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Beaded key rings

For ages. 8 years +

Materials

Small wooden beads

beading wire (available at selected craft outlets and beading stores)

key ring attachment (available at craft stores)

Step 1

Cut a length of beading wire about 20cm long. Using the pliers, form a 1cm wide coil in one end of the wire.

Step 2

Thread 36 beads onto the wire. The coil will stop them falling off the wire as you work.

Step 3

Each butterfly wing is made up of eight beads. Form the first segment of the wire with eight beads into a wing loop, so that four beads are on each side of the loop. Twist the end of the wing loop and the centre wire together a couple of times to secure the wing loop in place.

Step 4

Continue as in Step 3 to create three more loops, twisting the centre wire and wing loops together at the centre. The remaining four beads form the body of the butterfly.

Secure the loop end of the key ring to the excess wire, just above the four beads, by passing the wire through the key ring then twisting the wire to secure it. Cut off the excess wire and then arrange your butterfly wings in the correct positions as the may have moved out of place.

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Animal book marks

For ages. 4 years +

Materials

Coloured cardboard

white paper

pencil

safety scissors

craft glue

felt pens

Step 1

Enlarge our animal templates on a photocopier to the desired size. Trace and cut out to form patterns for your bookmarks.

Step 2

Trace the patterns onto the cardboard in the colours of your choice and cut out the shapes.

Step 3

Glue these cardboard shapes onto contrasting coloured cardboard and cut around them so there is a 3mm contrasting border remaining around each animal shape.

Step 4

Add eyes, noses and decorative details to the shapes using felt pens. Position your bookmarks in your books by inserting the legs of the animal shapes so they hold the pages.

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Funky feather pencils

For ages. 5 years +

Materials

Pencils with erasers attached

feathers

tacky craft glue

narrow sequined trim (available in haberdashery departments)

small plastic eyes

Step 1

Remove eraser from the end of the pencil. Squeeze glue into this hole and push the end of the feather into the glue and hold in place or rest for a couple of minutes so that the glue begins to adhere and the feathers remain in position.

Step 2

Attach one end of the sequined trim to the metal tip of the pencil. Wrap the trim around the metal a couple of times to ensure you have secured the trim and the feathers in place. Wind the trim down the length of the pencil securing it in place at intervals with dots of glue, then wind it back up the length of the pencil, securing it in place as before to form a criss-cross effect on the pencil.

Leave about 1cm to 1.5cm of pencil without trim at the base, to allow you to sharpen your pencil.

Step 3

Glue two eyes and sequins on the feathers, just above the top of the pencil, to create a face for your Funky Pencil.

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Editor’s letter

On the first day of every January, I rev myself up for the year ahead by resolving to be happier, healthier, wiser, slimmer, kinder, thriftier, more patient, more caring, more understanding, more selfless, more generous, more charitable, spend more and more time with my family … basically more of everything. And while I’m lying on a beach, the day after the big night before, it’s so much easier to imagine being more while doing so much less. Sometimes, I think it would be more (there’s that word again) realistic to make our “new year” resolutions when the year’s in full swing, say around March or even June, when the day-to-day reality tempers our need to be, well … so much more to everyone!

Even with the best intentions, juggling a toddler, career, family and friends makes it impossible for me to stick with all of the resolutions I’ve listed above. Heck, only a superwoman could deliver 12 months on those. But then I know that’s not what it’s really all about. For me, January 1 marks a time for renewal and revision; a time to take stock of the past year – the good and the bad – and look forward to the next. I’m a firm believer in assessing each year and being happy that I have made the most of what was on offer. My father always tells me that “life’s too short to be something you’re not happy with, and if you can, move on”.

So now that you know what I’m resolving to do in the New Year, I thought it would be fun to find out what some of The Weekly staff and our contributors are resolving to do for 2005. Here, in no particular order: Lyndey Milan, Food Director: “To have singing lessons more regularly.” (Don’t give up your day job! Please. Deb.)

Deborah Hutton, Editor-At-Large: “Improve my golf handicap.”

Kerryn Phelps, Medical Practitioner: “To appreciate life and to value and take note of every single happy moment.”

Jane De Teliga: “To have more fun and more time with friends and family.”

Lee Tulloch, Columnist: “To laugh more, worry less, find a way of exercising that doesn’t involve moving from my desk and, finally, put those family snapshots in an album.”

Jackie French, Gardening Editor: “Lose another 10kg, relax instead of stressing at delay, and clean out last decade’s jams and chutneys from the larder.” (Jackie, we can help with the first one. See page 104 for summer diets.)

Bettina Arndt, Social Commentator: “Make more time to enjoy my children.” (Don’t we all. Deb)

Pat McDermott, Columnist: “To remind myself before I pay the electricity bill what a privilege it is to have children.” (Note to self: Remember to tell Pat that I think she’s one of the most amusing writers in Australia. Deb.)

Caroline Roessler, Managing Editor: “To enjoy each day as if it were my last.”

Jo Wiles, Deputy Editor: “To be nicer, kinder, wiser, thinner, calmer … In short an extreme makeover!” (Jo, you’re as bad as me. Must be Capricorn ambition! Deb.)

There you have it – some worthwhile intentions to inspire your resolutions. And talking about inspiration, this month’s issue is full of extraordinary women, from British PM’s wife, Cherie Blair, who invited us to visit her at 10 Downing Street, for an exclusive interview, leading up to her Australian tour next month; to the reluctant Hollywood movie star Angelina Jolie, who confessed to our writer, William Langley, that she makes movies so she can spend the money and her time helping refugees as goodwill ambassador for the UNHCR.

As a special Australia Day tribute, we’re celebrating our own inspirational indigenous women, including Olympic champion Cathy Freeman, and four others.

Cathy summed up the spirit of the article when she spoke to The Weekly’s Sue Williams: “Australia Day is a wonderful opportunity for all of us to celebrate our multi-culturalism, as well as marking each other’s histories and accepting our uniqueness. As an Aboriginal woman I would like to say congratulations to The Weekly for doing a piece like this. Telling an Australian indigenous story is a wonderful way of celebrating Australia Day. To be in a magazine means a lot to us, things like this make a huge difference. Little girls, wherever they’re from in Australia, will get a huge kick from seeing Australian indigenous women in such a widely read publication. Everybody needs role models.”

From all of us here at The Weekly, may 2005 bring you more happiness, more love, more opportunity, more peace and more of the good things life has to offer.

Deborah Thomas, Editor

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Eliminating excess kilojoules

1. Spice up your meals. You’ll eat less.

2. Bulk up your salads. Chop vegetables into bigger pieces instead of shredding or slicing. You’ll chew more and eat less.

3.Drink water before your meal to decrease your appetite.

4.Try a juice spritzer, instead of juice. Just mix half of your favourite juice with water or sparkling water and you can cut up to 400kJ a glass. Over a year this could mean 3kg.

5.Have a cup of green or jasmine tea before you walk. Caffeine liberates fatty acids from your muscles so that you can burn fat faster.

6. Spray, don’t pour, oil. You’ll use less.

7. Have chunky soup, full of large vegetable pieces. It will fill you up more than pureed soup.

8. Read labels so that you can check for serving size and fat and sugar content.

9. Get a lunchbox and take a healthy, low-fat lunch to work.

10. Measure pasta into servings to avoid cooking too much and overeating.

11. Savour your snack. Eat slowly and enjoy every bite.

12.Earn your kilojoules. Before you grab your fork or spoon and start eating, do 10 sit-ups or push-ups.

13. Satisfy your cravings in other ways like chewing sugarless gum or popping a mint.

14.Paste some friendly reminders about your eating plan on your mirror, or computer.

15. Get inspired, but don’t beat yourself up for not instantly attaining the ideal.

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What’s in a serving?

It’s easy to be confused about exactly how much a serving is. Here’s an easy guide to what one serving equals.

Vegetables: 1 cup of raw, leafy vegetables or 1/2 cup of other vegetables, cooked or chopped raw.

Fruits: 1/2 cup of chopped, cooked or canned fruit; 1 medium apple, banana or orange; 3/4 cup of fruit juice.

Whole grains: 1/2 cup of cooked cereal, rice or pasta; 1 slice of bread or half a bagel.

Dairy: 40g reduced-fat cheese, 1 cup of low-fat or fat-free milk; 1 cup of low-fat or fat-free yogurt.

Flavonoid foods: 2 tbsps soy nuts; 3/4 cup of miso soup; 1/2 cup of cooked beans or legumes; 85g tofu; 1/4 cup of soybean sprouts; 1/4 cup of chopped onion.

Omega-3 foods: 1 omega-3 egg, 2 tbsps chopped walnuts, 85g tofu, 85g cooked fish.

Meat/poultry/eggs: 55-85g cooked poultry, 55-85g cooked lean meat.

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Live long and prosper

Improve your longevity by eating what’s possibly the healthiest diet in the world.

On some small islands of Japan called Okinawa you’ll find more centenarians than anywhere else in the world. But what’s most surprising is that they’re not just old, they’re incredibly healthy. In fact, scientific studies of elderly Okinawans have found they have young, clean arteries and low cholesterol levels; are at extremely low risk for hormone-dependent cancers including cancers of the breast, prostate, ovaries and colon; have very strong bones and remarkable mental clarity, even over the age of 100; and have an average body mass index of 18 to 22 (lean is less than 23).

What’s more, there are virtually no women in Okinawa using hormone replacement therapy. They don’t need it. So how do they do it?

The answer is surprisingly simple, according to The Okinawa Way (Penguin) by Bradley Willcox, Craig Willcox and Makoto Suzuki.

Besides getting regular exercise and practising relaxation techniques, Okinawans have managed to combine the best of everything we know about healthy eating in their lifelong dietary plan. Here are the six main features of their way of eating.

**Eat more soy and fish

** They eat plenty of soy food and fish but little meat.

It seems that soy foods are an extremely rich source of flavonoids, powerful antioxidants that can help protect us from diseases ranging from cardiovascular disease to cancer.

They are useful against hormone-related cancers like prostate cancer or breast cancer, say the authors, as they seem to provide a weak form of oestrogen where the body needs it and block the body’s own oestrogen in locations where this hormone may induce cancer.

While you can find flavonoids in foods such as onions, apples, broccoli, and tea, soybeans have levels that exceed those in other plants by as much as 1000 times.

So think tofu, tempeh, miso, soy milk, soy flour or texturised soy protein if you’re looking for ways to improve your health and longevity.

As for fish, this is a valuable source of omega-3 fatty acids that help maintain the performance of your brain, as well as your cardiovascular and immune systems. Darker-fleshed fish, such as salmon, tuna and mackerel, are the best choice. Based on the Okinawan diet, the authors recommend you eat three calcium foods such as tofu, soy milk, or dairy; three flavonoid foods, such as soy nuts, tofu, or onions; and two omega-3 foods such as oily fish, walnuts, pumpkin seeds or omega-3 eggs or margarine, daily.

**Eat more vegies

** Okinawans eat an abundant amount of fresh vegetables, at least seven servings daily. In fact, about 80 per cent of their diet consists of plant foods, including soy products.

The pick of the crop is tofu, of course, as well as carrots and even carrot tops, cabbage, onions, bean sprouts, zucchini, sweet potatoes and green capsicums, all of which are rich sources of antioxidants. It is these that help protect your DNA and other important cells in your body from the damaging hits of free radicals, say the authors.

So load up on legumes (beans) and vegetables and don’t forget that fruit is important, too. Okinawans eat mostly tangerines, pawpaws, watermelon, bananas and pineapples.

**Eat more complex carbohydrates

** They eat lots of complex carbohydrates, at least six servings a day.

“Carbohydrates are, by and large, nature’s perfect clean-burning fuel, which is why we strongly suggest you avoid all the low-carb fad diets currently all the rage,” say the authors.

There is some evidence that complex carbohydrates will help protect you from bowel and colon cancer and, of course, they’re important for slow-burning energy.

If you’re looking for new ways to get more complex carbohydrates in your diet, consider wholegrains such as barley (a good choice in salads and casseroles), wild rice (which has a delicious, nutty flavour), buckwheat (great in pancakes), millet (which can be used for stuffing vegetables) or burghul (it makes a delicious salad with chickpeas, raisins or nuts). Okinawans eat complex carbohydrates such as legumes, rice and barley, or sweet potatoes (not refined carbs like cakes and pastries) which keep their glucose load low and protect against diseases such as diabetes.

**Drink more water and tea

** They drink plenty of fresh water and antioxidant-packed tea. “We recommend you drink enough water so that your urine is clear. Whether it takes three glasses a day or 12, that’s the right amount for you,” say the authors. Green tea is now believed to contain flavonoids that may be effective in preventing arteries narrowing and clogging. But even better news is that it can help burn fat.

**Limit fat and salt

** Okinawans limit their fat intake to 30 per cent or less of total kilojoules and their salt intake to less than 6g a day. Not only that, but the type of fat they eat is ‘good’ fat. Think mono-unsaturated fats such as those found in olive oil and almonds, and polyunsaturated fats found in walnuts, fish oil, grapeseed oil and poultry.

**Aim for five colours

** “Visuals count,” say the authors. “Okinawans feel that food should look as good as it smells and tastes.” Their advice: to make your dinner beautiful, always try to get five colours on your table – for instance, red cabbage; yellow egg, corn or squash; green vegies; white onions, tofu, rice, bread or potatoes; black olives or beans.

Garnishes can also help you to add appeal to healthy meals: green mint leaves, white sesame seeds on green salads, or finely chopped red chillies sprinkled on potatoes or tuna salad.

(The Okinawa Way – How to Improve Your Health and Longevity Dramatically, by Bradley Willcox, Craig Willcox & Makoto Suzuki) (Penguin).

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Hangover helpers

So you’ve been celebrating and now you feel … well, awful, in fact. When you drink alcohol to excess, your body is unable to break it down fast enough, so it accumulates in a harmful byproduct called acetaldehyde.

The liver – which has the job of detoxifying your body – is overwhelmed by dealing with this substance, and that is what creates the appalling feeling. The other main reason for a hangover is dehydration, because alcohol robs the body of water, and with this, vitamins and minerals. The only real cure for a hangover is time. But there’s a lot you can do to relieve the symptoms – the headache, nausea and fatigue – so you can deal with ‘the day after’ as painlessly as possible.

What you can do

  • Have a large glass of grapefruit juice, and eat some honey. The grapefruit is a liver tonic, and the honey helps your body burn off the alcohol still in your system faster.

  • Drink bouillon. Broth made from bouillon cubes or any homemade soup broth will help replace the salt and potassium your body loses when you drink.

  • Replenish your water supply. Drinking plenty of water before you go to bed and again when you get up in the morning may help relieve discomfort caused by dehydration.

  • Take B-complex vitamins, vitamin C and zinc before drinking, and again in the morning to replace what you lose when you overindulge. Research shows your system turns to B vitamins when it is under stress – and overtaxing your body with too much booze, beer, or wine definitely qualifies as stress!

  • Bark back. Willow bark tablets are a natural alternative if you’d like a herbal pain reliever. It contains a form of salicylate, the active ingredient in aspirin.

  • Don’t reach for a coffee. Caffeine is a diuretic and will rob your body of even more water and nutrients. Try a sports drink instead, to replace electrolytes and give you energy.

  • Sip herb tea. Chamomile and peppermint tea are good stomach settlers. Aloe vera juice neutralises excess stomach acid and soothes an irritated gastrointestinal tract.

  • Go for the carbohydrates. As you start to feel a bit stronger, nibble on a tiny bit of dry toast. Then graduate to light protein, like chicken breast or a soft-boiled egg. Fatty foods are the last thing you need!

  • Spice up your life. Ginger is one of the most effective natural remedies for nausea and indigestion. Take tablets or capsules, or as a tea.

  • The herbs milk thistle and dandelion may help; they are traditional liver tonics.

  • Activated charcoal tablets are great for getting rid of excess wind and a ‘sour’ stomach.

  • Soothe a throbbing head with an ice pack; or, soak cottonwool pads in cooled chamomile tea and place them on your eyelids.

  • Breathe deep. For nausea, try putting 4 drops each of lavender and sandalwood essential oils on a hanky, and inhaling the scent.

  • Press your luck. Try the ancient Chinese art of acupressure for nausea. Apply rapid massaging pressure to the webbing between your thumb and index finger on either hand for several minutes.

  • Take a swim or a brisk walk in the fresh air.

  • Let time heal. The best and only foolproof cure for a hangover is, of course, 24 hours. Treat your symptoms as best you can. Get a good night’s sleep and the next day – hopefully – all will be forgotten.

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Cucumber cooler

Jackie French’s Natural Solutions from The Australian Women’s Weekly Home Library (p.9)

Refresh and relax after a long hot day at work, or in drying air-conditioning. Chill the ingredients in the fridge before using.

1 Lebanese cucumber

1 cup natural yogurt

Blend or process ingredients until the mixture is smooth.

Apply while still cool, leave for 10 minutes and rinse off with cool water.

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Baby’s breath wreath

For a unique yet festive Christmas decoration, make a gorgeous wreath. Hang one on the door, or make a few and hang them on the walls or around the garden. They’ll be the talk of the season!

Materials

1 x ‘Oasis’ wreath base (available from florist or floral supply stores)

1 x hot glue gun

1 x hot glue stick

2 x large bunches of baby’s breath

To make

  1. Soak base for an hour prior to using

  2. Cut baby’s breath pieces to size (approximately 10-20 cm)

  3. Poke into wet base

  4. Work your way around until wreath is covered

NB: Spray with water every two days to keep fresh

To attach wreath to door, use ribbon, or florist wire glued to the back of the wreath

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