends. He said he’d have a problem with ‘say, an aperitif followed by one glass of wine with dinner.’ Alice thought an aperitif must be a particular brand of drink. (‘Oh Alice,’ said Elisabeth.) Nick explained that an aperitif was a pre-dinner drink.

Nick came from a aperitif-drinking family. Alice came from a family with one dusty bottle of Bailey’s sittng hopefully in the back of the pantry behind the tins of spaghetti. In spite of what the obstertrician said, she’d only had half a glass of champagne since she’d done the pregnancy test and she’d felt guilty about that even though everybody kept saying it was fine.

‘Where am I?’ asked Alice, terrified of the answer. Was she in some seedy nightclub? How could she explain to Nick that she had forgotten she was pregnant?

‘You’re at the gym,’ said Jane. ‘You fell and knocked yourself out. Gave me an absolute heart attack, although I was sort of glad because it gave me a chance to stop.’

The gym? Alice didn’t go to gyms. Had she woken up drunk in a gym?

‘You lose your balance,’ said a sharp, jolly voice. ‘It was quite a fall! Gave us all a shock, you silly sausage! We’ve called an ambulance, so don’t you worry, we’ve got professional help on the way!’

Kneeling next to Jane was a thin, coffee-tanned girl with a bleached blonde ponytail, shiny lycra shorts and a cropped red top with the words STEP CRAZY emblazoned across it. Alice felt instant dislike to her. She didn’t like being called a sily sausage. It offended her dignity. One of Alice’s faults, according to her sister Elisabeth, was a tendency to take herself too seriously.

‘Did I faint?’ asked Alice hopefully. Pregnant women fainted. She had never fainted in her life, although she spent most of fourth grade practicing, in the hope that she could be one of those luck girls who fainted during church and had to be carries out, draped across the muscly arms of their PE teacher, Mr Gillespie. ‘It’s just that I’m pregnant,’ she said. Let her see who she was calling a silly sausage.

Jane’s mouth dropped. ‘Jesus, Alice, you’re not!’

Step Crazy Girl pursed her mouth as if she’d caught Alice out being naughty. ‘Oh dear, sweetie, I did ask at the beginning of the class if anyone was pregnant. You shouldn’t have been so shy. I would have suggested modifications.’

Alice’s head thumped. Nothing anybody said was making sense.

HOT DEAL

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Moon Gardens

Once upon a time gardeners believed that flowers and herbs had more power if gathered by moonlight – especially if you planted them for spells and potions. Maybe this was because some plants are more fragrant at night, as they try to attract night flying moths and other insects.

Cool moist air also seems to ‘collect’ scents too. But mostly, I think, it’s because gardens can have a strange magic at night. Vivid colours are stronger in daylight. But other colours have a ghostly beauty that’s best seen at night…

‘Night gardens’ used to be known as ‘moon gardens’. These days, when most of us are at work during the day, it can be glorious to have a garden you can wander around at night. A little garden lighting, and you too can have some garden magic!

Moon Garden Trees:

Go for ones with stunning trunks, preferably pale dapples that almost glow in moonlight. Most of us rarely notice the beauty of tree trunks during the day. But at night they aware serene an sculptural. Some of my night time favourites are snow gums, especially ones that have been allowed to grow several trunks; any of the malaleucas, or paperbarks; strawberry guava, with the lower limbs trimmed back so you can see the twisted shape of the stems; silver birch; paper birch; Brazilian cherry, with it’s twisted dappled stems; smoke bush – once again, the multi stemmed ones can be the most lovely.

The Sheraton Cherry, or Prunus serrula, has a shiny red dappled trunk, especially stunning with spot might below it also the rich color can be seen. Other great trees for ‘moon gardens’ are open canopied trees, like jacarandas, where the moonlight can shine through the branches leaving silver dapples on the grass. Melia adzerach, the native white cedar, can also look stunning by moonlight.

Shrubs for Moonlight:

Many of the dark leafed shrubs like camellias are lost at night. They just merge into one thick shadow. Silver leafed plants, on the other hand, like silver Artemisia or wormwood or curry bush or English lavender – especially the white varieties – seem to reflect the moonlight, and shiny leaved sculptural plants like yuccas or Buddleia or Butterfly Bush can look amazing.

Midnight Flowers:

It’s the light, bright flowers that look glorious by moonlight- not just white ones, but pale colours that glow. Japanese anemones are fabulous; so are white and yellow hollyhocks, white echinacea, butterfly like gauras, pale bloomed wisterias, and dancing cosmos flowers.

Look for blooms that are most fragrant in the evening, too, like night scented jasmine or Jessamine, or wallflowers, orange blossom, mock orange blossom, coreopsis ‘Moonbeam’, sweet William, carnations, freesia, gardenias, white heliotrope with its fabulous vanilla scent, white alyssum’s honeyed sweetness, or the haunting sensual note of mandevillea, Flowering ginger lilies can put out such a strong scent as night you can almost float on it.

My favourite though has to be ‘lunaria’ or moonflowers, also known as honesty. The purple spring flowers are pretty enough. But it’s the paper silver seed case that really glow for months, stunning in both daylight and night.

And that’s another bit of magic about moon gardens. They are lovely in daylight too. Suddenly you have two gardens, not just one- an enchanted paradise for the evening, and and garden with quite different beauty during the day.

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Exercise For Your Life

Exercise For Your Life

Exercise Breakdown

Exercise For Your Life

New evidence is showing us that we need to both exercise as well as lose weight to have the greatest reduction of risk to lifestyle related diseases such as heart disease, diabetes and some forms of cancer.

This exercise to weight relationship is a direct balance between the energy we consume as food & drink (Click here to assess your energy intake from fluids) as opposed to the energy we burn when exercising and doing our daily activities. For many of us, there needs to be some change in what’s coming in as well as what’s going out in order to get the best protection of all (not to mention the motivational effect of a healthy body and wellbeing!). As a result, there have been recent changes to many exercise guidelines.

This is where the National Physical Activity Guidelines (NPAG) becomes so important. They get enhanced with a little fine tweaking by Professor Garry Egger, who was one of the original authors of the guidelines as well as being responsible for the National Weight Management Guidelines. Garry proposes that along with achieving the NPAG there are some additions that will help improve our fitness and reduce our fatness and help us be active long into old age.

So the bottom line for long term good health and living a full life is to be active combined with exercise that increases your fitness (Click here to assess your health behaviours including your activity levels). Creating a goal of increasing everyday physical activity will start you off. After a week or two you could begin to increase your physical activity to 20 – 30 minutes of moderate physical activity 2 – 3 days per week. It could also help in these initial stages to break the physical activity up into 2 or even 3, 10-minute sessions per day.

The next stage could progress to 30 minutes of moderate activity most days or greater than 70,000 steps per week, with encouragement to throw in a 60 minute session to develop your endurance. This equates to 150-180 minutes in total.

The final stage may include substituting the 30 minute sessions for some more vigorous exercise that will target your fitness (Click here to find out the best types of activity for you).

At the end of the day it’s important for you to work at your own pace and work with a health professional and your doctor if you have any health concerns. The best results are achieved when fitting these activities in with your daily routine, rather than making activity a special chore. The most important thing is that we move, how, when, why and how often depends on you.

YOUR SAY: How do you get creative with exercise? Share your tips with us below…

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