Теги: magazine   magazine woman  

ISBN: 2703-6421

Год: 2022

Текст
                    BEING
BENEE'S MUM
A SUPERMUM
FOR A SUPERSTAR

JACINDA
ARDERN

A LETTER TO HER MOTHER

MADELEINE
ALBRIGHT

HILLARY CLINTON:
ON THE WOMAN WHO
PUSHED THE ENVELOPE

Trenchcoats
& heels
8 fabulous looks

F O R

A O T E A R O A

What
mothers
really
want

...more than just a lie in

ADHD

THE DISORDER THAT IS
OVERLOOKED IN GIRLS

MY MOTHER,
MY FRIEND
HERA LINDSAY BIRD

TIME FOR A
CHANGE

NEW MENSTRUAL POLICIES
IN THE WORKPLACE


WELLINGTON
CRUMPET DAMASCUS A COMPELLING MIX OF CULTURE, HISTORY, NATURE AND CUISINE FLOWERS MANUELA SMALL ACORNS KA U KA U
12 30 The Mother Ode Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and poet Hera Lindsay Bird write letters to their beloved mums On the cover 34 What Mothers Really Want Model Pamela Sidhu wears Modern Times coat by Gloria, $780; Marnie pants by Twenty-Seven Names, $420; cotton tulle top, Standard Issue, $195; Minerva gold pendant by Hailwood, $229; Nostalgia sleepers by Silk & Steel, $199; Charles Jourdan Katibe heels, Lineage, $850. Dr. Kate Prickett argues for a deeper societal change for mothers in Aotearoa 36 Just Like Mum Used to Make Kiwi chefs tell us how their mums inspired their own cooking 42 Time for a Change Aroha Awarau talks to Niu FM’s Lusia Petelo about workplace policies that can help women deal with menstruation 48 Fat Chances Features 12 The Life of a Superstar’s Mum Benee’s mum talks to Victoria Spence about her amazing bond with her daughter and how inspiring her own mother was Diabetic Megan Whelan on how we need to change our view of fat women 20 48 52 Dead Famous Fiona Oliver tells the curious tale of ˪˛ˬʾ˔˧˛˘˥˜ˡ˘ˀ˔ˡ˦Ѓ˘˟˗Ϡ˦˛˔˜˥˜˦˜ˡ˧˛˘ National Library of New Zealand 20 Women and ADHD ADHD is often overlooked in women and girls and it is severely affecting their lives, particularly in Aotearoa By Sally Williams 28 Remembering Madeleine Hillary Clinton remembers Madeleine Albright, who inspired her own career 4 | Woman Credit for this font, Domaine, goes to Klim Type Foundry, which was founded by Kris Sowersby in 2005, and is based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington, Aotearoa. Their foundational ethos is “a thing well made”.
LIMITED EDITION REWA ROSÉ GIFT BOX - Scan here to learn more In the true spirit of Aotearoa — give the gift of celebration. Numbers strictly limited Perfect for Mother’s Day visit tohuwines.co.nz Nga hua a te whenua. Our gift from the land. One bottle of beautiful Rewa Rosé with two bespoke flutes in each box
Lifestyle EDITORIAL TEAM Editor Susanna Andrew Art Director Bronwyn MacKenzie Designers Anna Revell, Matt Dykzeul Chief Sub-editor Louise Adams Sub-editor Alison Mudford Beauty Editor Amy Houlihan Fashion Editor Anastasia Doniants Digital Artist Andy Kirkup 54 Fashion Coats for a cooler climate – and a cooler look By Anastasia Doniants 62 Beauty Amy Houlihan ˢˡ˧˛˘˕˘ˡ˘Ѓ˧˦ˢ˙ face masks and her top picks for your mum on Mother’s Day CONTRIBUTORS 70 Food Louise Adams, Jacinda Ardern, Aroha Awarau, Hinemoana Baker, Niki Bezzant, Hillary Clinton, Colleen Coffey, Monique Fiso, Alexa Hill, Abbie Jury, Anne Kennedy, Dr Renee Liang, Hera Lindsay Bird, Moana Maniapoto, Angela Meyer, Clare Moleta, Stacey Morrison, Tamar Münch, Fiona Oliver, Kate Prickett, Lily Richards, Josie Shapiro, Yael Shochat, Victoria Spence, Ruth Spencer, Sophie Steevens, Rikki Swannell, Jindra Tichý, Alexander Tylee, Megan Whelan, Sally Williams 54 Sophie Steevens shares healthy plant-based recipes from her new cookbook 82 Books Q&A with Clare Moleta, Anne Kennedy reviews Unsheltered, Josie Shapiro’s Mother’s Day picks, and Jindra Tichý’s new memoir GROUP PROPRIETOR Greg Partington 98 Art Artist Anna Evans shares her process and why she uses Resene acrylics 100 Travel Bula! It’s time to go back to our favourite international destination 106 Astrology Your reading for the month ahead with Colleen Coffey 70 Brain teasers, crosswords and more Columns 10 Stacey Morrison ADVERTISING ˆ˧˔˖˘ˬ˥˘Є˘˖˧˦ˢˡ˧˛˘˝ˢˬ˔ˡ˗ importance of kapa haka A crafty pursuit goes awry when prehistoric creatures get involved 46 I Am Your Body 112 Entertainment Tamar Münch and Lily Richards give us their picks for the month 100 General Manager Lisa Hay CONTENT 40 Ruth Spencer 108 Puzzles COMMERCIAL Dr Renee Liang investigates a part of your body that hides in plain sight 68 Health Niki BezzantЃˡ˗˦˧˛˘˕˘˦˧˔ˣˣ˦˧ˢ˛˘˟ˣ your mental and physical health 78 Music Victoria Spence curates a playlist that celebrate motherhood 92 Sport Rikki Swannell on sports’ role in politics 94 Gardening Abbie Jury ˥˘Є˘˖˧˦ˢˡ˧˛˘˦˧ˢ˥ˠ˧˛˔˧ nearly destroyed her entire garden 104 Finance Angela Meyer says we need to be each other’s FBFs - Financial Best Friends General Manager Susan Browne Auckland Sales Manager Kim Blewett Wellington & Christchurch Sales Manager Heidi Van Wheeler Marketing Coordinator Olivia Jackson TO CONNECT WITH US: General enquiries 09 912 6640 Subscriptions 0800 776 247 or subscriptions@schoolroad.nz Website womanmagazine.co.nz Email hello@womanmagazine.co.nz Instagram @womanmagnz Facebook @womanmagnz Postal address PO Box 4567, Shortland Street, Auckland 1140 Courier address 22 Stanley Street, Auckland 1010 Advertising 0800 776 247 or advertising@schoolroad.nz Published by School Road Publishing © 2022. All rights reserved. ISSN 2703-6421 Printed by Inkwise Distributed by ARE Direct
Protect the ones you love so they can keep doing what they love School holidays are a great time to get your school-aged tamariki immunised against COVID-19. As a parent, you’re likely to have questions about the vaccine and what it could mean for your whānau. We’re here to help you get the answers and information you need. Call 0800 28 29 26 to chat with someone who can help or to make a booking for your whānau. Covid19.govt.nz/tamariki
EDITOR’S LETTER nā Susanna ‘I lost no time, of course, in telling my mother all that I knew, and we saw ourselves at once in a difficult and dangerous position.” This sentence from Treasure Island tells you two things; telling your mother might not solve anything, but it might change the way the story turns out. If you read the Prime Minister’s letter to her mother you’ll know what I mean. Welcome to the Mother Issue. We feature some pretty impressive women who are also mothers – among them are Madeleine Albright and Jacinda Ardern, women who have done outstanding things. Jindra Tichý, who escaped a labour camp in Czechoslovakia with her son; Dame June Jackson, to whom we pay tribute. All have lived incredible lives in pursuit of the truth and as advocates for others. Combining work and motherhood is one of the hardest jobs and that’s why Kate Prickett from Victoria University is arguing for more societal change. Breakfast in bed on Mother’s Day is lovely, but what would make a real, daily difference is better policies to support working mothers. When Tania Anderson went into motherhood with Stella (Kiwi pop sensation Benee) she just imagined they would be close (spoiler alert – they are!) but she knows that’s not always the case and cherishes what she has, being Mumager. Speaking of singing – our monthly playlists are beautifully curated by Victoria Spence for your enjoyment. Plug in your speakers and listen to The Mother Mix while reading her collation of songs on motherhood. Spinning 10 plates in the air while reading emails, catching up on Twitter and shopping for dinner is applauded as the prerogative of the modern woman ever since the word “multitasking” was assigned as a strength to our gender. Now we know it’s also one of the reasons ADHD has been woefully under-diagnosed in women for the last 20 years. An everincreasing number of young women are seeking help to understand a condition that can make life more of a battlefield than it needs to be. My own gorgeous mother is 96 and she once told me that after raising her eight children, she never took sleep for granted. It’s true that these days she finds a patch of sun as an instant invitation to nap but I never knew what her sleep sacrifices really meant until I too was a mother. New Zealand poet Mary Stanley said it best: Night puts an ear on silence where a child may cry. When I asked our Prime Minister if she would write a public letter to her mother, she came through with so much honesty and so much love that, be warned, it might make you cry. But that’s okay, for as Poet Hera Lindsay Bird says, “apart from Mother’s Day, the only other time anyone invites you to write nice things about your mother is in an obituary”. Thank you, Mum, I love you! Susanna Andrew, Editor 8 | Woman 1 2 3 2 4 5
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10 | Woman
TE REO Māori K PHOTO: ALAMY. ei te pēhea koe? Kei te pai koe? How are you? Are you okay? It’s been such a strange time that I feel the desire to ask, even if it has to be a ui makihoi – rhetorical question, as I’m asking you from this page. I’ve noticed as the pandemic goes on, people are stretched and sometimes forget to ask how others are. It’s understandable, but I always appreciate a genuine “Kei te pēhea koe”. Kei te pai mātou ko taku whānau – my whānau and I are okay, although we’ve had a brush with Covid, as many of you reading this will have. Amazingly, though, two of our kids managed an awesome feat, along with thousands of other Auckland teens, and it provided this māmā with such a boost. The Polyfest cultural festival began in 1992, and in pre-Covid times would welcome up to 100,000 visitors to watch the events on 10 or so stages that became mini-villages, representing each culture involved. This year, no crowds were allowed, so parents and whānau were watching the live stream or the Te Reo channel, our eyes welling up with proud tears. It’s always emotional watching your kids express their culture, but this year it was a particularly impressive watch considering the massive effort from all schools who managed to put together performances despite high Covid case numbers among students and tutors. My daughter is in Year 9, so this was her first Polyfest experience, and her school often wins the competition, even the national title at times, so they practise like true professionals. Twenty-two hours in a weekend, early in Term One, rapidly builds whanaungatanga – relationships, diligence and stamina. I was amazed I didn’t hear one amuamu (complaint) from her, either. Such is the joy that kapa haka brings. Kapa means team and also row or line, and I’m sure you already know the meaning of haka. If you’re a regular reader of this column, you’ll hopefully remember me warning against saying, “kapa haka team”, because that means THE POLYFEST CULTURAL FESTIVAL BEGAN IN 1992, AND IN PRE-COVID TIMES STACEY MORRISON Best Columnist Magazine Media Awards 2021 WOULD WELCOME UP TO 100,000 VISITORS. “haka team, team!” – “kapa haka” is just fine by itself. There are other handy haka terms you’ll often hear, especially if your kids take the stage. There are a number of words used for the leader of the group – Kaea being one, also Kaitātaki tāne – male leader, Kaitātaki wahine – female leader. The term Manukura is also used for leader of the kapa at times. When it comes to competitions, there’s usually a set format for the performance that each kapa follows and is judged on. The Waiata tira – choral, is often the first number, and a warm-up of sorts. Then the kapa will leave the stage and every aspect of their move back on stage is the whakaeke – entrance. The mōteatea, or traditional chant, follows, along with waiata ā-ringa – action song, poi and haka. There are many different types of haka, some with weapons and some not. The lyrics often present social commentary or a challenge, and the strength of those words and their delivery are also judged. The whakawātea, or exit, is the last part of the performance and the choreography is intricate, with split-second precision and style. The top high school groups could foot it at Te Matatini – the (adult) national kapa haka festival. That’s on in Auckland next year, named by Professor Wharehuia Milroy, with te mata – the face – and tini, meaning many, coming together to mean “the many faces”. My face, as I watched my children, was full of emotion, pride and gratitude that our tupuna (ancestors) ensured this generation still has this unique and spiritual way of expressing themselves. Many faces many stages Reflecting on Polyfest, Stacey shares the joys of kapa haka. Woman | 11
Few superstars want to take their mothers on tour, but for Benee’s mum, Tania Anderson, it’s a paid role she loves, writes Victoria Spence. 12 | Woman
FEATURE kōrero motuhake STELLAR performance Woman | 13
B “I WAS MOTHERED BY AN ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS WOMAN . . . I’M ONE OF FIVE GIRLS, AND WE ADORED OUR MOTHER. SHE WAS A NURSE AND A REAL EMPATH.” Tania wears the Dorian shirt by Gloria, $420. Bracelet by Husky Beads from That Looks Shop, $70. Benee wears the Ocean necklace by Delilah Jewellery from That Looks Shop, $190. 14 | Woman enee’s personal assistant has her feet up on my couch and is being very nice about the aromatic presence of the resident terrier. Tania Anderson is here to talk about life, love, dogs and Benee, the 22-year-old superstar she works with. An entertainment-industry native who has worked as a voice-over artist, actor, singer, producer, tour manager and driver, Tania is ideally qualified to guide a young pop star through the showbiz maelstrom. She also gave birth to Benee, so there’s that. This is a proper job, too, not a tongue-in-cheek descriptor to justify Mum being on the tour bus. Benee, known to her PA as Stella/Darling/Babe, issued an ultimatum that if Tania didn’t agree to be paid for the work she was doing, she’d get someone else to do it. The timing was good because when the borders closed as a result of the Covid pandemic, Tania’s language-teaching work dried up, so, drawing on decades of experience, she stepped into the role of a lifetime. Both hers and Stella’s. There’s no mother-daughter pathology here. Tania throws her hands in the air at the very thought. “I never had a mother-daughter thing! What even is that? I suppose I went into motherhood with Stella just imagining we would be adoring and close. I know that’s not always the case, but that was my expectation.” Starting at the beginning, Tania credits her parents with her own happy childhood, describing her mother, in particular, in tender terms. “I was mothered by an absolutely gorgeous woman, and her mother was gorgeous as well. I’m one of five girls, and we adored our mother. She was a nurse and a real empath, all love, all care. She was just divine.” There is sadness here because her mother was taken from her in a cruel and incremental way as a result of dementia. Stella internalised the toll this took on the family and worries she will also lose her mother this way. Tania observes, “Stella’s terrified of me forgetting anything . . . ‘You can’t get dementia, Mum. I can’t go on if you get dementia.’ ” She wryly reflects on the huge responsibility of being a parent and the pressure to “have to be alive and onto it all the time!” This was a family who valued rugged individualism and welcomed a good debate. “I’m a feisty woman with a lot of sisters and we had to be outspoken. We were expected to have our own opinions and Dad liked a good argument!” Growing up surrounded by strong women has rubbed off on Stella, says Tania. “She’s definitely had it modelled
Woman | 15
Tania wears the Witches dress by Gloria, $490. 16 | Woman
– my girlfriends are strong, my sisters are strong. So, she was never afraid to speak her mind and be her own person. I think that’s what it’s got to be, it’s better to make it on your own terms.” Hinting at the source of her daughter’s talent, there Tania credits was also music growing up. Tania’s earliest musical her parents with memory is her mother’s beautiful voice singing giving her a Amazing Grace. Describing her own singing as “a very happy childhood, serious hobby”, Tania has shared her alto voice with and her beloved mum, Edythe, Auckland’s Jubilation gospel choir since 2007. (below) has been Seemingly at odds with her irrepressible nature, an inspiration Tania admits, “I do get very nervous singing by myself on Tania’s own – I prefer singing in a choir where the spotlight’s not on parenting style. you. The fear of wanting to be good at something and then going flat is so awful. When you hit a bum note, everyone knows it. I don’t feel that when I’m acting at all because in film or TV you can go back and do it again.” Even as a seasoned performer, Tania grappled with nerves on her daughter’s behalf. “She won the singing cup at high school, but I could scarcely concentrate because I was sick with anxiety. With her first big performances, I had to lurk out the back so I didn’t put her off.” Ever the producer, she laughs, “It’s gotten better, but I’m very aware of everything that’s going on in terms of sound and lighting, and I can’t bear it when something’s not doing her justice.” “ALL I WANT AT There’s now a reassuring phalanx THE END OF THIS of talented support around Stella – from her management through to IS A PHYSICALLY, her tight-knit band. “The band are incredible professionals, they’re EMOTIONALLY, great musicians, and the amazing CREATIVELY, technical team are a supportive force as well. We are very fortunate SPIRITUALLY with everyone, they’re great mates.” INTACT CHILD.” And, of course, there’s Tania, who, as something of a lifer in Tāmaki Makaurau’s creative community, has earned her seat at the table. The formidable mother-anddaughter team generally agree on most things. “My role is to just make it [she pauses] easier for her. To make life easier for her and be a bit of a buffer between her and the rest of the industry machinery. This is a hell of a lot to take on as a young person, and I always have her back. It’s also harder to say ‘no’ to two of us!” Tania’s phone buzzes and it’s Stella calling in, “Speak of the devil. Hi, Babe!” What follows is Tania as “Momager” in action, den-mother-in-chief. The conversation darts around family diplomacy, tour logistics, Covid protocols and then a quick debrief about Tania’s hairstyle today. Stella’s voice chimes out of the phone, “Soooo cuuuuute, it suits you!” After an emotional farewell to her hound two days earlier, Stella is needing a dog update – who was walked, who did and didn’t behave – and the reassurance that all is well in the menagerie. The band are in the van travelling to the airport to fly from Sydney to Canberra, part of a whistle-stop Australian tour playing to packed venues. It’s a normal chat for this mother and daughter, but it’s not so normal for the average 22-year-old to be navigating this life. In 2018, Tania and Stella were in New York to meet prospective record labels lining up to court the young artist. As 18-year-old Stella wowed the boardroom at Republic Records, Tania observed just how much they wanted to win her daughter over, appreciating that this was a rare thing. Evidently, Stella was going to be BIG, but there were no stars in Tania’s eyes when she collared one of the executives and sent a clear message – “All I want at the end of this is a physically, emotionally, creatively, spiritually intact child.” This wasn’t just a protective parent talking. In the before-Benee years, Tania ploughed her creative force into some inspired community health initiatives, so she knew what she was talking about at that NYC meeting. Mind Over Manner (MOM), founded by friend Susan Haldane, is a theatre-inspired charity that aims to strengthen communication with neuro-diverse kids. Anti-bullying workshops in schools further the charity’s goal to ignite social change. For years, Tania acted in role-plays and workshops to help reframe perceptions of behaviour. “Basically, MOM’s workshops help teachers, parents or caregivers understand where certain behaviours originate and how to manage them. In the classroom, it might be tempting to say, ‘That kid’s the naughty kid.’ That kid might be the one who can’t read properly or who is having a huge problem with the way this room is set up or can’t concentrate because they can hear something ticking behind the wall. That is going to affect their learning.” Tania describes being blown away when son Oli introduced her to the all-ages, all-abilities world of Circability, an organisation providing circus lessons and workshops, focusing on the power of inclusion. Oli’s circus troupe was diverse and inclusive – the lead actor had cerebral palsy, and the other performers were mental health survivors, Down syndrome kids, neurotypical kids and people from the deaf community. “It’s about including everybody, giving everybody the chance to have self-expression and Woman | 17
18 | Woman supporting them. These parents have incredible behavioural and physical health challenges thrown on top of that. It broke my heart to hear about one kid who had never been invited to a birthday party or even a play-date – small things we just take for granted.” Tania describes herself as both fortunate and imperfect, carefully sidestepping the praise and admiration that she gets as the mother of a famous kid. She’s painfully aware of how corrosive poverty or disability can be to children and their families. “So many parents are doing an amazing job in tough circumstances. Some of the parents I’ve spoken to over the years . . . I weep for them. They’re arming themselves with information and doing everything they possibly can. Some people have said to me, ‘Wow, your child is so successful, you must be a great parent.’ PHOTOS: OLIVIA RENOUF, SUPPLIED. creative output.” That first circus show sparked such a deep connection that Tania spent nine years on the Circability board, stepping down only recently. Serendipity struck again when a wrong turn on the way to help out on a school trip led Tania to Ambury Park’s Riding for the Disabled. Her strong social justice instinct collided with her love of horses, and she was hooked. Her years of volunteering there convinced her of the social and emotional benefits of physical therapy. On a recent visit to Dame Hinewehi Mohi’s Raukatauri Music Therapy Centre, Tania was further struck by the inequities faced by parents with kids who live with one or more disabilities. “It’s hard work being a parent keeping your house together, keeping your kids happy, keeping them fed and financially
“I’M VERY LUCKY AND FORTUNATE. I’VE BEEN A GOOD MOTHER, BUT I HAVEN’T BEEN A GREAT MOTHER AT EVERY MOMENT – NOBODY HAS!” No. I’m very lucky and fortunate. I’ve been a good mother, but I haven’t been a great mother at every moment – nobody has!” The skein of kindness runs from mother to daughter, and Stella channels her love of animals into volunteering at a dog shelter. Her beloved rescue kurī, Tūī, has been on hand (paw) with emotional support during the hard times of the Covid pandemic. Just when a blossoming musician should be communing with her audience, Stella found herself isolated and untethered from the joy of performing. Online platform TikTok provided global exposure during lockdown (even J.Lo danced about to Benee), but social media fame came with a nasty sting in its tail. “I think it’s because a lot of TikTokkers are really young. They’re 13 or 14 and they don’t realise that Above: Stella with her mum and her beloved rescue ˞˨˥͵ʟˇΩ͵ʟ˪˛ˢ has provided her with immense emotional support. when you put something out there, it does have an effect. It’s taking other people down instead of building them up. What a sad way of looking at the world.” This is where the maternal instinct kicks in and Tania’s mettle shows. “Sometimes, you can’t look, because people can be downright vile. When it’s your child and you’re reading it – imagine it, it kills you. You want to protect them and go out and slay those dragons!” Stella, truly her mother’s daughter, clapped back with positive discussions about mental health (she’ll even share that Tūī the dog is on Prozac). Tania admires Stella’s vulnerability and openness, saying, “She’s a real person, she’s not pretending to be anything she’s not. She’s not hiding behind anything – what you see is what you get, and she’s got a good soul. She’s a kind, loving person.” There’s no handy instruction manual for parenting a famous child, so Tania processes things by taking the whānau dog pack to the beach and walking it out. Tania muses, “My life has changed so dramatically in the last couple of years. I was walking the dogs the other day, thinking about what the next phase is going to look like, in terms of managing all our households and all the bloody dogs and cats. I try not to project too far ahead as it’s overwhelming and I lose sleep. It’s exciting, but it’s not normal!” For now, Tania’s focus is keeping the show on the road, as the whole family unit prepares to go on tour in Europe and America. It’s years away from soccer matches and water-polo training (Tania is the only woman I’ve ever met who says, totally straight-faced, that she misses Saturday morning sports), but the kaupapa remains the same. Tania distils it down to this simple formula: “You just have to be there. And be there. And be there.” Woman | 19
FEATURE kōrero motuhake ADHD AND WOMEN THE HIDDEN EPIDEMIC Impulsive? Disorganised? Easily distracted? Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder is a condition usually associated with young boys. But a new generation of women are belatedly getting a diagnosis – and finally making sense of their lives. 20 | Woman
PHOTO: INSTAGRAM Jess Joy, left, and Charlotte Mia, both 28, run an online platform for people like them who have ADHD. W hen Charlotte Mia, 28, was studying graphic design at the University of Plymouth, she always set out to hand in her work on time, but she’d get diverted. First, she’d chat to other students and get caught up in their amazing projects. Next, she’d have an urge to pour a glass of water, open a window, tidy her room – all important for a good working environment, or so she told herself. Finally, despite her best intentions, she’d give up and go out. There were other struggles. She’d forget to go to lectures or to plan meals. “I ate a lot of instant food, like noodle pots,” Charlotte says now. She’d lose her keys again and again and had real difficulty remembering to pay her rent. “Everyone else seemed to be managing completely fine, but for me it was so much harder and I didn’t know why.” She googled memory loss. She felt like a failure and drank “far too heavily”. A saving grace was meeting Jess Joy, 28, who was studying fine art at Plymouth College of Art. Like Charlotte, she was battling headwinds that were limiting her potential. “I’d always leave things to the last minute,” she says. “I desperately wanted to manage, but always felt I was playing catch-up. I struggled a lot in my first year. My mental health was in an absolute state.” She had insomnia, hardly left her room, couldn’t be bothered to shower. The two became close friends. “We’d sneak off early from nights out and go and sit in my room in the dark, trying to wind down,” says Charlotte. “We tried to fit in and make friends, but the environment was just so loud and overwhelming.” In 2018, they were still working out their place in the world, wondering if a “normal” life would ever be attainable. Charlotte had a job as a graphic designer in Brighton. She’d worked there for two years and was part of a small team. “But my mum got ill and my five-year relationship ended, and I started to turn up late, miss emails, make careless mistakes.” Jess was in a similar position. She’d been “let go” from her office job. She now finds the idea that she could fulfil an admin role “laughable”. One evening, Charlotte called Jess. They each sat on their respective sofas, crying. They discussed Twitter posts to cheer themselves up. One account struck a chord: Black Girl, Lost Keys. They spent the next few days on Twitter researching. It all started to click into place. Jess and Charlotte have ADHD: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Charlotte was shocked: “I didn’t know women or girls could have it.” ADHD is a cognitive disorder rooted in a disruption of the self-management system of the brain – the part that allows us to Woman | 21
organise, plan, focus, and manage emotions. There are three subtypes: hyperactive and impulsive, inattentive, and combined. ADHD is different for each person, but the main symptoms include difficulty starting and finishing tasks; being disorganised and distracted easily; losing things; zoning out of conversations; impulsivity; time blindness. Children and adults with ADHD are often exquisitely sensitive and feel emotions intensely. Some are hypersensitive to touch, sounds, light, even tags on clothing. The condition has nothing to do with intellectual ability. People with ADHD often have high IQs. Many are exceptionally creative, charismatic and think outside the box. They also have an uncanny ability to “hyperfocus” on things that really grab their interest. But fitting into a world that rewards concentration and focus can be hard. ADHD is associated with poor educational performance, difficulty finding and keeping employment, higher divorce rates, traffic accidents, substance misuse, and criminality. It often comes with a side order of depression and anxiety. Adults with ADHD are much more likely to have attempted suicide than those without, according to research published in 2020. “It should be taken very seriously,” says Dr Rob Baskind, a consultant psychiatrist and specialist in adult ADHD. “It is very debilitating, particularly if undiagnosed.” Which is why early intervention is key. “People think ADHD only exists in naughty boys,” Rob says. In other words, it’s thought of as a behavioural problem. In fact, it’s a biological and cognitive disorder you are likely to have been born with. Scientists estimate that ADHD is about 70 percent inheritable. This puts it up there with traits such as blood pressure, height and weight. So why is the kind of person who has ADHD assumed to be male and under 10? Because the manual experts first used to diagnose ADHD in the early ’80s was mainly based on studies of boys. “If you’re using mostly boys to define the diagnostic criteria, and you are then using the diagnostic criteria to define who has ADHD, you’ll be finding mostly boys,” says Dr Joanna Martin, an ADHD specialist at Cardiff University. Girls, experts suggest, are more likely to have the inattentive subtype; in other words, appear dreamy and scatterbrained – qualities that, of course, are acceptable for girls and don’t ring alarm bells in any obvious way. Women also talk of hyperactivity being internal – having 1000 different ideas crowding in your head at the same time. A fidgety brain, rather than body. “But parents and teachers can’t observe a child’s hyperactive thoughts,” says Joanna. “The question is: can a child sit still and concentrate? We know there are girls who are not getting diagnosed who should be.” According to her studies, between three and four boys have ADHD for every girl. But in treatment clinics the rate is higher: seven to eight boys for every girl. “That suggests girls are not getting to the clinics, not getting referred, not getting diagnosed. Girls are not getting the treatment and support in school that they need.” That means girls are missing out, and so, it follows, are women. “It means women have no idea they have ADHD – they have never associated their struggles with ADHD and neither have clinicians,” says Michelle Beckett, 49, who was diagnosed with ADHD five years ‘People think ADHD only exists in naughty boys,’ Rob says. In other words, it’s a behavioural problem. In fact, it’s a biological and cognitive disorder you are likely to have been born with. 22 | Woman
ADHD in Aotearoa T he way to an ADHD diagnosis for women in Aotearoa is expensive and lengthy. Recently Greens MP Chlöe Swarbrick opened up to the media about her own journey through the health system. “If you designed a system that was navigable for somebody with ADHD, it would not look like the one we currently have,” she says. We talked to three women from Aotearoa who walked the long road to get help and found their lives changed for the better. Hinemoana Baker PHOTO: SUPPLIED The award-winning writer and poet answered our questions about her experience with ADHD. I sought a diagnosis in 2014 when I stopped being able to read. I was almost completely incapable of focusing on anything longer than a paragraph. I thought it would pass, but it didn’t – it got worse. As time went on, I stopped being able to concentrate almost completely. It spread into being unable to write as well, which was really distressing as I had a writing residency to start that year and then another one in 2015-16 in Berlin. I have since read and heard about how girls and women with ADHD often learn many masking and coping strategies that make it as invisible as possible, most of the time, at least from the outside. Then something major happens, a trauma or grief or big stress, and all those coping strategies fall away and ADHD kind of takes over their lives. That is what happened to me in 2014. My 10-year relationship ended, and in 2015, a rebound one also ended. Things compounded when I travelled to Berlin for the writer’s residency and got very sick on the way over. That illness lasted for a couple of years, and is still not entirely gone. All of that, plus my mother’s death, the death of her two sisters, the loss of my job and two big relationships in the same year meant that by the end of 2018, I was a bit of a wreck. My ADHD really came even more to the fore then, although at the time I had no idea that was the problem. Not only could I not read or write, but ˔˟˦ˢʼ˪˔˦˧˘˥˥˜Ѓ˘˗ˢ˙ˢˣ˘ˡ˜ˡ˚˔ˡˬˠ˔˜˟ʟ Award-winning writer and poet Hinemoana Baker. and was almost paralysed with fear when having to deal with anything bureaucratic – and there is a lot of bureaucratic stuff to deal with in Germany. In addition, I couldn’t keep my room tidy. The most basic things, dishes and laundry, were completely beyond me. I still had no idea why. I thought it was depression and anxiety, which I have had since I was a teenager and been medicated for since my late 30s. And I guess maybe some of it was. My proper diagnosis came in 2019 when I got the opportunity to begin a PhD at Potsdam University. I knew there was no way I could even attempt something like this without getting help with my reading and writing situation. I was able to access a counsellor/therapist through my health insurance here. It sounds like a ridiculous coincidence, but she also just happened to be an expert on ADHD, particularly how it presents differently in girls and women. When I described what I was struggling with, she immediately asked if I had ever explained that they have a similar action to Ritalin, and in almost every case, people ˪˜˧˛ʴʷʻʷЃˡ˗˧˛˘ˠ˧ˢ˕˘˖˔˟ˠ˜ˡ˚˥˔˧˛˘˥ than stimulating. I didn’t have experience with either drug. She then took me through a very long, very detailed questionnaire in German about my childhood, teens, ˔ˡ˗˖˨˥˥˘ˡ˧˗˜˙Ѓ˖˨˟˧˜˘˦ʡˇ˛˘˥˘˦˨˟˧˦˪˘˥˘ ˖˟˘˔˥ϝʼ˗˘Ѓˡ˜˧˘˟ˬ˛˔˩˘ʴʷʻʷϝ˪˜˧˛˧˛˘ “hyperactivity” presenting, as it often does in non-men, as self-destructive behaviours such as nail-biting. I had always thought my habitual nail and cuticle annihilation was anxiety-related. She sent me to a psychiatrist (again covered by my health insurance). The psychiatrist prescribed bog-standard Ritalin, and within days my life changed. I was able to read and follow the detailed and complicated instructions that came with enrolling in post-graduate education here. I attended all the necessary sessions and I was making a relatively good start with my thesis writing and planning. I could tidy my room and open letters been tested for it, and I said no. She then asked if I had ever done cocaine or speed, which I thought was an odd question. She again. Things were looking up until the pandemic, but that’s a problem that even Ritalin can’t solve. Woman | 23
ago and founded the charity ADHD Action. “I went through decades with potential I couldn’t quite realise . . . I struggled with depression and anxiety. I’ve been suicidal. And it was ADHD all along.” Lucy Clement, 42, is a GP who lives in Leeds with her husband, Chris, 43, an electrical engineer, and their two children, Daisy, 11, and Max, nine. She did well at school. “My mum and dad are teachers, very structured people, and they also knew how education worked. My mum gave up work for seven years to bring up me and my brother and she was completely devoted to us.” She was reading at two, “flew” through primary school, “loved” secondary school. Looking back, she says her success was the product of a restless mind. “I have this constant need to feed my brain.” Things started to unravel when she went to read medicine at the University of Liverpool in 1997. “I went from being the biggest swot in the entire world to the least disciplined person ever. I absolutely could not prioritise work over play. I did hardly any work at all.” Her room was a “disgusting” mess, she says. “I even bought a double bed once, just so I could put stuff on one side and sleep on the other.” She failed her first-year exams. “I’d never failed an exam!” She blamed her parents. “I said, ‘You didn’t make me independent enough. It’s your fault I went wrong at university.’ ” She resat her exams, passed, and went on to graduate and qualify as a GP in 2013. She met her husband in 2007. “He realised I was this quite scatty girl who lived each day as it came. I think he enjoyed that. I was spontaneous, fun. He couldn’t believe he’d met this high-earning person who had no savings. I’d spend it! I’d go out and eat and have fun.” Lucy bought a house in 2005. Three years later, Chris moved in. “He’d get exasperated. Why haven’t you paid these bills? Why aren’t you opening your post? I was so overwhelmed by bills, I didn’t open the post until a red one came through. I knew I had to open that one because it would say ‘final warning’.” Daisy was born in 2010; Max in 2012. Lucy went back to work part-time: three days as a GP, two at home. “I love my job and I could do that fine, no problem. And yet at home, I couldn’t keep anything tidy. I was the most disorganised mum. Always the one forgetting nappies and raincoats.” By 2017, when she was 37, both her children were at school full-time. “I thought, this is the moment I’m going to become the perfect housewife. No excuses now. I hated my days off. I’d look around and get so overwhelmed. No matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t get on top of stuff. I’d get to the point where I’d look around and go, ‘What am I doing? How do I finish this?’ And what I’d do is run a bath. I’d feel calm, feel the warmth. You can’t do anything when you’re in the bath. And that would happen most days when I was off. About one or two in the afternoon, I’d get in the bath.” She bought self-help books and devised programmes. “But I couldn’t sustain it. It would all go wrong again and I’d feel really rubbish about myself.” In 2017, she was assigned a life coach through an NHS scheme to support primary-care workers. “It’s meant to be about leadership, but I kept talking about my kitchen cupboards. I remember saying other people seem to be able to do things as easily as they can breathe.” Be organised, plan, structure a day, create a routine. “And I just couldn’t.” In 2019, when she was nearly 40, she signed up for NHS England’s Supporting Mentors Scheme, where experienced GPs support more 24 | Woman PHOTOS: GETTY. THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN THE TIMES BY SALLY WILLIAMS. REPRODUCED UNDER LICENCE. When dealing with ADHD, women are also battling society’s expectations. ‘We’re not supposed to be bad at washing up or forget people’s birthdays,’ says Michelle. This is why ‘the shame and damage to selfesteem is particularly acute in women.’
junior doctors. Lucy was paired with Adrian, an established GP. “In the first meeting he said, ‘The interesting thing about me is I have ADHD.’ I was like, ‘Oh, really.’ I wasn’t at all interested.” She was more worried about her brain and why she was so forgetful. In the fourth session, after a particularly difficult week, she broke down. “What’s wrong with me?” she asked. Adrian suggested she had ADHD. “He made me do a questionnaire then and there, and I just burst into tears. I carried on reading about it that evening, and I haven’t stopped reading about it since. I had this enormous penny-dropping moment. I spent the whole week looking back on my life with this new lens, either laughing or crying.” She was formally diagnosed three months later. “Some could argue my ADHD is mild. But come to my house. Try to get in my car. Don’t go into my handbag. Don’t come into my brain. You really don’t want to be in here. I’m a happier person since the diagnosis. I totally understand myself now.” When dealing with ADHD, women are also battling society’s expectations. “We’re not supposed to be bad at washing up or forget people’s birthdays,” says Michelle. This is why “the shame and damage to self-esteem is particularly acute in women”. Lucy agrees. “My husband does most of the cooking, all the cleaning, all the washing. I’m quite proud and very grateful.” But at times she feels “de-skilled”. “If it was the other way around, nobody would question it. “Successful men may get away with ADHD better than women,” she says. “People organise their diaries and write up minutes, leaving them to shine in meetings. And then they come home to a nice, organised house with their very able wife, juggling gazillion things, and dinner is on the table.” What further compounds the difficulties for women with ADHD is hormones. One of the trademarks of ADHD is low levels of dopamine, the “feel-good” chemical manufactured in the brain that appears to play a major role in things like attention and inhibition. When you tackle a difficult task or pay attention to a complex social situation, you are essentially generating dopamine in the parts of the brain that deal with higher cognitive tasks. (Most ADHD medication works by enhancing the impact of dopamine in the body.) Alongside this, women’s brains are affected by hormones. Oestrogen, for example, produced in the first two weeks or so of a woman’s monthly cycle, is a dopamine booster. Progesterone, which surges in the third and fourth weeks, suppresses the effects of oestrogen, and consequently dopamine. However, to an ADHD brain that needs more dopamine, the depressing effect can be intensified. “Fluctuating hormones can make ADHD symptoms significantly harder to manage,” says Beckett. In October 2020, Charlotte and Jess set up I Am Paying Attention, an online platform for people with ADHD and/or autism. Billed as “the badass neurodivergent community”, it offers advice, diagnoses and more. “I feel sad for people like me who have grown up resenting themselves. I’d love people to see it as less of a deficit.” FOR MORE INFORMATION ON ADHD, VISIT: adhd.org.nz psychology-tools.com/test/adult-adhd-self-report-scale addadult.com/adhd-treatment-in-new-zealand mentalhealth.org.nz/groups/group/adhd-nz-national-support-adults Celebrities who have ADHD, from left: Mel B, Simone Biles, Chlöe Swarbrick, and Liv Tyler.
x ADHD in Aotearoa x T Artist Isabella Dampney. Editor and digital producer Louise Adams with Maggie. 26 | Woman wo years ago, when Isabella her academic life, she says the red Dampney returned to Aotearoa in the middle of the pandemic, Є˔˚˦˪˘˥˘˔˟˟˧˛˘˥˘ʡ “My school reports were littered with she went through the usual readjustment experience of coming remarks like ‘doesn’t apply herself’ on subjects I didn’t enjoy – but no one home. The 27-year-old artist took temporary jobs while working out what ever suggested to my mother that I get tested,” she says. “I was a girl who her next plan was going to be. It was daydreamed.” only after cycling through a number of jobs and never settling for anything that Isabella began to wonder if her feeling of She came across the topic of ADHD in women by chance in a story on David Farrier’s Webworm blog in 2021. It wasn’t displacement was more than temporary; an accumulation of small things such as forgetfulness, an inability to concentrate and passing comments from a colleague who had ADHD and assumed she had it too, led her to seek out information. The internet provided plenty of answers and there were the usual tick-box tests, but trying to get a proper diagnosis was not easy and took almost a year. “I rang every psychiatrist in Auckland and Wellington and the earliest appointment was in eight months,” she says. It was an expensive process that started with the initial $500 for an assessment and then a referral, then additional costs for follow-up appointments and prescriptions. She was disheartened ˧ˢЃˡ˗˧˛˘˥˘˪˔˦˟˜˧˧˟˘ˢ˥ no support for anyone on a low income needing a prescription, especially when the prescription costs are ongoing and the diagnosis ˡ˘˘˗˦˧ˢ˕˘˥˘˖ˢˡЃ˥ˠ˘˗ annually by a psychiatrist. But even without the medication, Isabella has found getting the diagnosis worthwhile. “It made me understand myself on a personal level – why I do things in certain ways. There’s a lot of misunderstanding just the gender issue or the clinical bias that made her sit up and pay attention. “Admittedly, my knowledge and assumptions about ADHD at the time were based on social stereotypes about physically hyperactive children,” she says. “But when I read David’s article, I found myself identifying with nearly every symptom presented, particularly the part which explained that adult ADHD is more about having a hyperactive mind than a hyperactive ˕ˢ˗ˬʡˇ˛˜˦˖ˢˠˣ˟˘˧˘˟ˬ˘˫˘ˠˣ˟˜Ѓ˘˦ˠˬ own experience with ADHD. It was a light-bulb moment.” But getting a referral, diagnosis and treatment required spending a large chunk of her savings. Plus, getting on the case, making appointments, and Ѓ˟˟˜ˡ˚˜ˡ˙ˢ˥ˠ˦˔˥˘˔˟˟˧˛˜ˡ˚˦ˠ˔ˡˬ ˣ˘ˢˣ˟˘˪˜˧˛ʴʷʻʷЃˡ˗˗˜˙Ѓ˖˨˟˧ʡ However, the difference ADHD medication has made in her life has been worth every dollar spent on appointments. It has brought more order, structure and motivation to her life, as well as reduced anxiety and depression. She feels far more productive and calm. “I would never normally ‘selfdiagnose over the internet’, and I wouldn’t recommend others do, either, but there are valid resources, such as the Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale, that are worth looking into if you are already ticking these boxes in your head. about ADHD, but it’s slowly improving.” Editor and digital producer Louise Adams agrees. When she looks back at “It was all worth it for me. The difference in my life before and after medication is like night and day.” PHOTOS: REUBEN LOOI, SUPPLIED. Isabella Dampney and Louise Adams
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HILLARY CLINTON: Madeleine Albright KNEW HOW to PUSH the ENVELOPE 28 | Woman
POLITICS tōrangapū Hillary Clinton writes about former US secretary of state Madeleine Albright, who died recently, and says we can honour her memory by heeding her wisdom. PHOTOS: GETTY. THIS ARTICLE FIRST APPEARED IN THE NEW YORK TIMES. REPRODUCED UNDER LICENCE. L ate one night in 1995, in a cramped airplane cabin warned that an invasion of Ukraine would be “a historic error” high over the Pacific, Madeleine Albright put down a that would leave Russia “diplomatically isolated, economically draft of a speech I was set to deliver in Beijing at the crippled and strategically vulnerable in the face of a stronger, upcoming United Nations conference on women, more united Western alliance”. As happened so often, the man fixed me with the firm stare that had made fearsome with the guns was wrong and Madeleine was right. dictators shudder, and asked what I was really She was a woman of action, especially when facing injustice. In trying to accomplish with this address. 2000, she was the first secretary of state to travel to North Korea, “I want to push the envelope as far as I can,” I replied. “Then do where she spent 12 hours negotiating with the dictator Kim it,” she said. She proceeded to tell me how I could sharpen the Jong-il. But, as she often said, her crucial historical frame of speech’s argument that women’s rights reference was Munich, not Vietnam, so are human rights and human rights are she had a deep appreciation for the women’s rights. risks of inaction. Today, with a rising That was Madeleine, always cutting tide of authoritarianism threatening right to the heart of the matter with democracy not just in Ukraine but all clarity and courage. She pushed the over the world, that is a lesson worth envelope her entire life. She did it on remembering. behalf of women and girls, shattering Having experienced Europe’s the glass ceiling of diplomacy as the first historic traumas first-hand, Madeline woman to serve as secretary of state understood that the security provided and calling out atrocities against by Nato was the key to keeping the women all over the world. She did it for continent free, peaceful and undivided. the country that took her in as a child She rejected the criticism that Nato’s fleeing tyranny in Europe, championing expansion needlessly provoked Russia the United States as an indispensable and is to blame for its invasion of nation and the leader of the free world. Ukraine. Make no mistake, if Nato had She never stopped pushing the envelope not expanded, Mr Putin would be for freedom and democracy, including menacing not just Ukraine but the cajoling sometimes sceptical generals Baltic States and likely all of Eastern and diplomats to see human rights as a Europe. As the historian and journalist national security imperative. Anne Applebaum recently argued, For Bill and I, and her many friends “The expansion of Nato was the most all over the world, Madeleine’s passing is a successful, if not the only truly SHE SAW VLADIMIR PUTIN painful personal loss. She was successful, piece of American foreign FOR WHAT HE IS: A VICIOUS irrepressible: wickedly funny, stylish and policy of the last 30 years.” always game for adventure and fun. I’ll Madeleine also strongly disagreed AUTOCRAT INTENT ON never forget how excited she was to walk with Donald Trump’s approach of RECLAIMING RUSSIA’S LOST me through the streets of her native treating America’s alliances as a Prague and show me the yellow house protection racket where our partners EMPIRE AND A COMMITTED where she lived as a girl. We couldn’t stop must pay tribute or fend for themselves. laughing when an unexpected rainstorm She knew that US alliances – especially FOE OF DEMOCRACY. blew our umbrellas inside out, and couldn’t with other democracies – are a military, stop smiling when the captivating diplomatic and economic asset that playwright and dissident turned president neither Russia nor China can match, Václav Havel charmed us over dinner. Madeleine was 10 years despite their best efforts, and crucial for national security. ahead of me at Wellesley, and for decades we used to address and Even at the end of her life, she treasured her first glimpse of sign our notes to each other “Dear ’59” and “Love, ’69.” the Statue of Liberty, sailing into New York Harbor in 1948 as an In the 1990s, when Bill Clinton named Madeleine UN 11-year-old refugee on a ship called the SS America. ambassador and then secretary of state, she went toe-to-toe with She would have been thrilled by President Joe Biden’s recent the blood-soaked Serbian dictator Slobodan Milošević. She announcement that the United States will welcome up to 100,000 helped marshal American power and the Nato alliance to end the refugees fleeing Ukraine, and she would encourage us to do more brutal war in Bosnia and ethnic cleansing in Kosovo. She saw the to respond to this unfolding humanitarian nightmare. She would chronically underestimated Russian president Vladimir Putin for warn, as she did in her book, about the “self-centred moral what he is: a vicious autocrat intent on reclaiming Russia’s lost numbness that allows fascism to thrive”, and urge us to keep empire and a committed foe of democracy everywhere. In a pushing the envelope for freedom, human rights and democracy. prescient column in the Times published on February 23, she We should listen. Woman | 29
30 | Woman PHOTOS: JANE USSHER, SUPPLIED. ODE The MOTHER Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and acclaimed poet Hera Lindsay Bird attest to the fact that behind every great woman is a great mother.
FEATURE kōrero motuhake Dear Mum, HAVING A DAUGHTER AND WATCHING YOU WITH HER REMINDS ME OF WHAT IT WAS TO BE RAISED BY SOMEONE WITH SO MUCH KINDNESS, PATIENCE, AND CARE. I am writing this from my office at the Beehive. It’s just gone 10pm. Clarke’s away filming, so you’re at home with Neve. When I left this morning, you were in a nightie, patiently sitting with my three-year-old daughter who has no concept of time. She thought 7am was a perfectly respectable moment to start a craft project (a unicorn mask with bedazzling, to be precise), and you knew that if you sat down with her, distracting her with tiny pink gems, it would be easier for me to slip out. I don’t believe that having kids makes us love our mothers more – for me, that vessel was already full. But having a daughter and watching you with her reminds me of what it was to be raised by someone with so much kindness, patience, and care. And yet, you have never claimed perfection, and nor do you expect it in others – including your kids. I watch our young people now and feel like they have the weight of the world on their shoulders. Not only do they have the same pressures that past generations felt, but also they have the added weight of their lives being documented and commented on in a way that others before them have not. Being a teenager was already hard – it now seems relentless. It feels like one of the few antidotes is the unconditional love of others in our lives. And I always had that. I remember the first set of serious exams I faced as a young person – I would have been 16. I studied hard. Even though I had two more years of this kind of assessment, it felt somehow like these exams were make or break. I was almost through them all when I fell at the last hurdle, mistiming my last exam and failing to finish a critical essay. I was gutted. I remember arriving home and you asking me what was wrong. I could barely get out the words before I burst into tears. I can’t remember every word you shared, no doubt I was still rerunning the day in my head, but I do remember how you made me feel. That I was loved. And that the only thing you expected from us as your kids was that we do our best – whether it was school, relationships – life. You just wanted us to try, and be kind. You then decided to distract me, so you drove to United Video and hired Mr Holland’s Opus. Not your best choice. While it has a strong “life doesn’t always turn out as planned” theme to it, it’s otherwise 143 minutes of gut-wrenching anguish. Still, I appreciated the gesture. But that was just one minor moment of many. And in all of life’s twists and turns, I can hand-on-heart say that there has never been a time in my life where you, as my mum, made me feel as if I wasn’t good enough. In a world full of quick judgements, where it’s so easy to feel full of self-doubt, I can’t imagine a greater gift from a mother. To Mum, on this Mother’s Day, my greatest desire is that you feel the same in return. That you never cast your mind back, as mothers and women so often do, and question whether you were good enough. Whether you met some impossible expectation that for whatever reason we place on ourselves as parents. You were more than good enough. You are my beloved mother, and I will be forever grateful for you. Love, Jacinda Woman | 31
by Hera Lindsay Bird I LOVE HEARING Listening to other people talk about their mothers is like listening to ABOUT OTHER someone else’s dream. A bad dream reveals too much about the dreamer. A PEOPLE’S MOTHERS, good dream, who cares? There’s a limit TOO. MOTHERS ARE to how many good things people who don’t know you really want to know THE FUNNIEST about your life, and happy childhoods PEOPLE ALIVE. I’M fall squarely into that category. Not to mention that talking about how much SORRY, BUT IT’S TRUE. you love your mother feels a lot like unearned boasting, which only breeds resentment or boredom on the part of the listener. Your mother bought you the Malibu Barbie camper van for Christmas? Well, go eat shit, Amanda. Like the cabals of aesthetically commensurate brunettes paying hyperbolic tribute to each other on Instagram, such an act of gratuitous public esteem must awaken a healthy scepticism in the viewer. After all, such performances seem geared towards soliciting the attention of those just beyond the castle walls. If I love my mother so much, why don’t I just call her and tell her? Well, I already did that, over lunch, and she told me a great many hilarious and unrepeatable stories from her day. The things that a woman can say, while calmly eating an egg sandwich. Plus, calling my mother on the phone doesn’t pay nearly as well as writing about her, although I have to admit that I still get what I can only wincingly describe as pocket money, in the guise of a birthday present, paid out in weekly instalments. Before anyone gets het up about writers from monied families, let me say my mother is unmonied, and it’s all Hera Lindsay Bird’s biggest hero is my fault for studying poetry instead of computer her mum, Vivian, science. But happily, I can blame that on my mother, and she loves who always taught me to follow my dreams. hearing stories Mothers can be blamed for most things, which goes a from her extremely fascinating and long way toward explaining the current literary colourful life. landscape. I blame my mother for my bad feet, and my apparently inherited inability to remember the names 32 | Woman PHOTOS: VIVIAN LINDSAY, GETTY, SUPPLIED. An Ode To My Mother or faces of literally any actor who isn’t Frances McDormand. Sadly, I didn’t inherit her talent for Scrabble, or her ability to instantly befriend anyone within a 100-mile radius. But I guess some genes just skip a generation. A therapist once told me it wasn’t healthy never to fight with your mother, but I wasn’t exactly the climbing-out-of-windows type, and it seems a little gauche to be throwing tantrums at this late stage. I’m not saying our relationship is like Gilmore Girls. Catch me studying journalism in this day and age. But I wouldn’t be averse to a Grey Gardens-type scenario if anyone knows of a spare mansion going in the Hamptons. Sadly, this means my material for a bestselling memoir about my complicated mother-daughter relationship is sparse. I’ve always enjoyed reading these kinds of memoirs, in the same way accountants like reading about the Wild West. Apart from Mother’s Day, the only other time anyone invites you to write nice things about your mother is in an obituary, but my mother has a rare physiological disorder which means she is medically unable to die, so luckily I don’t have to worry about that. Anyway, I was lying earlier. I love hearing about other people’s dreams, and I love hearing about other people’s mothers, too. Mothers are the funniest people alive. I’m sorry, but it’s true. The dad joke gets the most press, sure, but even your favourite comedian has nothing on the emotional whiplash of the maternal non-sequitur. I’ve never laughed as hard in my life as the time my mother and I tried to get gas at a rural petrol station. The car’s gas tank was on the wrong side as the petrol pump, and we must have circled the pump at least four times before we were so hysterical we had to pull over and howl, while a nervous-looking teenager in an employee-regulation polo shirt came over to investigate. A good mother is like a good dream, in that it’s impossible to relay the mood nor the logic that governs it. It’s like the air you breathe your whole life, not knowing you are breathing it. I love my mother like I love air. I think of her every time I see a thing she likes. A giraffe. A cactus. A figurine of retired McDonald’s felon The Hamburglar. I think of her running away from home at 16, of riding a horse around the South Island at 20. That little brown horse and those big old stars. I think of her folding napkins into swans in the restaurant where she waitressed when we were little. I think of her playing Miss Hannigan, the gin-drunk orphanage keeper in our local production of Annie, every bit Carol Burnett’s equal. My mother, who ran off to art school in her 50s and formed a typewriter orchestra. My mother, who then skipped the country to move to rural China, and who introduced the local children to the horrors of Mr Bean. My mother, the sort of person that makes everyone I know ask: and how is your mother? She’s great, I always say. She’s fantastic.
Woman | 33
PARENTING whakatipu tamariki T Dr. Kate C. Prickett is the Director of the Roy McKenzie Centre for the Study of Families and Children at Te Herenga Waka – Victoria University of Wellington. 34 | Woman he advertisements showing us what issue is important and needs addressing. It’s hard to mothers want on Mother’s Day – a shine a light on or fix something when you don’t sleep-in, breakfast in bed, a good cup of understand the extent of the problem. coffee that someone else has made – are Some might argue that women are happy with this in stark contrast to what most mornings arrangement, that some couples have agreed on a look like for mums in Aotearoa. Which I guess is satisfactory division of labour, or that there are cases precisely the point. of men spending the same time as women on unpaid It’s 9am. I’ve made it to the office. As I sit down, I care. These two truths – that there is an unequal often reflect that I’ve been up for three hours but burden of labour and (some) women are fine with it – (perceive!) that I’ve accomplished nothing. My time can coexist. However, research on the intersection looks like this: I naturally wake around 6am, lying as between time use and wellbeing continues to show still as possible so as not to let on that I’m awake. First women are still doing more of the types of housework child wakes somewhere between 6.15-6.30am and and childcare activities (for example, bathing and crawls into bed to say good morning and get a cuddle. feeding children versus playing or watching TV And then we’re off. A shower, kids clothed, breakfasts together) that are less fun and wellbeing-promoting. made and eaten, and lunches made and packed. Kids Moreover, while time use is something we’ve been given the “we’re leaving” shout 10 minutes before we measuring for years, an evolving area of research is actually leave because, apparently it is now customary paying attention to the inequities in the invisible and that “we’re leaving” only means business when I have emotional labour that women do, such as organising said it three times and then also shout it from outside children’s schedules, having a working memory of the house, adding “I’ve left.” Inevitably, this is a false what’s in the fridge and what needs to be picked up start as we get halfway up the road and someone has from the supermarket, and making sure birthday forgotten something that they “really, really, really cards to whānau are in the mail on time. need” (60 steps back up to the front door, because . . . Despite the current state of play, 79 percent of New Wellington). It’s frowned upon for the kids to be at Zealanders think gender equality should be a school before 8.30am and my bus is scheduled to fundamental right. Moreover, in the 2021 edition of arrive at 8.32am across the road from the school. It is the Gender Attitudes Survey – a study commissioned a careful orchestration of time. by the National Council of Women of New Zealand to My mornings aren’t that dissimilar from many understand opinions on gender equality – a majority mothers’ – or perhaps just the privileged and lucky of respondents (87 percent) agreed mothers and ones like myself, able to work hours fathers should equally share the where I can get the kids to school, responsibility of raising children. and won’t get fired if I’m getting to This aspiration also made it to the CLOSE TO HALF the office chronically late. These top of the list in terms of where we hours are chaotic. The mornings should see gender equality reflected OF ALL MEN when my partner isn’t already at in society, if society was fair. Despite work (early morning Zoom calls to evidence to the contrary, however, (46 PERCENT) different time zones) make a close to half of all men (46 percent) BELIEVED GENDER palpable difference to my wellbeing. believed gender equality had been Juxtaposing the norm to a slow achieved in New Zealand, versus (a EQUALITY HAD morning in bed, being fed and not surprising) 35 percent of women. BEEN ACHIEVED IN feeding others, then, is salivating. I won’t be turning down breakfast But breakfast in bed feels like a low in bed, plus a little alone time, on NEW ZEALAND. bar, no? Study after study across the Mother’s Day, but what I really want world shows the unequal burden of for mothers is structural change that housework and childcare that will rebalance the time-burden mothers take on. This holds true in New Zealand. scales. Paid parental leave that encourages fathers to Although the last time this country undertook “gold take more leave without financially penalising standard” time-use data collection was more than a families. Affordable childcare that stops mothers decade ago (2009-10), those data found that women being forced into impossible choices about their were spending more than five hours on household career. Workplaces that can be flexible with schedules work and childcare per day, compared with less than and hours so we can better juggle work and family half that for men. And this wasn’t just all explained by demands – and that encourage dads to tap into those men working more: comparing mothers and fathers policies. And that these benefits aren’t just for those who worked full-time, women were still spending an of us whose jobs involve sitting at computers. And hour more than men on unpaid work (three hours and dads, as well as being the labour behind the Mother’s 16 minutes versus two hours 14 minutes, respectively). Day breakfast, it’s time to start putting your name Sure, things might have changed in the past 10 first on the school contact list, being the point-person years. But the fact that New Zealand doesn’t bother to on the WhatsApp group for football, and taking the collect time-use data to understand how things might afternoon off to do the school pick-up. When more be different says a lot about whether we think this dads do, we’re all better for it.
WHAT MOTHERS REALLY WANT FOR MOTHER’S DAY Dr. Kate Prickett argues for a deeper societal change that goes much further than dads changing nappies and sharing household chores. Woman | 35
Like MOTHER used to MAKE Top chefs and the food by which they remember their mother. 36 | Woman
L et’s face it, a lot of mother love is cupboard love. During infancy, our primal needs are food, drink and comfort. All things going well, they will match the same driving imperatives in whoever is doing the mothering. Sometimes the desire to make sure children are nourished can be overwhelming. It’s true that in the wild some animals are known to commit infanticide if their young refuse to eat. I once had a friend who rode a bicycle around the outside of their house to spoonfeed his child through the open kitchen window. But the supreme act of coddling was never more lovingly illustrated than when food writer Lois Daish wrote about her mother: On many mornings when I was a little girl I woke to the smell of scrambled eggs and wholemeal toast. The aroma didn’t come from the kitchen down the passage. It was much closer than that – it was in bed with me, on the triangle of mattress between my pillow and the corner of the bed. While my mother wanted me to sleep as long as possible, she also wanted me to have a proper breakfast before I went to school. So she delivered scrambled eggs to my bed while I was still asleep, so that I would wake up to their aroma, and immediately begin to eat. She was inclined to make the eggs rather firm, so it was easy to pick up the little squares of toast and scrambled egg, which was always full of finely chopped wild parsley that she’d picked along the road as she walked home from the bus stop the afternoon before. From A Good Year by Lois Daish, 2005 ALEXANDRA TYLEE OWNER OF PIPI CAFÉ, HAWKE’S BAY Left: Alexandra Tylee says her mum, Christabel, above, makes the best shortcake ever. Below: Feijoa shortcake. We grew up on a farm in Hawke’s Bay and cooking, preparing meals and keeping the tins full for farm workers, shearers and family was a full-time job. My mother’s cooking was strongly influenced by her mother and grandmother. When I think of my maternal grandmother Bessie Campbell’s cooking, what comes to my mind (or nose) is the smell of freshly grated lemon, which she was always squeezing into puddings or cakes, and white pepper, which was liberally sprinkled over mashed potato, which she served regularly with corned beef and creamed leeks. The way the table was set was hugely important – always lots of linen table napkins and candles and, of course, the flowers. Food memories evoke strong emotions. I sometimes see this in the restaurant when people order the flounder and are moved when recalling a time they caught one as a child. One of my mother’s favourite recipes is a very traditional buttery shortcake that can be made with anything, from strawberries to tamarillos. I think it sums up her cooking and how it has influenced me. Its simplicity is its beauty, and when made with love and care, it can hold its ground with any complicated confection, hands down. Feijoa shortcake 12 large feijoas 1 cup caster sugar 375g butter, softened 4½ cupsЄˢ˨˥ ¼ tsp salt 2¾ cups caster sugar 3 eggs, beaten ¼ cup caster sugar 1 cup cream, whipped 1 tbsp icing sugar SERVES 6-8 1. Preheat oven to 160°C. Grease a 30cm round pie dish. 2. Peel the feijoas, then simmer in 1 litre of water with 1 cup caster sugar. Once soft, drain the feijoas on a clean towel, then slice each one in half lengthways, keeping it intact. 3. In a large bowl, rub the butter into the flour, salt, and 2¾ cups sugar. Add the 3 eggs, then mix into a large dough. 4. Divide the dough in half, roll out one half and line the bottom and sides of the dish. Lay the feijoas neatly in the dish, then sprinkle with ¼ cup caster sugar. 5. Roll out the other half, then place over the feijoas. The pastry is very soft, so it doesn’t matter if you can’t roll it in one piece. 6. Bake for 45-60 minutes until golden brown and firm to touch. Sprinkle with icing sugar and serve with whipped cream. Woman | 37
MONIQUE FISO HIAKAI RESTAURANT, MT COOK, WELLINGTON My mother didn’t teach me to cook, but she did encourage me. I was helping in the kitchen from an early age, which my parents appreciated, as there were five kids and both my parents worked full-time and studied. I remember peeling garlic for the first time with my Nanny Tepora at the age of about four. My eyes started watering and I didn’t know what was happening to me. I was the pickiest eater out of my siblings; really fussy about what I ate. When I was young, my mother told me that people eat with their eyes, and it has always stuck with me. It’s also 100 percent correct. The recipe I most associate with my mother is apple and rhubarb sponge pudding. 38 | Woman Apple and rhubarb sponge pudding 2 cups hot, sweetened, stewed apple and rhubarb 125g butter ½ tsp vanilla essence ½ cup sugar 2 eggs 1 cupˣ˟˔˜ˡЄˢ˨˥ 2 tsp baking powder 2 tbsp milk Icing sugar 1. Preheat the oven to 190˚C. Place the stewed fruit in an ovenproof dish. 2. Put the butter, vanilla and sugar into a bowl, then beat hard until pale and creamy. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Sift in the flour and baking powder, then fold into the mixture, followed by the milk. 3. Spoon the mixture over the fruit. Bake for 40 minutes or until the sponge springs back when lightly touched. 4. Dust with icing sugar and serve hot with cream or vanilla ice cream (for Dad, of course). Above: Monique Fiso of Hiakai Restaurant, right, with her mum, Serena.
YAEL SHOCHAT IMA RESTAURANT, AUCKLAND My mum was an amazing cook and a curious and obsessive collector of recipes. It’s hard for me to pick one, because there were so many much-loved recipes. When I was a kid in Israel, other mothers had one cookbook – the equivalent of the Edmonds Cookery Book – but my mother had many books of different cuisines, piles of magazine cuttings and lots of handwritten recipe cards. I wish I had those cards today, but I have my memories. I’ve chosen moussaka, because it was a real comfort food I loved and she used to make it when I went home for a visit as a student. Moussaka For the eggplant layers: 5 large purple eggplants, cut lengthwise into 1cm slices ¼ cup non-iodised table salt From top: Yael’s mother, Thelma Shocat and Yael. 5 tbsp extra virgin olive oil For the potato layer: 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 3 medium potatoes, cut into 1cm slices For the tomato sauce: 1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 1 smallˢˡ˜ˢˡʟЃˡ˘˟ˬ˖˛ˢˣˣ˘˗ 4 garlic ˖˟ˢ˩˘˦ʟЃˡ˘˟ˬ˖˛ˢˣˣ˘˗ 2 cans ˪˛ˢ˟˘ˣ˘˘˟˘˗˧ˢˠ˔˧ˢ˘˦ʟ˦˘˘˗˘˗ʟ˪˜˧˛Є˘˦˛˥ˢ˨˚˛˟ˬ chopped and juice reserved For the meat layers: 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil 1 medium ˢˡ˜ˢˡʟЃˡ˘˟ˬ˖˛ˢˣˣ˘˗ 4 garlic˖˟ˢ˩˘˦ʟˠ˜ˡ˖˘˗ˢ˥Ѓˡ˘˟ˬ˚˥˔˧˘˗ 1kg minced beef 1 tbsp cinnamon ½ tsp˙˥˘˦˛˟ˬ˚˥ˢ˨ˡ˗ˡ˨˧ˠ˘˚ʛˢ˥̎˧˦ˣ˚˥ˢ˨ˡ˗ˡ˨˧ˠ˘˚ʜ cupЃˡ˘˟ˬ˖˛ˢˣˣ˘˗ʼ˧˔˟˜˔ˡЄ˔˧ʠ˟˘˔˙ˣ˔˥˦˟˘ˬ 1½ tbsp fresh oregano leaves 1½ tbsp˙˥˘˦˛˧˛ˬˠ˘˟˘˔˩˘˦ Pinch of salt FOR THE BÉCHAMEL SAUCE: 750ml whole milk 90g butter 6 tbspˣ˟˔˜ˡЄˢ˨˥ ½ tsp˙˥˘˦˛˟ˬ˚˥ˢ˨ˡ˗ˡ˨˧ˠ˘˚ʛˢ˥̎˧˦ˣ˗˥˜˘˗˚˥ˢ˨ˡ˗ˡ˨˧ˠ˘˚ʜ 150g grated parmesan cheese Salt and pepper 1/ PHOTOS: FLORENCE CHARVIN, SUPPLIED, FACEBOOK. 3 1. Preheat the oven to 180˚C. To prepare the eggplant layer, line two large trays with baking paper. Generously sprinkle the eggplant slices with salt, then leave to sit for 15 minutes in a colander. Wash well under running water to remove all the salt, then squeeze with your hands to remove all the water. Brush the slices with oil, then roast in a single layer on the lined trays until soft and lightly golden brown – about 25 minutes. Leave the oven on to bake the assembled moussaka. 2. To prepare the potato layer, heat the oil in a large frying pan on medium-high heat. Fry the potato slices, in batches if until lightly golden on both sides. Set out onto a paper-towel-lined plate. 3. To make the tomato sauce, heat the oil in a medium saucepan on moderate heat. Cook the onion, stirring occasionally, until softened and lightly golden – about 10 minutes. Add the garlic and cook 1-2 minutes, stirring occasionally, until softened. Add the tomato and juices from the cans, then simmer for 10 minutes. 4. To prepare the meat, heat the oil in a large frying pan on moderate heat. Cook the onion, stirring occasionally, until softened and just lightly golden – about 10 minutes. Add the garlic, then cook a further 1-2 minutes, stirring occasionally, until softened. 5. Turn the heat up a notch, add half the meat to the pan and stir occasionally until browned and quite dry. Remove the mixture to a bowl while leaving the residual oil in the pan, then cook the remaining beef the same way. 6. Return all the meat to the pan, then stir through the cinnamon, nutmeg and herbs. Add a pinch of salt, but do not season the meat strongly, as the eggplant slices will be well-seasoned even after being washed. MAKE THE BÉCHAMEL SAUCE 1. Heat the milk in a small saucepan until hot but not boiling. Reduce heat to low. Melt the butter in a medium or large saucepan. Whisk in the flour to form a paste, then cook, whisking for one minute. 2. If the roux begins to brown, turn down the heat a little. Gradually add the hot milk, a few spoonfuls at a time, and let the milk sit in the pan for a few seconds each time before whisking it in, which will help prevent lumps. 3. Once all of the milk has been whisked in, carefully bring the sauce to a gentle boil, then reduce the heat and gently simmer uncovered, whisking frequently, for 10-15 minutes. 4. Stir in the nutmeg and parmesan until the cheese has melted, then remove the pot from the heat. Season with salt and pepper to taste. ASSEMBLE THE MOUSSAKA 1. Arrange the potato slices in a single layer in a 35 x 25cm deep roasting dish, cutting some pieces to fit in the gaps like a mosaic (there is no need to oil the dish first). 2. Arrange a third of the eggplant slices on top of the potato. 3. Spread half the mince in an even layer. 4. Pour half the tomato sauce onto the mince. 5. Arrange half the remaining eggplant on top of the sauce. 6. Spread the second half of the mince onto the eggplant and pour on the remaining tomato sauce. 7. Arrange the remaining eggplant pieces in a layer and spread the béchamel sauce in a smooth layer onto the eggplant with a clean knife or spatula. Bake the moussaka for 30-40 minutes until hot throughout, with the sauce browned nicely on top. Let it stand for 20 minutes before serving, as this allows the layers to settle and will help you cut it neatly. The flavours will also be more pronounced if the dish is not piping hot.
LOFTY ASPIRATIONS Ruth Spencer discovers the magic of miniatures. 40 | Woman The direction of Ruth's new hobby took an interesting turn when her dinosaur-obsessed six-year-old daughter got involved.
PHOTO: GETTY. W hen I was a little child in Invercargill, there was a gorgeous public library in a Gothic stone building, and someone there liked little things. In a glass case was perhaps the most incongruous diorama ever to grace a children’s library: a bare field with a few brooding pine trees in the corners, through which a tiny brass band marched endlessly in rectangular formation. Red coats, tall bearskin hats, legs striding forward. To where? Towards an audience? Or, with a kindness and mercy usually unknown to brass bands, away from an audience? It was melancholy and slightly threatening in a way that all children’s content was in the late 1970s. So bleak, so mysterious. I’d check on the band every time I went to the library, looking for any sign of musical progress across Wasteland Park, convinced the faceless marchers moved when I looked away. Good miniatures contain some kind of stilled magic – a real pixie living behind that fairy-garden door, dollhouses that become bustling family homes at night, model railways that chunter and rattle and . . . no, they’re probably still boring when you’re not looking. I want to capture some of that magic for myself, to surround myself with tiny enchanted worlds. I’m going to reinvent myself as a miniaturist. Miniatures are big right now. Cute little diorama kits are in all the shops, promising mindfulness, focus and creativity. The idea is to painstakingly create a miniature space you’d like to inhabit, and then kind of look at it, I suppose, feeling big. Even the Queen collects miniatures, although that probably means people give them to her, then she nods in a kind, tired way before waving them off to the palace’s Diorama Storage Unit. Anyway, I bought a miniature kit. The kit is called Soho Loft. All the kits are aspirational – a Parisian bedroom or a bookstore or a plant shop, sets from perfect imaginary rom-coms, full of spiral staircases and indoor plants. So. Much. Whimsy. Soho Loft has a mid-century comfy chair upholstered in pale duck-egg felt. There’s a desk, a set of Scandi drawers, and a charming set of French windows thrown open to an imaginary breeze, which is overkill on the ventilation front, considering the room has only two walls. Soho Loft confronts me with a lot of work. There are so many books: stacked on the desk, lying on shelves, casually thrown on the chair. I’m supposed to make each book, with printed internal pages to fold and get the right way up. There are three windows to glaze. I’m to cut and glue tiny strips of actual wood veneer to make my desk and drawers look more like washed oak. I’m supposed to – and this feels possibly like it should not be legal – wire an electric light. I am an intelligent, educated woman rising into her power, but Reinvention I should not be anywhere near electrical wiring. RUTH SPENCER There’s a real-life flame involved, to shrink a rubber coating around exposed wire. This isn’t meditation, it’s MacGyver. It all goes together with glue, the least satisfying craft tool. Nothing feels clever or artisanal when you glue it. Glue is for preschoolers who can’t work the sticky-tape dispenser. To be fair, these kit people know their glue. This is rapid-drying, invisible, fingerprints-permanently-embedded-in-the-felt kind of glue. Nasa-level glue. Wait, is this rocket science? That would explain a lot. I eventually, mostly, complete it (I didn’t individually wrap paper around wire to make tiny pencils because OMG, there’s a limit), then it sits on the windowsill for a while to remind me not to buy another one. But Soho Loft finally achieves its best life. After a couple of weeks of “No touch, darling. For looking only!” to my six-year-old, it inevitably becomes a pied-à-terre for the Squishies, her tiny rubbery dinosaurs from Kmart. They swan over the chaise, use the iPad, and knock over the potted plants. They seldom read the books, perhaps because some of the pages are upside down. The veneered drawers have lost a toothpick leg and are full of Squishie Food. I don’t ask and neither should you. I felt a pang when the Squishies moved in, at my semi-perfect little apartment being squatted by Ankylosauri and THERE’S A REALPteranodons, but at least it hasn’t got the spooky melancholy of that frozen LIFE FLAME Invercargill brass band. Whatever it INVOLVED, TO gets up to at night, it’s alive during the day, playing host to many diorama SHRINK A RUBBER dinodramas. Even a life in miniature can be something big. COATING AROUND EXPOSED WIRE. THIS ISN’T MEDITATION, IT’S MACGYVER. Woman | 41
Menstrual cycles and menopause are increasingly being discussed in the workplace as women seek policy changes that take their ‘natural ribbons of life’ into account. In her fight to bring about policy change, Tongan broadcaster Lusia Petelo opened up to her male employers about the previously private subjects of menstrual cycles and menopause. By Aroha Awarau. PERIOD of CHANGE PHOTOGRAPHY: LUKE HARVEY P Right: Niu FM’s Lusia Petelo: “How can I go on air on my radio show every day and ask our people to be brave and bold when we can’t do that same thing?” 42 | Woman eriods and menopause are two topics Tongan broadcaster Lusia Petelo says are not openly discussed in her Pacific culture. So, the Niu FM radio host knew it would be an uphill battle when she had to confront the top four male executives in her company, the Pacific Media Network, and try to convince them to implement a menstrual policy that would allow paid extra leave for those having monthly periods or going through menopause. The controversial and divisive employment issue is becoming more common in workplaces both here and overseas, but Lusia discovered that trying to win over her employers, who work within a Pacific framework, was going to be challenging. “One of the main drivers for me was knowing that menstruating is not a sickness, as much as we know that sick leave is there for this,” the bubbly entertainer says. “As Pacific women, some of us feel uncomfortable talking about things that are natural. I have non-Islander friends who openly say, ‘Oh, I just got my period.’ In our Pacific culture, we would whisper when talking about our periods. I wanted to change these attitudes and allow Pacific women to feel comfortable talking about these things.” Lusia, 31, started with the Auckland-based Pacific media company in 2017, becoming a full-time host in 2020. She was appointed union delegate and given the job of negotiating for better conditions for her members. The idea of a menstrual and menopause policy was brought up during their annual collective contract
FEATURE kōrero motuhake “IN OUR PACIFIC CULTURE, WE WOULD WHISPER WHEN TALKING ABOUT OUR PERIODS. I WANTED TO CHANGE THESE ATTITUDES AND ALLOW WOMEN TO FEEL COMFORTABLE.” Woman | 43
“I DON’T LIKE CRYING IN FRONT OF PEOPLE, BUT I WAS ANGRY. I WAS TRYING TO PROVE A POINT TO PEOPLE WHO DON’T KNOW HOW IT FEELS.” negotiations. “Before each bargaining session with the CEO and executives, we sit down as a collective, as you would a family, and have a talanoa; we talk about what we need to sort out. “One collective member had read about a menstrual policy introduced by some Australian companies and suggested it was something we could have as well. The other members supported the idea, even the men. We talked about women waking up with bad headaches and cramps and not being able to move. If they have used up all their sick leave for themselves or in caring for their children, they have no other option but to carry on and go to work.” The policy concept was new to many of the members, including Lusia. Before raising it with her bosses, she read overseas research and sought advice from Pacific medical professionals. She also received help from Kristy Chong, the CEO of Sydney-based Modibodi, a company that sells period products. It was one of the first in Australia to implement paid menstrual, menopause and miscarriage leave for its employees (10 extra paid leave days a year). “It was important in our Pacific community that someone breaks that stigma, that we no longer feel embarrassed to address the things that just naturally happen and are just part of being human.” A UK study released by the Women and Equalities Committee in February found that nearly a third of women had missed work because of menopause or menstrual symptoms. The same poll found that just one in 10 had asked for workplace adjustments related to their menopause symptoms. A quarter of those who hadn’t asked for adjustments said they were “worried 44 | Woman Above left: Lusia Petelo on air at Niu FM. Above right: Lusia with ˃˔˖˜Ѓ˖ˀ˘˗˜˔ˁ˘˧˪ˢ˥˞ CEO Don Mann. about the reaction of others”. Armed with the research and a passion to make a difference, Lusia was confident going into the first round of negotiations. But she was devastated when the four male executives declined her request. “I don’t like crying in front of people, but I was angry. While they were explaining to me their reasons, I was half-listening to them and had all of these comebacks in my head. I was trying to prove a point to a group of people who don’t know how it feels. They have some sort of understanding because they have wives and daughters, but it’s limited because they can’t live what a woman experiences in her body.” Lusia loves her job as an announcer. Her warmth and personality make her relatable and popular with her audience. But she realised the fight was bigger than her and her employers. “At the beginning, I was representing the women of my collective, then I was representing the future of this organisation. Then I realised I was representing all women, so I’d better do my best to get this policy over the line.” After a short break from negotiations, Lusia returned and gave a heartfelt speech to her bosses. “I was scared, but I used that fear and gave it my all. I reminded them we are a Pacific broadcasting company and we are a brand that shares the success of our Pacific people. Why is it that we cannot do the same for ourselves? Why is it that we cannot set change as a Pacific brand and walk the talk? How can I go on air on my radio show every day and ask our people to be brave and bold when we can’t do that same thing?” Pacific Media Network CEO Don Mann, a former police officer with two daughters, admits that when Lusia first raised the subject, he felt uncomfortable. Like Lusia, Don acknowledges periods and menopause aren’t discussed openly in Pacific homes. “At a simple level, these issues are private matters, as we are talking about a person’s body. What does this mean under a Pacific construct, and what does this mean given the impact of Christianity within our Pacific community? How will this happen and how will this play out? Then I realised I shouldn’t overthink this and that it was a subject matter beyond me.” The Pacific Media Network employs 75 people. Sixty percent of its employees are women. Don knew it was important to investigate the request further before reconsidering his decision. “I lacked confidence that we should be the organisation that should do this. In my 20 years of being a senior manager, this topic has never been addressed. I needed time and space to process it and do my own research on what was being asked of us.” He wanted to look at how such a policy would
function within a Pacific framework, so researched the work of Māori and Pacific thought leaders, such as Dr Ngāhuia Murphy and Dr Lana Lopesi. Taking time to understand their work shaped his reasoning. He also approached Elizabeth Hill, an associate professor of social sciences at the University of Sydney, who has been studying menstrual leave as an employment policy for about three years. Her research found arguments for and against menstrual leave. One view opposing the policy was that it reinforces stereotypes and stigmas attached to menstruation and discriminates against those who have periods. But Don says that despite the arguments against the policy, his organisation made an informed decision to support their employees and create a more inclusive working environment. “If I’m going to lead an organisation that is predominately Pacific women, then I felt I needed to educate and better inform myself. It didn’t take me long to decide that we needed to support this. It was the right thing to do.” The menstrual policy came into effect at the Pacific Media Network early this year. Employees on the collective contract will be entitled to an extra 12 days of paid personal leave a year, in addition to the company’s existing sick leave entitlement, to deal with menstruation and menopause issues. The company will also supply free sanitary pads in its bathrooms. “There are senior women in the workplace who will oversee how this works and how it’s delivered safely. The women who are impacted by this will make it work and make it best suit them,” says Don. Chris Hubscher, manager of employment standards policy at the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, says it is not known how many New Zealand companies have a menstrual leave policy, as the concept is relatively new. But he says all companies can choose to include their own menstrual leave policy. “Firms are able to implement any internal leave policies or agree to the provision of leave for any reason with an employee, so long as the entitlement is above the minimum statutory requirements,” he says. Dr Minnie Strickland, clinical director for Etu Pasifika Auckland and member of the Pasifika Medical Association Group, a national organisation providing health services for the Pacific community both here and overseas, applauds the Pacific Media Network for becoming one of the first companies in Aotearoa to implement a menstrual policy. “It’s an achievement. It’s awesome that workplaces are taking into account the natural ribbons of life. “As a Pacific company, they are taking away the stigma of menstruation and menopause. They’re standing up and being brave and providing a better working environment for their employees.” When Lusia first learnt her advocacy work had been successful, she broke down. “I cried for what seemed like a lifetime. We did it! We fought for this policy that allows us to function better at home and in the workplace.” Above: Lusia says, Ϣˊ˘˔˥˘˔˃˔˖˜Ѓ˖ broadcasting company and we are a brand that shares the success of our ˃˔˖˜Ѓ˖ˣ˘ˢˣ˟˘ʡϣ Woman | 45
I AM YOUR NOSE K I’m the organ that hides in plain sight and knows a lot about you. There’s more to me than just smell and swabs. ia ora! Hi. Over here. Yes, that’s me waving at you from the centre of your face. I know we’ve had an awkward relationship at times. Like that time I wouldn’t stop dripping while you were trying to impress the school principal and you ended up with snot smeared all over your face. Or that time I seemed to grow much faster than the rest of your features, so I looked like a bulbous growth on your sensitive adolescent ego. But we’ve grown into each other since then, right? Right? You see, I’m used to being the one hiding out in plain sight, keeping my talents veiled. But just quietly, I know I’m crucial to your survival, physically, socially and – dare I say it – in love as well. Let’s start with the obvious. What do you need to live? Oxygen! How does it enter? Through me. Most of the air you breathe enters through my capacious passages. And when I say capacious, I mean it. Some people are surprised when they find out just how far back I go into your head. Those nasal swabs you’ve been having might give a clue. (And that’s only part of the length needed to satisfy me.) When you breathe, air gets pulled in through the front door – my nares, or nostrils – and into the secret back-party room. Here, the molecules swirl around my architecturally designed interior, a warm, dark space with three curved wall features (the upper, middle and lower conchae, also known as the turbinates). My walls are not just pretty, they’re also the latest in air-conditioning design. They moisten and warm the air so it’s the perfect temperature for gas exchange to occur when it reaches the lungs. Babies must breathe through their noses – it’s an adaptation they are born with to allow them to breathe and suckle at the same time. But grownups can choose whether to breathe through me or my colleague, the mouth. I’d advise choosing me. Research has shown (I knew all along) that 46 | Woman Your body DR RENEE LIANG breathing through me lowers your stress levels, helps you sleep, improves your exercise fitness, improves dental health, lowers blood pressure, and improves heart health. I also improve your memory, alert you to dangers, and make you super sexy. Read on. First, let me inform you of my security features. As your gateway, I’m equipped with the best. Those nostril hairs that you cringe at in the mirror? They’re a very effective broom, keeping randoms where they belong: outside. After that, anything wanting to score a free ride into your body has to contend with a tidal wave of sticky mucus that is constantly produced (a litre a day; more when you’re unwell). Much more effective than sprinklers on a parliamentary lawn. And, of course, there’s the sneeze – my high-tech expulsion device, travelling up to 5m a second, ejecting toxic organisms as aerosols for other suckers to breathe in. (In case you’re wondering, sneeze style is genetically determined.) But should intruders still stick around, immune cells breaststroke through my mucus, eliminating their targets with more efficacy than Navy Seals and none of the toxic masculinity. (Hope you’re feeling better about the snot now.) I also make nitric oxide, a gas that not only opens up blood vessels in the lungs, making them more efficient, but also may prevent viruses such as Covid-19 from multiplying and taking hold. I’m also exceptionally tidy; the perfect flatmate. The vanquished occupiers are swept efficiently towards the door by the coordinated movements of tiny cilia, microscopic “hairs”. These cuties Mexican wave those who have outstayed their welcome back to where they came from. Hasta la vista! Speaking of bad smells, did you know I can detect more than a trillion unique scents? Great to make sure you don’t swallow something that’s off, but I am also a purveyor of good taste and – get this – I can detect disease. Sometimes I can smell the early onset of conditions such as Parkinson’s disease or someone who’s crashing into a diabetes coma. My sense of smell (okay, I can’t actually smell,
BODY PHOTO: JOHN RATA. ILLUSTRATION: GETTY. tinana that’s the brain’s processing job, but I pick up the signals) also affects memory. You may have heard that of the five senses, smell is the most effective at triggering lost memories. But breathing through me also improves your recall: associating smells with events embeds them deeply. Memories lead to emotions: that’s why I’m so important when you’re in a place and a smell brings it all flooding back. Smell is also a key part of what I assess when you meet someone. A person’s smell can clue you into all kinds of things, including your past memories relating to them. Noses also pick up on personal hygiene (okay, shallow, but we all do it), general health, or even if someone’s lying: my temperature increases if it’s fake news. But stress makes me react the opposite way: my temperature drops, possibly because you’re breathing more quickly. If you’re having trouble finding your direction, I can help. I am a built-in GPS, or rather OPS (olfactory positioning system). As with other animals, humans can navigate along “smell maps” to find their way to things, such as bacon, when other senses are muted. Yes, I know, I am awesome. My form is also a map of your great-great-greatgrandmother’s travels. Did you know that over time, I have evolved into different shapes, affected by such factors as climate change and sexual selection? I am your ancestors’ histories carried on your face. Why would you want to change me? I know you want to get to the sexy bit before we finish. Have you ever noticed that when I’m blocked, your sex drive is . . . off? That isn’t just due to discomfort, it’s because I play a key role in your arousal. Memory, health, attractiveness, emotion. . . I’ve mentioned it already. But there’s also a mysterious pit located on my septum (the bit of flesh between the inside of the nostrils) called the VNO (vomeronasal organ). It’s rich in nerves and blood vessels, and some scientists think it triggers hormone release when it detects pheromones, as it does in other animals. Unbelievably, this isn’t an area that has been prioritised in scientific research. But the entire perfume industry might be built on it. So that’s me, the quietly sexy, dangerous and perceptive one. I know you won’t be able to look away, now that you know my secrets. Nice to meet you, I am your nose. Olfactory bulb Frontal sinus Olfactory nerves Sphenoid sinus Superior nasal concha Middle nasal concha Pharingeal tonsil Inferior nasal concha Opening of eustachian tube Vestibule Soft palate Tongue Hard palate Oral cavity JUST QUIETLY, I KNOW I’M CRUCIAL TO YOUR SURVIVAL, PHYSICALLY, SOCIALLY AND – DARE I SAY IT – IN LOVE AS WELL. Woman | 47

HEALTH hauora I Diabetic Megan Whelan says am browsing books when it happens, casually picking up covers that look interesting, before discarding them, constantly searching for the thing that speaks to me. A woman glides over, leans in for a conspiratorial whisper. “You’re so brave to wear that,” she says. “I could never.” Bewildered, I look down. What on earth am I wearing? Did I inadvertently leave the house in a bikini in the middle of winter? It’s a slogan T-shirt – girls can do anything – and a pencil skirt. It’s all black. Then my eye catches a glint of light, and I remember the skirt is sequinned. And I’ve forgotten I’m fat. I’ve spent so much of my life being told what I should and shouldn’t do. I should: lose weight, exercise more, have long hair (my bone structure isn’t fine enough for it to be short), do everything I can to not be fat, even though the overwhelming evidence says that weight loss is an almost impossible goal for most people, hide. I shouldn’t: be a burden on the healthcare system, bare my upper arms, complain, wear colours or shiny fabrics, be noticed, be happy. That is what I learnt, and so it’s no wonder that when the internet and the body positivity and fatacceptance movements came along, learning how to love my body took some time, and I made some mistakes along the way. I am really good at quite a few things. I have a busy, fascinating job that requires a lot of creativity and brainpower. I am good at it. I am a good boss, a great friend, very adept with knitting needles, and recently I have discovered I am quite good at squats. I am spectacularly bad at taking care of myself. Before I discovered I had diabetes, which I am now writing about in a regular column for RNZ, I would regularly get to about 4pm and think to myself, “Ugh, why is everyone so annoying. I am in such a bad mood.” I would then realise I’d had only a scone and three coffees that whole day. But that was OK, right? Starving myself would help me lose weight. (To be very clear, it did not and, no, that’s not how bodies work.) I’d Instagram #selfcare as I applied a face mask, and book weekends away, searching only for accommodation that had baths. And I would remind FAT CHANCES it’s okay to love your body and be mad at it in equal measure. PHOTOGRAPHY: REBEKAH PARSONS-KING
50 | Woman
OUR BODIES ARE ONE PART OF US people that no one looks after things they don’t love. Body positivity is a wonderful thing. It has allowed so many GETS US AROUND, women to free themselves from the GIVES US PLEASURE tyranny of impossible beauty standards and entire industries that profit from us AND HOUSES US, hating ourselves. SURE, BUT THEY’RE But I don’t love my body all the time. I don’t know anyone who does. My partner NOT ALL OF US. worries about his bushy eyebrows. My best friend celebrates her calves, but frets over her skin. I spent a decade, first through fashion, then through hair dye, then with therapy, learning to love my body, but when I finally started taking care of it, it turned on me. I expected that after all these years, joining a gym – and meaning it – and lifting weights would mean I was healthy in no time. Instead, I found myself at the doctor, a place I have avoided for most of my life – like most fat people. There is considerable evidence that fat stigma among doctors is as bad, if not worse, as it is with the public, and that’s one reason overweight and obese people have poorer health outcomes. Finding out I had diabetes felt like a betrayal – my body betraying me just when I was caring for it – and because of all the body positivity I had preached, being unwell felt as if I was “selling” a lie. But I can love my body and be mad at it in equal measure. I can look in the mirror and think I look hot, and also be annoyed that my knee still hurts two years after I first injured it. I can be super proud of managing as many lunges as I did yesterday, and be frustrated that doing so means my calves are so tight today that walking downstairs to the bathroom hurts. We don’t have to “yassssss queen!!!” ourselves into oblivion, and we don’t have to spend all our time wishing we lived up to the billboards we see while driving in the city. Our bodies are one part of us – the part that gets us around, gives us pleasure and houses us, sure, but they’re not all of us. To me, the curve of your waist is not nearly as interesting as your story – the bit I spend my day job on. Your eye colour might be striking, but I’d rather hear about what makes you Megan Whelan is excited. I’d rather hear your voice quiver when you talk the Head of Content about how much you love your child, or watch your eyes at RNZ, an MC, public speaker light up when you talk about a new album you’ve and fan of making discovered. things. Her new I am aware of the irony. I am writing about diabetes weekly column, Diabetes and Me, is because I hope it might help people. Not just people available at like me, but anyone who’s spent far too much of their rnz.co.nz/ adult life thinking about their body, and wishes that diabetesandme. maybe, just for a bit, we could talk about something else for a while. – THE PART THAT Woman | 51
WRITING tuhituhinga The peculiar story of Katherine Mansfield’s hair. By Fiona Oliver. T he Turnbull Library has not one, but two locks of hair that grew on the head of this country’s most famous – and perhaps most fetishised – writer. The cult of personality that surrounds Katherine Mansfield is remarkable, and 133 years after her birth, it continues to intensify, the ripples she sent into the world growing and widening and taking on a life of their own. You could argue it is the stunning fact of her short, tragic life that provokes our fascination. But other writers’ lives have been no less devastating: Janet Frame (whose mother, incidentally, was once housemaid to the Mansfield family) certainly had her moments – two sisters drowned in separate incidents, she miscarried a baby, and her imagination was misdiagnosed as schizophrenia, causing her to be sent to asylums where she received more than 200 electric-shock treatments (but narrowly escaped a lobotomy). And Robin Hyde’s life, too, was no less awful – addicted to morphine, she also lost a baby and had to give up another. Her attempted suicide and nervous breakdowns led to long periods in asylums, and she finally killed herself with poison. The shining works of these women, despite their hardships, outlive them, but it is only the body of Mansfield that is still fresh in the public imagination. The ponytail Katherine Mansfield’s ponytail, c.1913. Ref: Curios-018-1-012 Katherine’s ponytail came to the Turnbull Library in a black tin trunk that was part of the estate of her husband John Middleton Murry. Also in the trunk was a scrapbook of material relating to Katherine’s brother Leslie, a few letters, chequebooks, account books, and copies of manuscript poems. Katherine’s bobbed hair would become her trademark look. She cut off her ponytail, which is almost half a metre long, between 1908 and 1911 in a bold act of defiance and rejection of her Victorian childhood. They were turbulent years: she experimented with sex and drugs, got married and left her husband the next day, got pregnant and delivered a stillborn baby alone in a hotel room. She destroyed her writing, letters and photos from this period, but kept the ponytail – it was a part of her, after all, and perhaps a reminder of a more innocent time, which, by then, was irretrievable. The lock of hair Lock of hair belonging to Katherine Mansfield, c.1920. Ref: Curios-018-006 The second of the Mansfield locks was left in a cottage rented by John Middleton Murry after his wife’s death. He worked there, drastically cutting and restyling Katherine’s literary remains for publication. Why did he bring the hair with him? Did he leave it behind accidentally, or intentionally? If he was trying to forget his dead wife, he could not. Although he quickly remarried, the resemblance of his new wife, Violet Le Maistre, to Katherine was remarkable – similar in looks, with the same chestnut hair, also a writer, and also to die prematurely of tuberculosis. The two women converged in life and in death. During his courtship with Violet, John repeatedly dreamt of Katherine lying in her coffin, “swathed in black and white . . . with her head lifted. She was not dead, and she had been struggling (for life?) below”. When the couple had a daughter, she was named Katherine. The playing out of this Gothic obsession brings to mind Emily Brontë’s novel Wuthering Heights. Maybe this was self-styled – after all, John was a literary critic. He seemed to be casting himself as a kind of Heathcliff type, who was haunted by the death of his soulmate, also, of course, called Catherine. If not quite the Yorkshire moors, a country cottage may have been considered adequately bleak and isolated, and there, with the lock of hair before him, he may have reimagined the famous scene where Heathcliff digs up Catherine’s grave because he wants to hold her again. SHE CUT OFF HER The lock of hair is a vector for PONYTAIL. . . Katherine’s presence, both intimate and physical, and John’s feelings of guilt and BETWEEN 1908 AND grief, and his violent need for physical 1911 IN A BOLD ACT connection, which he had by then found in the body of his dead wife’s living OF DEFIANCE AND surrogate. But given these intertwined REJECTION OF HER identities, whose lock of hair is it? Is it Katherine’s – or could it be Violet’s? VICTORIAN CHILDHOOD. 52 | Woman Visitors to Alexander Turnbull Library in Wellington can view Katherine Mansfield’s hair on request.
PAINTING BY ANNE ESTELLE RICE, WELLINGTON, NATIONAL ART GALLERY: GETTY. ARTICLE REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM THE NATIONAL LIBRARY OF NEW ZEALAND. The curious case of the hair in the cabinet Woman | 53
HOOKED ON COATS In the first days after I moved to live in Berlin (oh, it was a long, long time ago), I remember feeling conspicuous because I didn’t wear a coat. I had not owned a coat since school days, when my mother used to insist I take one in case it rained, and I would hide it in the letterbox after I left the house. I didn’t want to have to drag it around with me all day. Coats were annoying things that you were always taking off. If it rained, an umbrella was better. But that city taught me otherwise. A coat is the most essential thing you’ll ever have in your wardrobe. A coat speaks attitude. It speaks both daring and nonchalance. It’s here for the business, here for the game, the silhouette you need for a getaway, the apparel you need for a walk. A coat says the world’s my oyster and I’m here for it. The coats on these pages are truly gorgeous. Ample swathes of wool to climb inside. Pocketed and belted, they’re a shield against the world. – Susanna Andrew STYLIST: ANASTASIA DONIANTS MAKE-UP: CHANELLE KENNEDY MODEL: PAMELA SIDHU PHOTOGRAPHY: LUKE HARVEY 54 | Woman
Left: Modern Times coat by Gloria, $780; Marnie pants by Twenty-Seven Names, $420; Nostalgia sleeper hoops by Silk & Steel, $199; Charles Jourdan Katibe heels from Lineageeri, $850. Right: Totéme coat, from FABRIC, $1299; Marnie pants by Twenty-Seven Names, $420; Lana merino wool skivvy by Hailwood, $299; Charles Jourdan Katibe heels from Lineage, $850; Nostalgia sleeper hoops by Silk & Steel, $199; Emily beret from Cotton On, $19.99; vintage leather gloves, borrowed from Unity Books.
Rosa wool coat by Hailwood, $599; Cassie wool scarf by Hailwood, $249; Marnie pants by Twenty-Seven Names, $420; Charles Jourdan Katibe heels from Lineage, $850; Minerva gold pendant by Hailwood, $229 Nostalgia sleeper hoops by Silk & Steel, $199.
Rosalie shirt by Samsøe Samsøe from FABRIC, $449; LilyMontana drops by Hailwood, $339; Sailor jeans by Kowtow, $289. Woman | 57
Coat by COS, POA; Camilla and Marc Coppola Top, $360; Sailor jeans by Kowtow, $289; Nostalgia sleeper hoops by Silk & Steel, $199; sandals by COS, POA.
Tartan trench from Search & Destroy, $140; Violet tank top by Kowtow, $79; Eternity sleeper hoops by Silk & Steel, $199. Woman | 59
Above: Modern Times coat by Gloria, $780; Marnie pants by Twenty-Seven Names, $420; cotton tulle top, Standard Issue, $195; Minerva gold pendant by Hailwood, $229; Nostalgia sleeper hoops by Silk & Steel, $199; Charles Jourdan Katibe heels, Lineage, $850. Wool jacket by COS, POA; Mejsi shirt by Samsøe Samsøe from FABRIC, $199; R.M. Williams Traditional belt, $140; Remy cords by Penny Sage, $420; Nostalgia sleeper hoops by Silk & Steel, $199. 60 | Woman
Totéme coat from FABRIC, $1299; Marnie pants by Twenty-Seven Names, $420; Charles Jourdan Katibe heels from Lineage, $850; Emily beret from Cotton On, $19.99; vintage leather gloves, borrowed from Unity Books.
MASK the issue A change of season is a great time to reassess your skin’s needs and think about adding a weekly mask to your routine. S pending much more time at home over the past two years has refocused many of us on our skincare regimes. Not being able to access our beloved beauty therapists, seeing far too much of our own mug on Zoom calls, wearing less makeup and having a little more time to invest into our daily routines have meant we’re more interested than ever in achieving great skin. Excellent at-home treatments are increasingly popular, with women seeking ways to get clinic-worthy results in the comfort of their own bathroom. While overdoing the actives and incorporating too many unnecessary (and potentially harmful) products isn’t always advisable, a weekly mask as part of a quality routine is always beneficial. It’s a great way to infuse skin with a concentration of ingredients that target your particular concerns. All masks have their own 62 | Woman usage instructions, so follow these to the letter and remember to remove with lukewarm, not hot water. A change of season is a great time to reassess your skin’s needs. Now that we’re well into autumn and the weather is getting cooler, humidity levels drop and the heating goes on. These factors suck the moisture out of skin, leaving it parched and thirsty. Nourishing it with a rich, hydrating mask will plump it up as well as soothe and calm any irritation caused by the elements. Look for masks with hyaluronic acid, ceramides, vitamin E and niacinamide, which are all known for their deeply moisturising, restorative and replenishing properties. Women who battle congestion, prominent pores and breakouts need a different mask prescription. Kaolin clay and charcoal are saviours for this skin type – they help to clarify, detoxify and draw out excess oil and
BEAUTY rerehua Top tip: DON’T BE AFRAID TO APPLY A HYDRATING MASK TO DRY AREAS, THEN A DETOXIFYING ONE TO YOUR T-ZONE TO TREAT ENLARGED PHOTO: GETTY. PORES. impurities without dehydrating or disrupting the barrier. But what if you suffer from dryness and acne? The good news is that multi-masking is very much a thing. Don’t be afraid to apply a hydrating mask to dry areas, then a detoxifying one to your T-zone, where most people have enlarged pores and congestion. If you want to improve your skin’s overall appearance – refine texture, even tone, improve clarity and minimise fine lines and wrinkles – look for masks that contain collagen peptides, acids and vitamins A, C and B5. Skin damage can be caused by ageing, stress, sun and pollution, and the above ingredients and powerful antioxidants work to counteract this damage and repair skin. Sheet masks continue to have their major moment. As well as getting great results, they’re a fun, pampering treat as part of a relaxing self-care ritual. These single-use superstars are fabulous for hydrating, nourishing and brightening skin and work particularly well on the go, especially during long flights. Applying a sheet mask before a night out is Beauty Editor AMY HOULIHAN also a great way to get a beautifully plumped, primed and glowy canvas for your makeup. The sheet-masking trend has also inspired the creation of innovative eye and lip masks, where the full face-mask concept targets specific areas that require a little more TLC. Under-eye masks are little serumsoaked cloth or gel pads that work to rejuvenate the look and feel of the area, as well as cooling, soothing, depuffing and tightening. Lip masks are either pout-shaped patches infused with hydrating, soothing properties, or rich balms and butters to massage in. Next-generation light masks take things to a whole new level. They’re designed to offer the soothing, skin-stimulating and rejuvenating properties of in-clinic LED light therapy. Blue light destroys acne-causing bacteria and encourages healing, while red light boosts collagen and elastin and enhances natural defence mechanisms. They’re not cheap, and they may scare your children, but they’ve had amazing reviews and become a cult favourite among skincare aficionados. Woman | 63
Here are a selection of new and old masks that cover all bases. Beauty Editor AMY HOULIHAN MURAD CLARIFYING MASK, $80. This soothing, medicated mask has a clay-based formula that helps treat and prevent breakouts. It’s the perfect addition to ˔˦˘˥˜ˢ˨˦˔˖ˡ˘ʠЃ˚˛˧˜ˡ˚ regime and includes kaolin and bentonite to purify and deep clean, while sulphur reduces the severity of pimples as it encourages skin to heal. 64 | Woman DR DENNIS GROSS SPECTRALITE FACEWARE PRO, $711. Said to “reverse years of damage with zero downtime”, this device offers a three-minute wrinkle-reducing, acneЃ˚˛˧˜ˡ˚˧˥˘˔˧ˠ˘ˡ˧˙ˢ˥ your entire face. It’s Ѓ˧˧˘˗˪˜˧˛ʤʣʣ˥˘˗ʿʸʷ lights and 62 blue. BONDI SANDS PURE SELF TANNING SLEEP MASK, $26.99. This handy hybrid imparts a gorgeous golden glow and also Єˢˢ˗˦˧˛˘˦˞˜ˡˢ˩˘˥ˡ˜˚˛˧ with hyaluronic acid for hydration, vitamin C for brightening and vitamin E for repair. ESTÉE LAUDER ADVANCED NIGHT REPAIR EYE MASKS, $92. These under-eye pads are infused with the iconic Advanced Night Repair serum and when used at night weekly, will soothe, hydrate and refresh ˗˘˟˜˖˔˧˘˦˞˜ˡʡʿ˘˔˩˘ˢˡ ˙ˢ˥ʤʣˠ˜ˡ˨˧˘˦ʟ˧˛˘ˡˣ˔˧ in any leftover serum. LEMON & BEAKER GALVANIC BRIGHTENING SHEET MASK, $25. A sheet mask that’s a little different from the rest. It has microcurrent galvanic charged points that allow better delivery of its semigel serum. The serum has been formulated to provide intense ˛ˬ˗˥˔˧˜ˢˡʟ˪˜˧˛ˠ͓ˡ˨˞˔ oil to nourish skin, along with harakeke extract to soothe and replenish. DR LEWINN’S ULTRA R4 COLLAGEN SURGE OVERNIGHT SLEEP MASK, $84.99. With more and more consumers seeking solutions to enhance sleep and reduce telltale signs of exhaustion, the “anti-fatigue market” is taking off. This new mask is formulated with a complex range of active ingredients, including collagen peptides and a sleep fragrance, to transform skin overnight. It comes in a dualchamber delivery system, which results in double the serum power.
dry skin? Rosehip Oil is scientifically proven to reduce the appearance of fine lines, stretch marks, and improve the look of skin firmness, while boosting moisture and hydrating the skin. Try the below regime or click on the QR code below to find the perfect skincare regime for you. Hydrating Rosehip Hydrating Rosehip Hydrating Rosehip GEL FOAMING CLEANSER CERTIFIED ORGANIC ROSEHIP OIL REGENERATING MOISTURISER • Combines active natural New Zealand botanicals (Harakeke and Mamaku) with cold pressed Rosehip Oil • Cleanses without stripping your skin’s natural oils • Prepares your skin for better absorption of actives Scientifically formulated to help: • Soften the look of scars, fine lines and stretch marks • Boost moisture and hydrate the skin • Improve the look of your skin’s firmness and even out skin tone Scientifically formulated to help: • Provide daily skin nourishment and intense hydration • Restore skin’s protective moisture barrier • Improve the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles essano.co.nz essano_beauty essanobeauty To get your very own customised essanoTM skincare routine, head to essano.co.nz or simply scan the code. CRUELTY FREE
MOTHER’S DAY Treat your queen to one of these covetable beauty gifts this Mother’s Day. From stunning New Zealand-made home fragrances to luxurious skincare, candles and cosmetics, you’ll find something here to show how much you adore her. 1 1 2 Perfect for warming up winter evenings at home, Ecoya’s new limited-edition fragrance is a sweet, velvety, comforting and creamy one. The Madison candle combines notes of cassis cream, blackberries and honeycomb atop warm wintery notes of sandalwood, vanilla and white musk. eyeshadow palette includes five perfectly matched matte and shimmer shades that are ideal for sensitive eyes, as they’re made with finely milled mineral pigments. It makes a great gift, as the colours are universally flattering and matched to complement each other perfectly. Ecoya Limited Edition Honeycomb & Cassis Madison Candle, $54.95. Jane Iredale Pure Pressed Eyeshadow Palette, various prices. 2 As we’re still wearing masks when we’re out and about, it’s all about the eyes right now. This gorgeous new 3 Instead of flowers, why not gift Mum a florally fragranced candle that’ll last much longer? This limitededition, triple-scented soy candle contains notes of water lily and yuzu and comes in a glass 6 vessel that’s adorned with scenes from an enchanted garden. Glasshouse Fragrances Limited Edition Velvet Rhapsody TripleScented Soy Candles, $59.99. 4 Shiseido’s Ultimune Power Concentrate is a bestselling serum that works to prevent skin damage caused by ageing, while enhancing its smoothness and radiance. This gift set comes in a pretty box that also contains a clarifying cleansing foam, which takes care of two key steps in a great skincare regime. Shiseido Ultimune set, $200 (valued at $265). 5 If Mum is a fan of Lancôme’s iconic La Vie Est Belle fragrance, or she loves elegant, fresh, floral scents, she’ll adore the latest incarnation in the line. The bottle comes emblazoned with a beautiful crystal motif, so makes a stunning 7 66 | Woman
Beauty Editor AMY HOULIHAN 4 addition to a bathroom shelf or dressing table. Lancôme Oui La Vie Est Belle, $145, 50ml. 6 Beauty from the inside out is one of the industry’s biggest trends, and these four mini-bio-fermented elixirs are targeted to suit specific skin needs. Each does a precise job when it comes to assisting skin from within and they help with hydration and gut health, refreshing fatigued and stressed skin and strengthening hair and nails – to name a few. 8 Take Mum on a trip down memory lane and help her create a sense of aromatic calm at home with these beautifully boxed incense sticks. They’re infused with one The Virtue’s eight decadent, unique fragrances, which are made right here in New Zealand. Founder Brooke Lean says, “We want to elevate the perception of incense, releasing those childhood or teenage memories of overwhelming white sage, and inviting lovers of home fragrance to usher in a new, modern take on incense that 5 creates a type of exquisite ritual, elevating our existence in and around our home.” The Virtue Premium HandRolled Charcoal Incense, $58 for a pack of 50 sticks. 9 This new fragrance diffuser is perfect for women who love fresh, clean and uplifting scents in their home. It’s fragranced with top notes of citrus and pear, layered over a blend of marine, green florals and lily. Linden Leaves Aqua Lily Midi Fragrance Diffuser, $24.99. The Beauty Chef Brighter Boost Set, $54. 7 Powered with East Cape mānuka oil and rosehip oil, this pack has been curated to cover every step of a skincare routine and focuses on protecting and rejuvenating skin. It’s 100 percent natural and New Zealand-made, with the day cream, night cream, cream cleanser, skin oil and eye cream working with each other to reduce the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles. ˀ͓ˡ˨˞˔˅˫ Pro-Aging Ritual, $211.75. 8 TREATS 3 9
HEALTH hauora AN APP for that T here’s much talk these days about how damaging it is to be glued to our phones 24/7. Constant scrolling is bad for our mental health, we’re told, sets a bad example for our kids, and even causes neck and back pain. But there’s another side to tech: its power can be harnessed for good, and even to improve our health. Here’s a rundown of some of the apps, sites and resources we can use to help us be healthier. Diet trackers If we’re wanting to eat better, there’s value in keeping track of what we’re actually eating. It’s a good starting point for any change we’re looking to make, establishing a baseline and helping to identify any surprises: patterns or habits that are not serving our health. Once we start a new habit, tracking what we’re eating can help keep us on the right path; there’s nothing like being accountable for what we’re doing, even when it’s just to an electronic helper. Diet 68 | Woman Diet tracking apps can help motivate you to start good, healthy habits and keep them going, and can also be very educational when it comes to nutrition. trackers can also be educational, too. For example, it’s fascinating to see where the calcium, protein and fibre are coming from in my diet. They can be timeconsuming, though, and it’s not the most intuitive way to eat, but for short bursts, take your pick from a range of useful apps. For a fuller picture, choose one that also tracks your activity. O MY FAVOURITE: Easy Diet Diary is based on local data, meaning it’s more accurate for New Zealand. And you can scan barcodes and add your favourite branded foods. O CAUTION NEEDED: If you’ve had an eating disorder, diet trackers are not for you. For everyone else, if you start to feel controlled by the need to record your food, step away. O SPECIAL MENTION: Other online services that can lead to better eating include meal delivery subscriptions – they put healthy food right into your kitchen – and grocery shopping, which can help avoid impulse supermarket purchases. PHOTO: GETTY. Can technology help us become healthier?
Online workouts Health Editor NIKI BEZZANT THERE’S EVIDENCE Gyms are great and so are self-directed exercise regimens such as running, cycling and walking. But if working out in the convenience of your living room has appeal, there are thousands of options to choose from, and many are excellent and – bonus – free! If you’re looking for quality online workouts on YouTube or other platforms, go for qualified, experienced trainers. Search using criteria that are meaningful for you: whether it’s strength training for women over 40, or a quick yoga workout – whatever you’re after, there’s a video or channel for you. O MY FAVOURITE: I love Canadian trainer PJ Wren, who specialises in workouts for women over 50. Search for “Fitness with PJ” on YouTube. Sleep aids There are a tonne of apps aimed at SOCIAL MEDIA CAN MAKE improving the quality and quantity of our sleep. Some track your habits to help US FEEL MORE ANXIOUS develop good sleep routines, whereas others use calming meditation, stories, AND LESS HAPPY, AND videos and music to help you fall asleep. It AFFECT OUR SELF-IMAGE might take a bit of trial and error to find what works best for you. And don’t forget IN NEGATIVE WAYS. IF your phone probably has inbuilt functions YOU FOLLOW PEOPLE you can use to help you sleep, too. O MY FAVOURITE: I’ve set up the WHOSE POSTS MAKE YOU “bedtime” function on my phone to remind FEEL BAD ABOUT me to wind down half an hour before bed, and to turn off all notifications at night YOURSELF – HIT THE until the alarm goes in the morning. It also tracks my sleep against my sleep goals. If UNFOLLOW BUTTON. it’s an app you’re after, Calm features guided meditation, sleep-inducing music and just-boring-enough stories to help you drop off. Symptom trackers and health O SPECIAL MENTION: The SnoreLab app is a boon condition apps for night-time buzzsaws: record your snoring and you If you’re struggling with a health condition, some apps might discover useful ways to alleviate it. It can even can give insights into what’s going on. Choose from help diagnose sleep apnoea. period trackers or apps that nudge us to drink more Mental health helpers water, through to symptom trackers for particular We live in anxious times, so it’s no surprise there are health challenges. When it comes to symptoms, it’s not lots of tech solutions to ease stress, anxiety and other always easy to remember what happened and when, so mental health issues. A great free resource if you’re tracking can provide a record to take to your doctor. It feeling really down is the 1737 phone or text line. may also help identify triggers for certain symptoms. O MY FAVOURITES: The Monash University FODMAP Available any time, day or night, it puts you in contact Diet app is a “gold standard” for irritable bowel with a trained professional to talk things through. On syndrome sufferers. If you’re trying to figure out what’s the app front, search for “anxiety” and you’ll find a happening in your perimenopausal body, the Balance heap of helpers, from breathing and meditation apps app is a comprehensive way to track symptoms and to the very cute Worrydolls app that lets you offload to cycles and get accurate advice. a digital doll. O CAUTION NEEDED: If you have any abnormal O MY FAVOURITE: Calm is a stress-busting app that symptoms, don’t self-diagnose (especially not with an can guide you through calming meditation to help with app!). Make sure you get checked out properly before anxiety, sleep and focus. It even has mood-boosting using any digital management tools. workouts to try. Woman | 69
FOOD kai Taking your pulses Sophie Steevens shares delicious, healthy and versatile plant-based meals from her new book Simple Wholefoods. Mediterranean smashed chickpea sandwich filler Serves 3 400g can chickpeas, drained and rinsed (or 1½ cups cooked chickpeas) ¼ cupЃˡ˘˟ˬ˖˛ˢˣˣ˘˗˙˥˘˦˛ˣ˔˥˦˟˘ˬ ¼ cupЃˡ˘˟ˬ˗˜˖˘˗˥˘˗˖˔ˣ˦˜˖˨ˠ 6-8 pitted˕˟˔˖˞ˢ˥˚˥˘˘ˡˢ˟˜˩˘˦ʟЃˡ˘˟ˬ˦˟˜˖˘˗ ½ tsp onion powder ¼ tsp˚˥ˢ˨ˡ˗˧˨˥ˠ˘˥˜˖ 2 tbsp˛˨˟˟˘˗˧˔˛˜ˡ˜ 2 tbsp ˟˘ˠˢˡ˝˨˜˖˘ 1 tbspˣ˨˥˘ˠ˔ˣ˟˘˦ˬ˥˨ˣ 1 tbsp˪˛ˢ˟˘˚˥˔˜ˡˠ˨˦˧˔˥˗ sea salt and cracked pepper˧ˢ˧˔˦˧˘ TO SERVE (OPTIONAL) ˟˘˧˧˨˖˘ˢ˥˦˜˟˩˘˥˕˘˘˧˖˨ˣ˦ ˦˟˜˖˘˗˦ˣ˥˜ˡ˚ˢˡ˜ˢˡ ˖˛˜˟˟˜Є˔˞˘˦ 70 | Woman 1. I love the flavour combination of this easy egg-like mash, which can be put together in just five minutes. This recipe is a great one to make ahead and have in the fridge for a wholesome bite, ready to be dolloped into sandwiches or leafy green lettuce cups. Chickpeas are high in fibre, with a mild flavour and soft texture that makes them a versatile addition to many plant-based meals. You’ll even find them in baked treats! They work well in this recipe as a mashed egg or tuna replacement. 2. Place the chickpeas in a bowl and mash with a fork, leaving a few small chunks. 3. Add the parsley, capsicum, olives, onion powder and turmeric, then toss to combine. 4. In a separate bowl, place the tahini, lemon juice, maple syrup and wholegrain mustard. Whisk until smooth. 5. Add the tahini mixture to the chickpeas, mix to combine, then season to taste. 6. To serve, spoon into lettuce or silverbeet cups and top with spring onion and chilli flakes if desired. Any leftovers can be stored in a sealed container in the fridge for up to five days.
Recipes extracted from Simple Wholefoods by Sophie Steevens, Allen & Unwin, RRP $49.99. Woman | 71
Spiced roast cauliflower, green lentils and toasted almonds with smoky yoghurt Serves 4 or 6-8 as a side SPICED CAULIFLOWER 1 head˖˔˨˟˜Єˢ˪˘˥ʟ˖˨˧˜ˡ˧ˢЄˢ˥˘˧˦ʟ˧˛˘ˡ˧˛˜˖˞˟ˬ˦˟˜˖˘˗ 2 tbspˢ˟˜˩˘ˢ˜˟ 1 tsp˚˥ˢ˨ˡ˗˖˨ˠ˜ˡ 1 tsp˚˥ˢ˨ˡ˗˧˨˥ˠ˘˥˜˖ 1 tspˣ˔ˣ˥˜˞˔ ½ tspˢˡ˜ˢˡˣˢ˪˗˘˥ pinch˖˔ˬ˘ˡˡ˘ˣ˘ˣˣ˘˥ʛˢˣ˧˜ˢˡ˔˟ʜ LENTIL BASE 1 cup ˗˥˜˘˗˚˥˘˘ˡ˟˘ˡ˧˜˟˦ʟ˥˜ˡ˦˘˗ 3 cups˪˔˧˘˥ ¾ cup˦˟˜˖˘˗˔˟ˠˢˡ˗˦ 1½ cupsЃˡ˘˟ˬ˦˟˜˖˘˗˖˨˥˟ˬ˞˔˟˘ˢ˥˖˔˩ˢ˟ˢˡ˘˥ˢ˟˘˔˩˘˦ 1 cup˥ˢ˨˚˛˟ˬ˖˛ˢˣˣ˘˗˙˥˘˦˛ˠ˜ˡ˧˟˘˔˩˘˦ʟˣ˟˨˦˘˫˧˥˔ ˠ˜ˡ˧˟˘˔˩˘˦˧ˢ˦˘˥˩˘ 2 tbsp˧˔ˠ˔˥˜ 3 tbsp˟˘ˠˢˡ˝˨˜˖˘ 1 tbsp˖ˢ˥˜˔ˡ˗˘˥˦˘˘˗˦ 1 tbspˣ˨˥˘ˠ˔ˣ˟˘˦ˬ˥˨ˣ 1 tsp˦˘˔˦˔˟˧ SMOKY YOGHURT DRESSING ½ cup˖ˢ˖ˢˡ˨˧ˬˢ˚˛˨˥˧ 1 tbsp˟˘ˠˢˡ˝˨˜˖˘ 2 tsp˧˔ˠ˔˥˜ 1 tspˣ˨˥˘ˠ˔ˣ˟˘˦ˬ˥˨ˣ ½-¾ tsp˦ˠˢ˞˘˗ˣ˔ˣ˥˜˞˔ ½ tsp˚˔˥˟˜˖ˣˢ˪˗˘˥ 1. Preheat the oven to 180°C fan-bake. Line a large baking tray with baking paper. 2. SPICED CAULIFLOWER Place all the ingredients in a bowl and toss until the cauliflower is evenly coated in the spices. Transfer to the prepared tray and spread out in a single layer. Bake for about 25 minutes, or until cauliflower is tender. 3. LENTIL BASE Place the lentils and water in a saucepan, cover, then bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer for 20-25 minutes, or until soft. Drain and set aside. 4. Heat a small frying pan over medium-high heat. Add the almonds, then toast, swirling the pan almost constantly to avoid burning, for about 2 minutes or until fragrant. 5. SMOKY YOGHURT DRESSING Place all the ingredients in a bowl and mix to combine. 6. To make the salad, put the kale, mint, tamari, lemon juice, coriander seeds, maple syrup and salt in a large bowl. Add the roasted cauliflower, lentils and most of the toasted almonds, then toss to combine. 7. To serve, transfer the salad to a serving plate and scatter over the reserved almonds and the extra mint leaves. Drizzle over the smoky yoghurt. Serve any remaining dressing on the side. 72 | Woman Be adventurous with roast cauliflower. I love combining it with legumes, such as chickpeas and lentils, or gluten-free wholegrains to create a solid salad base. In this salad, the spiced cauliflower plays against the carefully curated lentil mixture, and it’s finished with a drizzle of the flavoursome yoghurt to conquer an outstanding, hearty salad.
Garlic broccoli, chickpeas, red chilli and rocket with turmeric tahini yoghurt Serves 4 or 6-8 as a side 3 small heads of broccoli, cut into ˦ˠ˔˟˟Єˢ˥˘˧˦ 400g can chickpeas, drained and rinsed (or 1 ½ cups cooked chickpeas) 8 garlic clovesʟЃˡ˘˟ˬ˖˛ˢˣˣ˘˗ olive oil (optional) sea salt and cracked pepper to taste ¼ cup pine nuts 2 large˛˔ˡ˗˙˨˟˦˕˔˕ˬ˥ˢ˖˞˘˧˟˘˔˩˘˦ 1-2 red ˖˛˜˟˟˜˘˦ʟЃˡ˘˟ˬ˦˟˜˖˘˗ʛ˦˘˘˗˜˙ desired) 1 avocado, stoned and sliced TURMERIC TAHINI YOGHURT 1/ 3 cup ˖ˢ˖ˢˡ˨˧ˬˢ˚˛˨˥˧ 2 tbsp hulled tahini 2 tbsp lemon juice 1 tbsp tamari 1 tbspˣ˨˥˘ˠ˔ˣ˟˘˦ˬ˥˨ˣ ½ tsp˚˥ˢ˨ˡ˗˧˨˥ˠ˘˥˜˖ ½ tsp˔ˣˣ˟˘˖˜˗˘˥˩˜ˡ˘˚˔˥ ½ tsp˚˔˥˟˜˖ˣˢ˪˗˘˥ ¼ tspˠ˜˟˗ˬ˘˟˟ˢ˪˖˨˥˥ˬˣˢ˪˗˘˥ 1. Preheat the oven to 180°C fan-bake. Line a large baking tray with baking paper. 2. Spread the broccoli, chickpeas and garlic evenly on the prepared tray. Lightly drizzle with olive oil, if using, then season to taste. Bake for 15-18 minutes, or until the broccoli is just tender and slightly charred. 3. Meanwhile, heat a frying pan over medium heat. Add the pine nuts and cook, tossing frequently to avoid burning, for about 2 minutes or until fragrant. Set aside. 4. Place all the turmeric tahini yoghurt ingredients in a small bowl, then mix until smooth and creamy. 5. To serve, place all the ingredients in a large bowl, reserving some chilli slices to garnish, and gently toss to combine. Transfer to a serving plate and garnish with extra slices of chilli. Woman | 73
Creamy Alfredo spaghetti with caramelised onion, broccoli and cheesy kale Serves 4 1 head˕˥ˢ˖˖ˢ˟˜ʟ˖˨˧˜ˡ˧ˢЄˢ˥˘˧˦ 250g˚˟˨˧˘ˡʠ˙˥˘˘˦ˣ˔˚˛˘˧˧˜ CHEESY KALE 1 bunch˖˨˥˟ˬ˞˔˟˘ˢ˥˖˔˩ˢ˟ˢˡ˘˥ˢʟ˦˧˘ˠ˦˥˘ˠˢ˩˘˗ʟ ˟˘˔˩˘˦˥ˢ˨˚˛˟ˬ˖˛ˢˣˣ˘˗ 2 tspˢ˟˜˩˘ˢ˜˟ 2 tbspˡ˨˧˥˜˧˜ˢˡ˔˟ˬ˘˔˦˧ sea salt and cracked pepperʟ˧ˢ˧˔˦˧˘ ¼ cup˙˥˘˦˛˧˛ˬˠ˘˟˘˔˩˘˦ ¼-½ tsp˖˛˜˟˟˜Є˔˞˘˦ʛˢˣ˧˜ˢˡ˔˟ʜ CARAMELISED ONIONS 1 tbspˢ˟˜˩˘ˢ˥˔˩ˢ˖˔˗ˢˢ˜˟ʛˢˣ˧˜ˢˡ˔˟ʜ 2 large˥˘˗ˢˡ˜ˢˡ˦ʟ˦˟˜˖˘˗ 2 tbsp˕˔˟˦˔ˠ˜˖˩˜ˡ˘˚˔˥ 1½ tbsp˖ˢ˖ˢˡ˨˧˦˨˚˔˥ˢ˥ˣ˨˥˘ˠ˔ˣ˟˘˦ˬ˥˨ˣ CREAMY ALFREDO SAUCE 1 cup˥˔˪˖˔˦˛˘˪˦ʟˣ˥˘ʠ˦ˢ˔˞˘˗ ¾ cup˥˜˖˘ˠ˜˟˞ʛˢ˥ˢ˧˛˘˥ˣ˟˔ˡ˧ˠ˜˟˞ʜ ½ cupˡ˨˧˥˜˧˜ˢˡ˔˟ˬ˘˔˦˧ 2 celery stalks 2 tbsp˟˘ˠˢˡ˝˨˜˖˘ 2 garlic cloves 1 tbsp˪˛ˢ˟˘˚˥˔˜ˡˠ˨˦˧˔˥˗ 1 tbsp˙˥˘˦˛˥ˢ˦˘ˠ˔˥ˬ˟˘˔˩˘˦ ¼ tsp˦˘˔˦˔˟˧ 1. Preheat the oven to 180°C fan-bake. Line a large baking tray with baking paper. 2. CHEESY KALE Place the kale or cavolo nero and oil in a large bowl. Using your hands, massage the oil into the leaves for about 1 minute or until they begin to soften. Add the yeast, season to taste, then massage the flavours into the leaves until evenly coated. Set aside. 3. Spread the broccoli on the prepared tray in a single layer. Bake for 10 minutes. Add the kale, then bake for a further 10 minutes, or until the broccoli is just tender and the kale is wilted and slightly charred. Watch closely as the kale will burn quickly. 4. Bring a large saucepan of water to a boil. Add the pasta, then cook according to the packet instructions. 5. CARAMELISED ONIONS Heat the oil, if using, in a large frying pan over medium-high heat. Add the onion, then cook for 10 minutes, stirring frequently, until very soft and starting to caramelise. Add the vinegar and coconut sugar, reduce the heat, then continue to cook for a further five minutes, or until the onion mixture is dark brown and caramelised. 6. CREAMY ALFREDO SAUCE Blitz all the ingredients in a blender for 30 seconds or until smooth and creamy. 7. Drain the pasta, then transfer to a large serving bowl. Add the caramelised onion, broccoli and kale, thyme leaves and chilli flakes (if using), then pour over the sauce. Gently mix everything until well combined. 74 | Woman You can definitely count on this comforting pasta for an easy weekday dinner. There are many things to love about it, from the cheesy, crispy kale to the caramelised onion, flavourful Alfredo sauce and aromatic fresh thyme. Each element does its part to create a heavenly pasta dish everyone will love.
Rocky road bars Makes 16 bars ½ cup coconut oil ½ cup pure maple syrup 1/ 3 cup plus 1 tbsp cacao powder 1 tbsp ˖ˢ˖ˢˡ˨˧Єˢ˨˥ 1 tbsp pure vanilla extract pinch sea salt 1 cup shredded coconut ¾ cup dried cranberries ½ cup raisins ½ cup hazelnuts ½ cup almonds ¼ cup hemp seeds 1. This simple rocky road chocolate bar celebrates wholefoods and all the sweet, earthy goodness they provide. I love how versatile this recipe is. You can easily swap any of the chunky wholefoods with whatever you have in your pantry. The numerous textural components add a little crunch and a touch of sweet chewiness, all suspended in a dark, decadent chocolate. It’s an on-the-go energising chocolate fix. 2. Line a 20 x 28cm rectangular dish with baking paper. 3. Heat a small saucepan over medium heat. Add the coconut oil, maple syrup, all of the cacao powder, the coconut flour, vanilla and salt, then stir until the coconut oil is melted and the ingredients are combined. Remove from the heat. Add the remaining ingredients and stir to combine into a thick mixture. 4. Tip the mixture into the prepared dish, then spread out evenly. Freeze for 1-2 hours to set. 5. To serve, remove from the dish and slice into 16 bars. Store in a sealed container in the fridge or freezer.
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78 | Woman The MOTHER’S MIX
From Anika Moa to Dolly Parton, Victoria Spence dives into a musical exploration of ‘mother’ and creates a playlist of songs that go straight to the heart. Y ou can go very deep when you start examining the notion of motherhood, but I’m not here to lay down a treatise on the Cult of Domesticity or third-wave feminism. Instead, let’s make a musical exploration of “mother”, lending our ears to the textures of verb, noun and social construct. This month’s lovingly curated playlist mines the rich seam that nourishes (if we’ve been lucky). With hanky tucked in bra, we’ll traverse the emotional landscape of coming home, coming out, birthing, ageing and grieving. Some tracks I’ll hold forth on – others I’ll leave you to discover for yourself. Scanned the playlist’s QR code? After you. To begin, we must grasp the nettle and deal with that Kate Bush ugly-crying classic This Woman’s Work. Unscientific polling puts this at the top of the “songs about motherhood that get you in the feels” list. I know I put in the hours in 1992, lying on the dusty floor of our flat, swollen legs up the wall, desperately trying to commune with my unborn child. For the 1988 John Hughes movie She’s Having a Baby, the burning Bush (as she was once described) had to write it not just from a male perspective, but also around previously filmed scenes. Take a moment if you need to. The Goddess is alive and magic is definitely afoot when Chrissie Hynde gently implores “Let me inside you . . .” on Hymn to Her. Littered with gynaecological imagery and pagan references, it excited male music critics who frothed about “the eternal feminine” (gag) and “the spirit behind the Mists of Avalon” (eye roll). It’s just a lovely song that always made me glad to have a couple of X chromosomes. Similarly defying a straight read is the Cocteau Twins’ For Phoebe Still a Baby. It’s wafty nonsense, and you’ll need to google the lyrics to understand a single word, but, oh, it’s glorious. Tracey Thorn (the “girl” half of Everything But The Girl) has long been a musical spirit guide. She’s actually a close friend but just doesn’t know it. Since the early 1980s, she’s written about wanting babies, having babies, the babies leaving home, contraception and menopause. Her superb 2018 album Record gave up (surprise!) Babies, a thrumming gem that totally gets the full 3D experience of mothering “Lay your Left: Country music queen Dolly Parton tells the story of where she came from in her song Coat of Many Colors. Right: Kate Bush’s This Woman’s Work, the ultimate ode to motherhood, tugs at the heartstrings every time. pretty head down, get the f**k to bed now.” Aotearoa’s Anika Moa has used motherhood to connect with a whole new audience – the babies of the world. Her smashing Songs for Bubbas recordings are not just for the kids – you can drop the metaphorical needle anywhere on these albums and be very happy. Her delicate reading of Hirini Melbourne’s Purea Nei fills the heart. Another wahine for whom motherhood has brought a life change is Dame Hinewehi Mohi. Her daughter Hineraukatauri’s startling response to music was the inspiration to set up the Raukatauri Music Therapy Centre in Tāmaki Makaurau in 2004. Hineraukatauri lives with cerebral palsy and is named after the Māori Goddess of Flutes – the sound of which is the ethereal thread that runs through the song named for her. A good son will pay tribute, such as the late Justin Townes Earle did in Mama’s Eyes. Lefty Frizzell’s 1951 devotional Mom & Dad’s Waltz is beautifully rendered by long-time fan Willie Nelson: “I’d fight in wars, do all the chores, for my mama and daddy”. Swinging into the early 2000s, the Elton-flavoured Take Your Mama chronicles a boy coming out to his mother, based on the Scissor Sisters’ lead singer Jake Shears’ personal experience. A woman is always grateful for an excuse to get “jacked up on some cheap champagne”, so come at me with your revelations, kids. My Mr and I are fond of nerdy musings and we’ve Woman | 79
Left: Emmylou Harris will leave you feeling emotional with her poignant song Calling My Children Home. Below: Motherhood was transformational for Dame Hinewehi Mohi, who was inspired by her daughter to set up the Raukatauri Music Therapy Centre. been trying to settle on the meaning of Mott The Hoople’s I Wish I Was Your Mother – a Dylan-esque heartbreaker in THIS MONTH’S which lead singer Ian Hunter (consensus LOVINGLY would have it) lays out all the ways in which he is a terrible lover and generally CURATED PLAYLIST unworthy. It’s not surprising to hear Marty MINES THE RICH Duda, MTH super-fan, describe whole audiences of grown men weeping along to SEAM THAT this song as the lyrics alone belie the deep emotional well of the song. The night of the NOURISHES (IF Christchurch mosque killings, visiting WE’VE BEEN musician Alejandro Escovedo, empath to a T, walked through the audience at LUCKY). Auckland’s Tuning Fork venue singing this song to connect with his shaken audience. Comfort can come from strange musical origins – apparently born of a musing on life and death, Mother and Child Reunion correctly stays on the poignant side of maudlin. Freshly released from Simon & Garfunkel and reggae-curious, Paul Simon used Jimmy Cliff’s band for the music track and the backing vocalists included Cissy *Scan this code Houston, mother of the mega-famous Whitney. in the Spotify Legend has it that at the time of its release, this was a app to listen to favourite of inmates in South African jails who, on the the playlist eve of an execution, would sing songs into the night. I know, sorry. Let’s finish by taking a tour through the Mom-and- 80 | Woman apple-pie world of Americana, starting at the source with Dolly Parton’s dirt-poor origin story Coat of Many Colors. Then hit the back roads with the Be Good Tanyas’ Draft Daughter’s Blues, a staple of road-trip playlists when the women in our whānau are on the hoof. The youngest would bellow out the order from the back seat to “PLAY THE SHEEP LADIES!”. Frazey Ford’s homespun vibrato is, erm, distinctive – everyone’s a critic, but don’t let that put you off. Head south to Lake Charles, Louisiana, to hear Lucinda Williams’ heartbreak on Mama You Sweet. Approaching spoken-word poetry, Lucinda lays out a sensual invocation of her late mother bracketed in lyrical washes of melody. If, like me, your kids have all left home, then Emmylou Harris will have you on the floor with her a cappella version of Calling My Children Home, recorded live in Nashville’s hallowed Ryman Auditorium, aptly referred to as the Mother Church of Country Music. Of course, when the children do all come home, the glow lasts about 48 hours and then they revert to being horizontal teens, drinking all the good gin and asking vile questions like, “What’s for dinner?” Music guides us through the rites of passage, from childhood into the whirlwind of adolescence, through love and heartbreak and then the lessons of parenthood and old age. In these times of hormonal and global brouhaha, a good song soothes the soul. Hallelujah, and pass the HRT.
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BOOKS pukapuka The novel portrays a mother-daughter relationship with brilliant and vivid intensity. Do you have a child? How old are you and how long have you been writing? I’m 48. I’ve always written, but for a long time I did it around the edges of everything else in my life. I travelled and lived in other places, worked all kinds of jobs. I was an actor and theatre maker and I spent years in Australia immersed in social justice and environmental activism. Between my mid-20s and my late 30s, I wrote a collection of stories and a novel for children. The novel was better than the stories, but neither was good enough to get published. At 40, all I had to show for years of work was a handful of stories in literary journals and some freelance travel writing. Unsheltered had been growing in my head for a while, but I was afraid of spending the next decade on another book that would turn out to be unpublishable. Around then, a friend suggested applying to the MA in Creative Writing programme at Te Pūtahi Tuhi Auaha o te Ao/The International Institute of Modern Letters. How hard was it to write this novel and what was the process – did it take a long time? There are whole layers of a book that happen before you start to write it. Some of the things that fed Unsheltered were hard. And the two-and-a-half years of rewriting and trying to find an agent felt like a wilderness at times. But the eight months I spent writing the first draft at the IIML were some of the most vivid and satisfying months of my life. I was ready to write about big things that mattered to me, and I wanted to do them justice, so I pushed myself to imagine and inhabit every aspect of my story as fully as I could. And for the first time, I experienced the kind of imaginative leaps you can make when you put writing at the centre of your life and immerse yourself in it. 82 | Woman Name a book you read as a child that got you. The Neverending Story by Michael Ende. Epic, hugely imaginative, morally complex. It’s a story about storytelling. My parents gave it to me for Christmas when I was 10, and I lay under the “I EXPERIENCED tree and just mainlined it. I read it THE KIND OF over and over through my childhood, teens and early 20s, and IMAGINATIVE every time, I worried that I was going to wreck it or see through it LEAPS YOU CAN somehow. Then a few years ago, I MAKE WHEN YOU read it to my own kid and, hearing it out loud, I was struck by the PUT WRITING AT spareness of the descriptions – how THE CENTRE OF much space he’d left that I’d filled in in my head. So I got something new YOUR LIFE.” from it: a lesson about the imaginative act of reader meeting writer. Name a writer or two you admire. Two very different writers I admire have debut story collections out this year: Maria Samuela’s Beats of the Pa’u and Anthony Lapwood’s Home Theatre. Both books started life in our shared MA year and it’s great to see them out in the light. What was the last book you read that affected you? The book I’ve just finished, that still has me under its spell, is Cal, by Bernard MacLaverty. It’s a love story set in early-1980s Belfast and I first read it when I was about the same age as the 19-year-old protagonist. A conversation with a friend sent me back to my bookshelf to see if it was as good as I remembered. It’s better. Unbearably tender, alive to the conscience, it builds and builds the tension between what people long for and what the world will let them have. It made me cry again, but for different reasons. PHOTO: EBONY LAMB. In her stunning debut novel about the big things that matter to her, Clare Moleta has included aspects of her own life as a mother – for better or worse. I do have a child – almost a teenager now – and there’s a lot of her younger self in Matti. Other kids, too, including me! For better or worse, there’s also a lot of me as a mother. In a way, Unsheltered is a conversation with myself about motherhood. The mythology and expectations of it, pressed up against the messy, self-doubting, intensely loving, constantly failing experience. But it’s also a conversation about the world our children will walk out into. About how to be a parent if you’re losing faith in the future.
Notes to Myself Clare Moleta: “In a way, Unsheltered is a conversation with myself about motherhood.” Woman | 83
The compelling story of a mother’s lonely search for her lost child is a fresh and brilliant debut, writes Anne Kennedy. Unsheltered by Clare Moleta (Simon & Schuster/Scribner, $35) E very so often, a novel comes along that has everything: a compelling narrative, a beautifully calibrated voice, a story that speaks fearlessly to our times, plus – incredibly – it’s fresh from the keyboard of a debut writer. Clare Moleta’s dystopian thriller-butliterary Unsheltered is such a novel. When considered among other works in this genre, such as Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, Charlotte Wood’s The Natural Way of Things, and various Margaret Atwoods, Unsheltered is without question their equal. The story follows 30-something Li as she searches for her lost eight-year-old daughter Matti across a future Australia that isn’t so lucky anymore. A broken, post-climate-disaster, it is in the grip of a military coup, and at war with a neighbouring country. While Unsheltered is invented, never sure about motherhood, a doubt and the techniques of literary suspense cemented by Matti always preferring are used with imagination and skill, the her father. This topic is reminiscent of IT SEEMS WE’RE chilling thing is, in our world of climate The Lost Daughter; it seems we’re okay OKAY NOW WITH change and creeping authoritarianism, now with exploring flawed, or at least it all feels possible. Moleta’s opening self-doubting, mothers. When Li finds EXPLORING epigraph from The Grapes of Wrath herself searching alone for Matti, the FLAWED, OR AT rings eerily true. And although responsibility weighs heavily. But as Unsheltered has a global message, it with all the threads in Unsheltered, it’s LEAST SELFspeaks specifically to an Australia that grist to the mill of the novel. Against a stole a generation of Aboriginal backdrop of catastrophe, Li’s honest, DOUBTING, children, imprisons refugees, and textured interiority – her selfMOTHERS. legislates profit before sustainability. castigation, yet her fond reveries of her Perhaps the most remarkable feat is father who taught her bush craft, of her the portrayal of Li. After Matti goes loving partner Frank, of Matti’s missing, Li believes she may have joined a group of creative play – are poignant reminders that the present children travelling east looking for “the best place”. isn’t everything. Which, in turn, implies hope in a That the family – including the absent husband, Frank future. In the end, love is what forces Li on, but because – is “unsheltered” is due to their refusal to sign Matti she’s human, it’s complicated. up for conscription at age 15. They therefore have no Unsheltered is a novel of deeply felt and meaningful rights; they are “undocumented”. Li embarks on a contrasts: between the unrelenting landscape – which cat-and-mouse search on a road that is dog-eat-dog, Moleta describes with palpable precision – and the where the necessities of life have become commodities nuances of Li’s interior thought. Between a brutal to fight and bargain for, where violence is the norm and regime and occasional acts of kindness that pop up like the body a thing of transaction. Shelter means a prison seedlings. Between Li’s trustworthy telling in a world camp where flu is raging. Communication means rare where nothing is dependable. Between fear of failure as cell phone minutes to a Kafkaesque government a parent and love for a child. Between weakness and reunification programme. There is no such thing as heroism, misery and happiness. These juxtapositions trust. And Matti is just out of reach geographically, are woven into a fine, unexpected, profound narrative. psychologically, and metaphorically. Moleta is unflinching in showing human frailty, And yet, as Li progresses through dystopia and must stupidity, and at the same time, hope. Like other great fight government, environment, and technology – dystopian novels that portray societal breakdown in a where blood-and-guts events are told with visceral way non-fiction can’t quite approach – through the clarity – her inner struggle is equally riveting. We learn personal, the emotional – Unsheltered is to be read as through exquisitely placed flashbacks that she was fair warning. 84 | Woman
BOOKS pukapuka MOTHER’S DAY A selection of great reads, ranging from historical novels and adventurous memoirs to a ‘picture book’ for adults. Notorious The Bookseller at the End of the World by Olivia Hayfield (Hachette NZ, RRP $34.99) by Ruth Shaw (Allen & Unwin, RRP $36.99) ˂˟˜˩˜˔ʻ˔ˬЃ˘˟˗ϝ ˔˟˦ˢ˞ˡˢ˪ˡ˔˦ˆ˨˘ ˊ˛˘ˡ˅˨˧˛ˆ˛˔˪˪˔˦ ʪʣʟ˦˛˘˗˘˖˜˗˘˗˧ˢ ʶˢˣ˦˘ˬϝ˜˦˕˔˖˞ ˪˜˧˛˔ˡˢ˧˛˘˥ ˢˣ˘ˡˇ˪ˢˊ˘˘ ʵˢˢ˞˦˛ˢˣ˦˜ˡ ˥˘˧˘˟˟˜ˡ˚ˢ˙ʸˡ˚˟˜˦˛ ˀ˔ˡ˔ˣˢ˨˥˜ʟʹ˜ˢ˥˗˟˔ˡ˗ʟ ˛˜˦˧ˢ˥ˬʡˇ˛˜˦˧˜ˠ˘˜˧Ϡ˦ ˧˛˘˦˧ˢ˥ˬˢ˙˅˜˖˛˔˥˗ ʼʼʼʟ˥˘˖˔˦˧˔˦˧˛˘ˆˡˢ˪˙˔ˠ˜˟ˬϝ˥˜˦ˤ˨̻˔ˡ˗ ˔˦˔Ϣ˙˨ˡ˥˘˧˜˥˘ˠ˘ˡ˧ ϟ˛ˢ˕˕ˬϠϣʡʻ˘˥ˠ˘ˠˢ˜˥ ˕˨˥˦˧˦˪˜˧˛˔˗˩˘ˡ˧˨˥˘ ˗˥˜ˣˣ˜ˡ˚˪˜˧˛˚˟˜˧˭ˬ˚˟˔ˠˢ˨˥ʡNotorious˜˦˔ ˙˨ˡˣ˔˚˘ʠ˧˨˥ˡ˘˥˙ˢ˥˙˔ˡ˦ˢ˙˥ˢˠ˔ˡ˖˘˔ˡ˗ ˛˜˦˧ˢ˥˜˖˔˟ˡˢ˩˘˟˦ʡ ϝ˦˔˜˟˜ˡ˚˧˛˘˪ˢ˥˟˗ʟ ˪ˢ˥˞˜ˡ˚˪˜˧˛˔˗˗˜˖˧˦ ˜ˡʾ˜ˡ˚˦ʶ˥ˢ˦˦ϝ˔ˡ˗ ˛˘˥˔ˠ˔˭˜ˡ˚˟ˢ˩˘˦˧ˢ˥ˬ ˪˜˧˛˛˨˦˕˔ˡ˗ʿ˔ˡ˖˘ʡ ʴ˕˘˔˨˧˜˙˨˟˛˔˥˗˖ˢ˩˘˥ ˕ˢˢ˞˪˜˧˛˖˨˧˘ ˘ˡ˗ˣ˔ˣ˘˥˦ʟ˜˧˘˫ˣ˟ˢ˥˘˦ ˧˛˘˚˟ˢ˥˜˘˦˔ˡ˗ ˦˔˗ˡ˘˦˦ˢ˙˔˟˜˙˘ ˥˜˖˛˟ˬ˟˜˩˘˗ʡ Bordering on Miraculous by Lynley Edmeades and Saskia Leek (Massey University Press, RRP $45) ˇ˛˘˙ˢ˨˥˧˛˕ˢˢ˞˜ˡ˧˛˘ ˞Ώ˥˘˥ˢ˦˘˥˜˘˦ˢ˙ Ϣˣ˜˖˧˨˥˘˕ˢˢ˞˦˙ˢ˥ ˔˗˨˟˧˦ϣʟ˘˗˜˧˘˗˕ˬ ʿ˟ˢˬ˗ʽˢˡ˘˦ʟBordering on Miraculous˜˦˔ ˚ˢ˥˚˘ˢ˨˦˖ˢ˟˟˔˕ˢ˥˔˧˜ˢˡ˕˘˧˪˘˘ˡˣˢ˘˧˔ˡ˗ ˣ˔˜ˡ˧˘˥ʡˇ˛˘ˠ˘˗˜˧˔˧˜ˢˡ˦˔ˡ˗˕˥˜˚˛˧ ˜˟˟˨˦˧˥˔˧˜ˢˡ˦ˠ˔˞˘˧˛˜˦˕ˢˢ˞˔˦˘˥˜ˢ˨˦ˬ˘˧ ˦˪˘˘˧˧˥˘˔˧ʡ The Leonard Girls by Deborah Challinor (HarperCollins NZ, RRP $36.99) Raiment by Jan Kemp (Massey University Press, RRP $35) How to Loiter in a Turf War by Jessica Hansell aka Coco Solid (Penguin Books, RRP $28) ˇ˛˘Ѓˡ˔˟˕ˢˢ˞˜ˡ˧˛˘ Ϣ˅˘˦˧˟˘˦˦ˌ˘˔˥˦ϣ ˦˘˥˜˘˦ʟThe Leonard Girls ˙ˢ˟˟ˢ˪˦˦˜˦˧˘˥˦ ˅ˢ˪˜˘˔ˡ˗ʽˢ ˧˛˥ˢ˨˚˛˧˛˘˗˥˔ˠ˔ˢ˙˧˛˘ˉ˜˘˧ˡ˔ˠˊ˔˥ ϝ˔˖ˢˡЄ˜˖˧˧˛˔˧˖˛˔˟˟˘ˡ˚˘˦˧˛˘˜˥ˣˢ˟˜˧˜˖˔˟ ˕˘˟˜˘˙˦˔ˡ˗˙˔ˠ˜˟ˬ˕ˢˡ˗˦ʡˇ˛˘˥˘Ϡ˦˟ˢ˩˘˔ˡ˗ ˦ˢ˥˥ˢ˪ʟ˔ˡ˗˚˥˘˔˧ˡˢ˦˧˔˟˚˜˖ˠ˨˦˜˖ʭ ˕˘˦˧˦˘˟˟˜ˡ˚ˁ˘˪ˍ˘˔˟˔ˡ˗˔˨˧˛ˢ˥ʷ˘˕ˢ˥˔˛ RaimentϠ˦ˠ˘˟˟ˢ˪ ˖ˢ˩˘˥˦˘˧˦˧˛˘ ˦˖˘ˡ˘ʭʤʬʪʣ˦ˁ˘˪ ˍ˘˔˟˔ˡ˗ʟ˔ˬˢ˨ˡ˚ ˪ˢˠ˔ˡʡʾ˘ˠˣϠ˦ ˠ˘ˠˢ˜˥˜˦˔ ˩˨˟ˡ˘˥˔˕˟˘ ˘˫ˣ˟ˢ˥˔˧˜ˢˡˢ˙˛˘˥˖˛˜˟˗˛ˢˢ˗˜ˡˀˢ˥˥˜ˡ˦˩˜˟˟˘ ˔ˡ˗˨ˡ˜˩˘˥˦˜˧ˬ˟˜˙˘˜ˡʴ˨˖˞˟˔ˡ˗ϝ˔˪ˢ˥˟˗ˢ˙ ˦˘˫˔ˡ˗˗˥˨˚˦ʡ˄˨˜˘˧ˣ˥ˢ˦˘˕˘˟˜˘˦˧˛˘ ˖ˢˡ˧˘ˡ˧ʭ˧˛˜˦˜˦˔˦˧ˢ˥ˬ˪˜˧˛˦˘˔˥˜ˡ˚˧˥˨˧˛˦ ˔˕ˢ˨˧˨ˡ˖ˢˡ˩˘ˡ˧˜ˢˡ˔˟ˠ˔˥˥˜˔˚˘ʟ˔˕ˢ˥˧˜ˢˡʟ ˀ˨˦˜˖˜˔ˡʟ˔˥˧˜˦˧ ˔ˡ˗˪˥˜˧˘˥ ʽ˘˦˦˜˖˔Ϣʶˢ˖ˢ ˆˢ˟˜˗ϣʻ˔ˡ˦˘˟˟Ϡ˦ ˡ˘˪ˡˢ˩˘˟˜˦ ˔˕ˢ˨˧˧˛˥˘˘˙˥˜˘ˡ˗˦ˡ˔˩˜˚˔˧˜ˡ˚˟˜˙˘˜ˡ ˇ͓ˠ˔˞˜ˀ˔˞˔˨˥˔˨ʡʼ˧Ϡ˦˕˟˜˦˧˘˥˜ˡ˚˟ˬ˧˜˚˛˧ʟ˔ ˦˪˜˥˟˜ˡ˚˔ˡ˗˚˘ˡ˥˘ʠ˗˘˙ˬ˜ˡ˚˦˧ˢ˥ˬʡʿ˔ˡ˔ ʿˢˣ˘˦˜˖˔˟˟˦˜˧Ϣˣ˔˜ˡ˙˨˟˟ˬˣ˘˥˖˘ˣ˧˜˩˘ʟ ˙˔ˠ˜˟˜˔˥˔ˡ˗˛ˢˣ˘˙˨˟ϣʡʼ˧Ϡ˦˔˙˥˘˦˛˔ˡ˗ ʶ˛˔˟˟˜ˡˢ˥Ϡ˦˟˔˧˘˦˧ˡˢ˩˘˟˜˦˜ˠˣ˘˖˖˔˕˟ˬ ˥˘˦˘˔˥˖˛˘˗ʡ ˔ˡ˗˧˛˘ˢˡ˟ˬ˧˛˜ˡ˚ˡˢˢˡ˘˖ˢ˨˟˗˧˔˞˘˙˥ˢˠ ˛˘˥ʭˣˢ˘˧˥ˬʡ ˘˫˖˜˧˜ˡ˚ˡ˘˪˪ˢ˥˞˙˥ˢˠˢˡ˘ˢ˙ʴˢ˧˘˔˥ˢ˔Ϡ˦ ˕˥˜˚˛˧˘˦˧˖˥˘˔˧˜˩˘˦ʡ Woman | 85
Find out more at www.penguin.co.nz Harbouring by Jenny Pattrick RHNZ Black Swan (Penguin) RRP $36. When I was 13, my highschool social studies teacher got us to write “empathy paragraphs”. Our task: imagine you are a settler heading to New Zealand. Why are you leaving? What are you leaving behind? What are you thinking and feeling? What are your hopes and fears about this country and your new life? Jenny Pattrick’s Harbouring, set in Te Upoko o te Ika, circa 1840, takes on this same challenge, “to imagine the lives of those at the bottom of the heap at that time – both Māori and Pākehā”. The novel starts with Huw Pengellin, a poor Welsh foundry worker given a golden-ticket opportunity by a man in a pub: secure enough muskets, fish hooks and other sundries to purchase what will become Wellington, then accompany them to a new life. Narrative focus and voice then shift to Martha, Huw’s down-to-earth wife, the yin to his dreaming, faerie-loving yang, before the triangle is completed by Hineroa, a Muaūpoko woman living in servitude as a Ngāti Toa mōkai. As they strive to escape their old lives and build new ones, they become intertwined in a warm, encompassing tale. Before my class wrote the empathy paragraphs, our teacher crossed out “New Zealand” and wrote “America”, because “New Zealand’s not that interesting” and “we don’t want you upsetting anyone”. He concluded, “You don’t want to write about it and I don’t want to read about it.” Our stories seem paradoxically too important and too insignificant to be given a storybook treatment, our colonial history too distant to feel real and too present to be able to enjoy fantasies of the past; it’s too serious to be taken seriously as fiction. We did our best to imagine ourselves in the lives of other people, in other times and other places, based on things we thought we knew. When we received our work back, a red pen told us we didn’t know what we were talking about. Pattrick has confessed that assuming the voice of a pre-colonial Māori person “has been a challenge – which I have somewhat nervously embraced”. Harbouring attempts to step into and understand the lives of others, to see connections above differences and invites us to do the same. Its aim is empathy, and it extends it even to Gareth, the novel’s bogeyman. I hope readers can do the same: “A dream perhaps . . . But in this country one can dream.” TEXT: ALEXA HILL Please do read it just because you caaaan... #book of the month Dolly Parton’s #1 bestseller!
BOOKS pukapuka T he first line on the back of the memoir Prague in My Bones tells us that author Jindra Tichý is one of the most influential Czechs living abroad. The academic, writer and author of 19 novels has been living in Dunedin for the past 35 years. How she got to be here and what she has been doing is the subject of a frank and fascinating book. It’s true that in 2012, she was voted the 11th most influential Czech expatriate by the Czech public, but her influence has not been “ONE OF THE BEST by way of any present-day social media. When we talk by phone the line gets too difficult and DISCOVERIES we resort to emailing questions. Her first email arrives back: “I just sent you the OF MY LIFE HAS answers to your nice letter. I hope the BEEN THE computer delivered it. I have a new computer and sometimes it is disobedient and swallows KINDNESS OF NEW my letters.” ZEALANDERS.” A world-class philosopher and author, Jindra (pronounced “Yindra”) was forced to leave her beloved Prague 35 years ago. The book traces a remarkable life as a central European intellectual involved in the heady politics of in the 1960s, the invasion of Russia in the spring of ’68 and the choices she made as an academic and mother. Among the many compelling passages in the book, there is one in which the determined Jindra sits down in a library just after arriving in England and begins to translate Jane Austen line-by-line in order to improve her English. She marvels at the “truths” the 19th century novelist could say and draws a parallel to Tolstoy and the way he too was able to use his work to reveal the underbelly and corruption in Russia. Truth is something that is central to her book. Everything is laid bare with a frank honesty; her relationships, her friendships, the unconventional approach to monogamy that was de rigueur in Czechoslovakia when she was first married; the obstacles she faced as a woman in the largely maledominated field of academia. Jindra says that like Ukraine before the invasion, Czechoslovakia was a prosperous and peaceful Prague in my country. She arrived in New Zealand on September 14, Bones: A Memoir 1970. Her husband, Pavet Tichý, was hired by the by ©Jindra Tichý, University of Otago as Professor in the department of Quentin Wilson Publishing, RRP $45. Philosophy. Jindra had been a university lecturer at Charles University in Prague but it took a little longer before she was able to work in her profession here in the Department of Political Studies in Otago. “I loved Dunedin from the first second I arrived here and one of the best discoveries of my life has been the kindness of New Zealanders,” she says, repeating what the Prime Minister has recently behoved the nation to keep doing. “There was plenty of food available of the best quality and I did not have to spend every day in long queues for food like I had in Prague.” But best of all, she says, she could tell her students the truth about the communist regime in Czechoslovakia. Jindra was considered a counterrevolutionary in Prague and fled an arrest which would have seen her sentenced to years in a labour camp and all her property confiscated. Though she has lived in all the major cities of the world her heart is still with Prague. “I love and miss her in winter, spring, autumn and summer. When her parks are full of flowers and when she is covered and sparkling in snow but I certainly do not miss the tyrannical, murderous regime of Mr. Brezhnev who is now born again in the guise of Mr Putin of the Ukraine.” Getting down to the bones of it Susanna Andrew talks to Jindra Tichý about her new book and the city she loves. Woman | 87
In the following extract from her book Prague in my Bones: A Memoir, Jindra Tichý details the moment she found out the Russians had invaded Prague. A Summer at Jistebnik ugust in 1968 was a wonderfully warm and sunny month in the whole country. My mother asked me to organise a holiday trip to the little country cottage I had bought with her money. As I said before, the cottage was located 50 kilometres from the Austrian border. The countryside there was really beautiful. The house, a former small farmhouse, stood on the edge of an ancient forest on the banks of the Vltava River. The forest had a magic lure for me. It provided wild mushrooms, and hazelnuts and wild strawberries, raspberries, blueberries and blackberries in summer, pinecones and dry wood to burn in the stove in winter. Fruit that grows wild in the forest tastes much better than fruit grown in the garden. My excellent grandmother taught me from an early age that to gather this fruit – a gift of nature – was one of the most rewarding activities. It was fresh, free, readily available without queueing in the socialist shops and, properly cooked, it provided jams and preserves – truly delicious. She never mentioned the other unique benefits of harvesting wild fruit. These I discovered much later, by myself: it was a panacea, it provided relief from stress that was better than any drugs. Even nowadays, when I suffer from anxiety I go to places around Dunedin where I know I will find wild mushrooms and blackberries. My mother was happy that Pavel did not travel with us. She did not like him and he did not like her. So I deliberately organised the visit to Jistebnik in his absence. I travelled with my son Peter. My mother also invited Aunt Helen and her son Karlik to visit with us. None of us was aware of the real situation on our border. We knew that Dubček was negotiating with Brezhnev, but he kept issuing statements that the political situation was under control; the talk about invasion was just scaremongering by the foreign press. At last he issued a proclamation that he had managed to persuade Brezhnev that there was no danger of a counter-revolution in Czechoslovakia. They reached a seemingly cordial agreement, and our fraternal ties with the Warsaw Pact allies were re-established. I was reassured that we would be safe in South Bohemia. My mother and Helen were fans of the aristocracy. Their favourite pastime was to visit old castles and splendid chateaux built by the Czech and Austrian aristocracy and now owned by the Czech government. South Bohemia was particularly rich in these little gems of architecture. I wanted to make my mother and Helen happy, so for Tuesday, August 20, I planned a trip to the charming old town of Třebon on the shore of the largest of the freshwater ponds. Třebon was famous for its restaurants: they knew how to cook freshwater fish such as carp and pike to 88 | Woman Soviet troops march through Prague in September 1968, after invading the city to stop the momentum of the democratic reforms instituted during the “Prague Spring.” After the invasion, a permanent Soviet presence was established in Czechoslovakia to prevent further reforms. perfection. There was also a very beautiful castle nearby. Before the communist rule the castle had belonged to an ancient aristocratic family, the Schwarzenbergs. My great-grandfather was an architect for the Schwarzenberg family and had built them a monumental funeral chapel. We all wanted to see the chapel. That Tuesday was a beautiful hot day. Even after forty-six years I still remember every detail of that day vividly. It was the last time I was happy in my homeland. I spent it with my son and with the two people who, next to my husband, were closest to my heart – my mother and my aunt Helen. None of my family owned a car back then – we were too poor to purchase one – so we caught the bus to Třebon. We enjoyed the ride through villages with ancient baroque farmhouses and churches. We had a sumptuous lunch in the best restaurant in Třebon: fish soup with homemade sourdough bread, fried carp
and potato salad, washed down with beer from the 400-year-old Třebon brewery. For dessert we ordered a local speciality: strawberry dumplings swimming in butter, covered in sugar and excellent cottage cheese. We enjoyed the meal all the more because we did not really have a proper kitchen in Jistebnik and had to cook our meals outside, on an improvised barbecue. After lunch we visited the funeral chapel of the Schwarzenbergs nearby. It did not disappoint. My great-grandfather was a master builder, and a family legend. He had an architecture degree from the Czech Technical University in Prague, which is one of the oldest institutes of technology in Central Europe. I could not have known then that his genes were firmly embedded in our family gene pool: his spirit resurfaced in 1971 in my daughter Veronica, who later graduated from Auckland University School of Architecture. After our trip to Třebon, which we all enjoyed, we returned to Jistebnik on the last bus in the evening. As we walked home along the banks of the Vltava, I admired the beautiful sunset over the Šumava mountains. I was so glad I had discovered this unspoiled and peaceful corner of our country, and I promised myself that I would remain true to it for the rest of my life. Our neighbour, Mr Šaleb, was sitting in his garden drinking beer with his friends. He had a little present for us – a rainbow trout that he had caught in the Vltava that evening. He was a very competent fisherman but he did not like eating fish! We were grateful for this present and planned a feast for tomorrow’s lunch. I was very tired; I went to bed and HE SHOUTED AT immediately fell into a deep sleep. I was awoken by a racket: somebody was ME, DESPERATION banging furiously at the door. Light streamed into my room through the window. I realised IN HIS VOICE. ‘THE that it was early morning: the clock showed RUSSIANS ARE 4.45am. I quickly went and opened the door. Mr Šaleb was standing there, still in his OCCUPYING US,’ HE pyjamas, dishevelled and unshaven. He SAID, AND POINTED shouted at me, desperation in his voice. “The Russians are occupying us,” he said, and ACROSS THE RIVER. pointed across the river to the road on the other side. Mr Šaleb was a very phlegmatic man. I had never seen him in a state of frenzy like this before. He led a quiet life; his main pastimes were fishing and gathering mushrooms. When he was still young he had injured his leg, and he had to take care as the wound had never healed. He never worked but collected a disability pension. My friend Zdišek, who visited us often, agreed with me that Mr Šaleb had the best, most relaxed way of life of all our acquaintances. But today he was not quite in control of his feelings. I looked where he was pointing and saw a long row of vehicles moving slowly on the road toward the border with Austria. At first I couldn’t make out what kind of vehicles I was looking at. They were larger than ordinary trucks. “Can’t you see,” shouted Mr Šaleb, “it is tanks – at least a hundred, maybe more.” Woman | 89
I was still half asleep and did not quite understand why he was so agitated. There were some units of the Czech army stationed in nearby villages. “What makes you think they are Russian?” I asked. “I’ve been listening to the radio broadcast,” he told me. “They are warning all citizens that the Russians and some other units of Warsaw Pact armies crossed our borders at midnight and are occupying us. There is no Czech authority in charge; the Russians have arrested Dubček and the whole government and taken them all to Moscow. They are doing as they like. They are killing people in Prague.” We learnt from the radio, which was broadcasting clandestinely from some secret location, that on the night of August 20 at least 300,000 troops had invaded the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. Before the government was taken to Moscow, it managed to make a proclamation that the invasion was a fierce and unprecedented use of force against Czechoslovakia by its supposed allies; and that no Czechoslovak authority had asked for so-called fraternal help, as claimed by the Soviets. The country was in total chaos. The radio said that the Czech army had been ordered to stay in their barracks. The police were nowhere to be seen. There was no Czech authority to protect the citizens against the violence of the foreign armies. The whole country was paralysed – no buses or trains were running; the post offices had stopped working; nobody was organising the delivery of food supplies to the shops. I did not have a radio. Mr Šaleb magnanimously brought his small transistor radio to my house and we both listened to it. It was never properly revealed how this illegal broadcast had come about. Who had organised it, and how? It was the only source of information for the whole nation about what was going on. It connected people with each other. I realised that Pavel was due to return from Bulgaria 90 | Woman in several days. We did not have a telephone at home in Prague; we had put in a request for it several years “THE RUSSIANS earlier and we were still waiting to be HAVE ARRESTED connected to the network. The waiting period for a telephone connection was DUBČEK . . . THEY several years. (Ironically, our request was granted in 1970, by which time we had ARE DOING AS already emigrated to England.) THEY LIKE. THEY Since the post offices in the whole ARE KILLING PEOPLE country were not functioning, it was impossible to send a telegram. I worried IN PRAGUE.” about how I could let Pavel know where we were. I did not know whether he would be able to return to Prague at all, given the situation at the borders. I kept watching the slow progress of the invading tanks. They were the only vehicles on what was usually a very busy road, with German and Austrian tourist traffic streaming to Český Krumlov, a popular tourist destination. The guns on the tanks were at the moment turned in the right direction, towards the Austrian border. But I knew that within a few seconds they could be turned in the opposite direction, towards our cottage, and could terminate its 200-year-old existence. If they felt like it, they could also terminate our fragile lives. There was nothing to stop them. I and the whole of my country were defenceless. I experienced a fit of panic at this thought. Little Peter was sleeping peacefully in the room next door, and I felt unable to protect him. I still remember those few seconds of absolute terror. It was a good lesson; it put right the false feeling of happiness and safety I had experienced the previous day. I was a fool. I should have known that no Czech citizen was ever safe in their own country in the middle of Europe. At this moment I knew that I wanted to move away, as far away as possible from the Russians and the
PHOTOS: GETTY, SUPPLIED. Scenes from the war-torn streets of Prague in 1968, after Russia invaded. communists; if need be I would go to the very end of the world. Although I had studied the philosophy of Thomas Hobbes, I was an indifferent observer of his ideas. It never occurred to me that his famous theory of the state of nature, which precedes the establishment of civilised society, had any relevance to my own life. But the view of the Warsaw Pact tanks moving so calmly in the vicinity of my summer house in Jistebnik made me realise that this was not an obscure 400-year-old theory but the stark reality of Czechoslovakia on a lovely summer morning on August 21, 1968. At that moment I was living in a state of nature in a country where there was no law and no authority to enforce it; where the invading forces were free to kill, to steal, to rape and never be punished for any of their deeds. This was a lesson I never forgot or forgave. I was afraid to wake up my mother and Helen – but they woke when they heard the radio. They both surprised me by their calm. My mother said that this invasion was no surprise; she had expected it immediately after the Warsaw Pact armies had started their Danube manoeuvres. I realised that both my mother and Helen had lived in a state of nature before: as children they had experienced the First World War, the famine, the flight from war-torn Prague. They had lived through the Munich crisis, the Second World War, through Nazi occupation, and the German massacre of civilians in Prague in May 1945. Helen, always mindful of our welfare and an excellent cook, went to the storeroom to inspect our food supplies. Fortunately we possessed a good supply of tinned food and a whole sack of potatoes. This was the result of a habit, in most Czech households, of hoarding basic food items – tea, sugar, cans of meat – in case of some catastrophe that could strike at any time without warning. Helen estimated that our supply of tins could last a whole month. But we had not stored any flour, because of the mice; there was very little bread, and no milk for Peter. My cousin Karlik then proposed that he and I try to reach the nearest town, Větřni, about 10 kilometres away, to buy some bread and milk and find out whether the buses and trains were running. If at all possible I wanted to return to Prague and see what was happening there. Naturally I was very worried about Pavel. Karlik and I were ready to go out when our nerves were severely tested. On the road to our cottage a big military truck suddenly appeared, marked with a white cross: the white cross that appeared on all invasion vehicles. We stood in the doorway of our house, paralysed by fear, not knowing what the soldiers wanted from us. It was obvious that they could take from us whatever they wanted: they could line us all up in front of the house and shoot us. But the vehicle did not stop; it continued on to the next village. We wanted to stay at home, but Mr Šaleb informed us that our settlement was safe for the moment. The river patrol boat had come to inform us that one Russian tank had tried to cross the only river bridge nearby. The bridge was quite flimsy, and under the weight of the tank it had collapsed and ended up in the river, together with the tank. From now on our settlement could be reached only by foot. We decided to walk to Větřní through a path in the forest, where we would be safe from tanks and armoured vehicles. Woman | 91
SPORT hākinakina HIGH PROFILE ‘HOSTAGE’ Sports Columnist RIKKI SWANNELL 92 | Woman When an Olympic medal-winning basketball star is detained in a Russian jail, why is silence seen as the best way to get her out?
PHOTOS: GETTY. B rittney Griner is a rock star of the sports world: dreadlocks, tattoos, some level of controversy, one heck of a basketball player, a two-time Olympic gold medallist and a six-time WNBA All-Star. Her name is probably only familiar to the most hardcore Kiwi sports fans, those who avidly follow American sports or keep tabs on high-profile female athletes from around the world. But it may have started to slip into your consciousness in recent weeks. As we have watched horror and despair unfold in Ukraine, sport is continuing to play a small but not insignificant role in global affairs, and Griner is increasingly in the thick of it all while she sits in a Moscow jail. In the US off season, many top female basketball players play in countries such as Russia, China and Turkey, where they can earn 10 times as much as their WNBA salary, which is about $60,000 for a new player, or about one percent of what their male counterparts earn. In February, Griner landed in Moscow for a Russian contract, but she was detained for allegedly having a small amount of cannabis oil in a vape. She’s been held in custody since, only recently being allowed a visit from US consular staff, and there are reports she won’t get a hearing until May. The charge carries a sentence of up to 10 years’ jail time, and her friends, family, teammates and the WNBA have been told staying quiet is the best way to help get her released. Griner was detained on February 19, but her situation came to light only in the days after Russia invaded Ukraine. Throw in the fact that she is gay and black, and Griner has become a perfect political pawn. The other name you may have heard a lot recently is Roman Abramovich, the “is he, isn’t he” bestie of Russian president Vladimir Putin and owner of Chelsea Football Club, one of the most successful teams in the world. The UK government has imposed sanctions on Abramovich and other Russian oligarchs believed to be aiding Putin, resulting in Chelsea FC being put up for sale and leaving fans, who’ve enjoyed the success brought about by Abramovich’s rubles, in despair. The term “sportswashing” has become an increasingly regular refrain. Shady businessmen and dodgy regimes use the power and goodwill of sport to cleanse their reputations and cover up the realities of who and what they are. Too often, of late, sports bodies and some athletes have been complicit. Witness the scene of International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach and his praise of Chinese president Xi Jinping during the Beijing Winter Games while Putin sat just a few seats away. FIFA, football’s governing body, having hosted one recent World Cup in Russia, will stage its next men’s event in Qatar. Top golfer Phil Mickelson received widespread condemnation when he admitted to wanting to use a Saudi-backed league to leverage more money from the PGA. In doing so, he pulled out this clanger: “We know they killed [Washington Post reporter and US resident Jamal] Khashoggi and have a horrible record on human rights. They execute people over there for being gay,” Mickelson said. “Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-alifetime opportunity to reshape how the PGA Tour operates.” Don’t even get me started on Novak Djokovic. Some of the leaders in the highest A YOUNG, GAY reaches of sport are putting other athletes, including some very young FOOTBALLER MAY ones, in near-impossible positions because they’ve fallen prey to greed, HAVE TO CHOOSE power and politics. They have rules BETWEEN FULFILLING that stop athletes from speaking out or protesting during events, yet athletes A WORLD CUP DREAM have no say in where competitions are AND STAYING SILENT held. A young, gay footballer may have to choose between fulfilling a World ABOUT WHO HE IS. Cup dream or staying silent about who he is, because FIFA bigwigs will stage their tournament in a country where homosexuality is illegal. But we’re also starting to see athletes and some codes push back, and social media has given sports stars huge platforms to express their opinions and use their profiles to fight strongly for causes. Since the time when LeBron James was told to “shut up and dribble” and when Colin Kaepernick took a knee, followed swiftly by Megan Rapinoe, we have seen the rise of the athlete activists who have found their voices in a range of areas: Black Lives Matter, gender equality, climate change, LGBTQ+ rights and many more causes. The governing body for women’s tennis, the WTA, pulled its tournaments out of China in the wake of the ongoing mystery of missing player Peng Shuai, while Tennis Australia was forced into a U-turn when it tried to ban fans at the Australian Open from wearing T-shirts asking “Where is Peng Shuai?” As supporters of sport, we have a role, no matter how uncomfortable it may be. Above: AntiIt used to be said sport and politics don’t or Springbok tour protesters at the FMG shouldn’t mix, but in reality the two are as intertwined Stadium Waikato, as any other part of society. Some of us remember the formerly Rugby Park, outcry in 1968 when Tommie Smith and John Carlos in 1981. Left: Chicago Sky raised black-gloved fists on the Olympic podium in players Candace Mexico City or the division caused here during the 1981 Parker, #3, and Springbok tour. Politics bathes itself in sport; it’s Stefanie Dolson, #31, defend against the there when fans still chant Abramovich’s name, and Phoenix Mercury’s it’s there in Griner’s plight. Brittney Griner Sport needs to take the power back, but for many, during a game at the Footprint Center in that will mean cleaning up their own houses first. Arizona last October. Perhaps in that case, the athletes themselves are the only hope. Woman | 93
GARDENING mahi māra FALLING TREES
I “Imagine if trees gave off Wi-Fi signals. We would be planting so many trees, we would probably save the planet, too. Too bad they only produce the oxygen we breathe.” – SOCIAL MEDIA MEME did not have “hit by cyclone” on my personal bingo card of climate change risk. Rising sea levels, flooding, mini-tornado (we get a few of those in our area), slips, droughts – I had mentally considered all those scenarios. Indeed, we made the decision two years ago to drop the one big tree that could fall on our house and pretty much demolish it. It was a handsome Abies procera “Glauca”, also known as the blue noble fir, planted by my late father-in-law about 70 years ago. We were sad to see it go, but it seemed a wise precaution. It seemed an even wiser decision when we took a direct hit from Cyclone Dovi in mid-February. As massive trees crashed down around us, we could at least take comfort from the thought the Abies was not going to fall on us as we sheltered indoors. When Cyclone Bola hit parts of Taranaki and then the East Coast in 1988, it largely bypassed our little corner of the countryside. The winds were strong, but nothing too far out of the ordinary. New Zealand is a windy country and we are used to that, but there hadn’t been any cyclones in our area in the intervening 34 years, which is why I hadn’t put it on my mental bingo card. I garden on a fairly expansive scale, with my husband, Mark. The property has been handed down the generations of his family since 1870, so we know who planted which trees and when. Some of the trees are now 150 years old, planted by Thomas Jury, and we know the old pine trees are pretty much at the end of their life. They are not helped by the fact that Thomas’ son, Bertrum Jury, topped them at about 10m high in the early years of last century. It didn’t stop the pines from growing, and the tallest are now up to 45m, but with a weak point where Bertrum cut them. Some have snapped off at that point, whereas others have uprooted entirely and fallen. Why, you may wonder, do we not bite the bullet and get all the pines felled? It is just too big a job. We can’t get heavy machinery into that part of the property and it would probably have to be done by a massive logging helicopter. We are not in that financial league and, where those trees are, when they fall, it is only our property that gets damaged, so they are not a risk to others. Besides, we can cope when big trees fall one at a time. We are used to that and can go in and do an efficient and speedy clean-up. Losing several at once, as we did with Cyclone Dovi, was rather different. It wasn’t just the damage from falling pine trees; we also lost a giant gum (eucalyptus) at our road entrance that was 150 years old, and Mark had tears in his eyes when he found another Abies – a baby at just 70 years old, Gardening ABBIE JURY Left: At 150 years old, our massive old Pinus radiata trees are weighed down with epiphytes and nearing the end of their life. Above left: We dropped the large Abies two years ago as a precautionary move lest it fall on the house, and when Dovi hit, we were very glad of that. Woman | 95
but one of our most handsome trees – uprooted in the park and lying over our WITHIN A YEAR, WE high bridge. Those were just the largest trees. There were smaller trees and CAN HAVE THOSE branches down everywhere. FALLEN TRUNKS Mark and I went into shock for the first two days, paralysed by the scale of the NESTLED INTO THE clean-up task that lay ahead. Fortunately, GARDEN WITH most of it was garden damage, not structural damage, and we have good PLANTS THRIVING ON people around us. It did not look as overwhelming once we eventually got AND AROUND THEM power and running water restored and the AND THEY CAN most urgent areas were being cleared. A fair number of homes in our local town of GENTLY DECAY OVER Waitara will be heated by firewood and THE YEARS. pine cones after I offered both for free on a local Facebook page. When big trees fall, our approach is now tried and true. Attempting to remove the fallen tree in its entirety would cause huge amounts of additional damage to the area and add considerable expense. We go in and remove all the debris, the foliage and side branches on the tree. We will cut through the trunk where it is blocking paths or access, but we leave the main length lying where it fell. I use “we” in the royal sense. I do not chainsaw and I would not like to mislead with a mental image of me in work boots and earmuffs wielding a noisy chainsaw. My strengths lie more in the lighter aspects of cleaning up and reinstating gardens around the remaining trunks. Within a year, we can have those fallen trunks nestled into the garden with plants thriving on and around them and they can gently decay over the years. Instant, unplanned stumperies, one could say, or a pragmatic gardening solution. The conundrum is that we know one of the ways to mitigate climate change is to plant many trees. Big trees. Long-lived trees. A dwarf apple or maple is not going to contribute to saving the world. But with climate change, we know we will get more extreme weather events that can bring those big trees down. labels – these are often conjured out of thin air to Power companies and linesmen are not tree lovers. make the tree seem less threatening to the customer I can understand why when I saw trees on three roads or, at best, are what might be expected in the short to around us bring down lines in the cyclone. I was mid-term. If space is limited, consider narrow, relieved that none of them were our trees. It is a fine columnar trees that give height and grace without line to tread. We monitor our trees that could spreading or casting much shade. Trees that stay endanger power lines or buildings and have already From top: Circles of felled some that we deemed too risky. ˣ˜ˡ˘˧˥˨ˡ˞ˡˢ˪˗˘Ѓˡ˘ lower often spread widely instead, taking up much the edges of a path; more space without giving stature in a garden. The answers seem to be: plant trees, lots of trees if these two pine trees Think long-term. Some trees can live hundreds of you have space, not just for future generations and to fell eight or nine years years. While a tree can achieve some size in 20 years, help the planet, but also for the pleasure of watching ago and we left the main lengths where they are not mature – not by a long shot. From about them grow. But choose the spots carefully so that they they lay, gardening 40 years on, you can start to claim you have mature have a chance of reaching maturity without around them and trees. Trees are generally low maintenance, but that threatening power lines or buildings and without allowing epiphytes to establish as they does not mean no maintenance. casting unwanted shade on either your house or those gently decay. We will be keeping a closer eye on our higher-risk of your neighbours. trees after Cyclone Dovi. Don’t believe the heights given on commercial plant 96 | Woman
We cut back the fallen pine on the left to clear the path. It will eventually collapse, but in the meantime it perches like a giant lizard. Below: The belladonna ˟˜˟˜˘˦Єˢ˪˘˥˘˗ˢˡʟ unperturbed by the fallen gum tree. I measured the diameter of the tree and the main section was two metres across.
Into the light Discovering the intensity of New Zealand’s natural colours as a child was a life-changing experience for Anna Evans. 98 | Woman
W hen 11-year-old Anna Evans woke up in a motel room on the edge of Takapuna Beach on her first morning in Aotearoa, she was dazzled by the vivid colours of sea and sky. It was an influential moment that has gone on to inform her work as an adult artist. “It was nothing short of a spiritual experience,” she says. “An intense explosion of orange, reds, purples and pinks set behind a stunning row of palms and Norfolk pines (back then I called them ‘pineapple and Lego trees’).” The contrast between the northern hemisphere light she and her parents left behind when they emigrated and this bright new world left a lasting impression on Anna, whose landscape paintings are imbued with the interaction of sunrise and sunset. “I remember wondering in the initial months of moving to New Zealand if it was all just a dream. Would I wake up from this colour-saturated land into the dull-toned greyness of Northern Manchester? The sky here seemed unnaturally blue, and the sea actual turquoise. There were greens I had never noticed before, adorned by trees that came in shapes my young brain thought impossible.” Anna spent hours as a child copying scenes from her Marvel comic collection, which she “I REMEMBER would then swap for WONDERING IN tuck-shop treats at school. THE INITIAL MONTHS OF Her biggest creative journey, though, happened in high school, under the influence and encouragement of artist and teacher Matt Elwood, who steered her towards a fine arts degree. At Elam School of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland, she found herself in pretty good company, with peers Judy Millar, Peter Robinson and Michael Parekōwhai, and Don Binney as one of her lecturers. During her time there, she began to see the world of art in new and exciting ways and to question her work and explore creatively. Anna’s landscapes and birds have a dreamlike surrealism, which she credits to the way in which her first impressions of Aotearoa were formed. When Anna was asked by Woman to be our featured Resene artist, she chose a landscape that meant something to her. The Oruaiti is the name of the awa that runs near her home and could be described as her tūrangawaewae. “Two years ago when I went into labour with my son, this is the view I had as I leaned against the ponga trees for support in and out of my contractions.” The painting took about 70 to 75 hours to complete, although she admits it’s quite difficult to give a precise time. One of the reasons she loves using Resene acrylics is their fast drying time, which allows her to keep her flow. Anna’s painting will be auctioned off via Trade Me on May 11 to raise money for Paint New Zealand Beautiful, Resene Biloba Flower Resene Unicorn Resene Wonderland Resene Twilight Resene Ballerina Resene Princess Resene Romantic Resene Sandy Beach Resene Neutral Bay Resene Half Innocence Resene Dark Slate Resene Chelsea Cucumber Resene Caper supported by Resene, to help beautify our communities with painting projects. Resene Permanent Green Resene Midnight Moss MOVING TO NEW ZEALAND IF IT WAS ALL Resene Olive Green Resene Cabbage Pont JUST A DREAM.” Resene Paddock Resene Marshland Resene Dell Resene Kombi Resene Kabul Resene Tom Thumb Resene Jaguar
Left: Gaiatree Sanctuary is located on Taveuni and is considered the “Garden Island” of Fiji. Below: Six Senses Alchemy bar. ISLAND TIME It’s near impossible to feel blue in Fiji, but you’re sure to see a lot of it. 100 | Woman
TRAVEL haere D reaming of a romantic getaway, an action-packed escape, family fun or five-star R&R? Fiji’s 333 tropical islands, each one a palm tree-dotted paradise with endless white-sand beaches and coral-fringed lagoons, are ready to welcome Kiwis back. Add year-round balmy weather, a short flight and that world-famous Bula spirit and you’ve got the perfect holiday destination. There’s so much to get stuck into when you land on Fiji’s soil, so we’ve gone the extra mile to help you with the ultimate five-day itinerary in the place where happiness can’t help but find you. x DAY 1 Resort life x Whether you’re stationed by your private pool in an adults-only resort such as Malolo Island’s Likuliku Lagoon Resort, Fiji, or at a large, lagoon-style pool with options for all ages such as the one you’ll find at Sofitel Fiji Resort & Spa, commit to a day of unwinding and making the most of your resort’s included, usually non-motorised water sports. If you’re looking for the ultimate wellness destination, check out Malolo Island’s Six Senses Fiji, a spot that invites you to reconnect and reinvigorate your senses. As a guest, you’re offered a personalised wellness programme that involves customised meal plans, sleep schedules and meditation sessions. The five-star luxury resort has private pool villas, insane residences and five unique dining experiences that all take a cleaner, simpler approach to their food. With their own onsite herb and vegetable garden, Cluckingham Palace – a spot to collect fresh eggs – and a dock-to-dine approach, sourcing fish from local fisherman, produce doesn’t get much fresher. If you’re a bit more adventurous, drop the kids off at their famous kids’ club, Grow with Six Senses, while you spend the day paddleboarding, enjoying a front-row show of some of the world’s best underwater marine life, hanging loose at the locals’ favourite surfing spot, Cloudbreak, or simply working your way down the cocktail list poolside. x DAY 2 Take a spin on the water x Make like an ostentatious Duran Duran video and explore Fiji’s spectacular palm-fringed islands and crystal-clear waters aboard a luxury catamaran. For those who fancy a day trip, Big Blue Fiji (sailing Woman | 101
from Port Denarau) takes in the highlights of the Mamanuca Islands – an experience that includes water sports and a beautifully prepared barbecue lunch. Fancy a multi-day sail? Quixotic Charters Fiji, a fast, blue-water sailing catamaran has got your number, featuring four staterooms as well as the opportunity to customise your itinerary. If you’re looking for a bit of luxury come sunset, Captain Cook Cruises offers a Sunset Dinner Cruise. On board one of Fiji’s most prestigious charter vessels and one of the largest sailing catamarans in the southern hemisphere, you can sit back, relax with a glass of bubbles and a tropical buffet and take in the spectacular views. x DAY 3 Spa day (or night) x Nothing screams relaxation more than a day at the spa. If it’s a Fiji spa, then you’ve got a recipe for absolute bliss. Luckily for you, Fiji offers more spas than you could possibly get to, but you could definitely give it a good crack. If you’re staying at Six Senses Fiji, they offer holistic wellness, rejuvenation and beauty treatments that go beyond the ordinary. If you want to relieve tension, give their deep tissue massage a try, or you’re after full personalisation, opt for their holistic massage. If you want to target stubborn cellulite, their detox massage will do the trick, or for other more targeted options, try the tension soother, relaxed feet and head massages. Or casually wave away any suggestions of hour-long treatments and book yourself into Shangri-La Yanuca Island for their ultimate “Dusk till Dawn” overnight spa and sleep package. An Ocean Bure Spa Suite has fresh, locally sourced fruits and produce and a variety of treatments. FIJI’S LARGEST RESTAURANT, WHICH CAN SEAT 322 GUESTS AT ANY TIME, IS A FESTIVAL OF THE SENSES. x Left: Enjoy a multisensory experience at Gaiatree Sanctuary. Below: Six Senses Alchemy bar. Above: Shangri-La Yanuca Island’s “Dusk till Dawn” overnight spa is highly recommended. Above right: Relax at a beachfront pool. 102 | Woman DAY 4 A day dedicated to feasting x Something not commonly known about Fiji is the incredible “feast of the senses” experience. From beachfront dining to hidden gastropubs and classic food trucks, Fiji has a multitude of dining experiences worth trying. The newest dining option is Island 619 at Sheraton Fiji Golf & Beach Resort. Fiji’s largest restaurant, which can seat 322 guests at any time, is a festival of the senses. With five live cooking stations all equipped with a specialist chef, you’ll be able to get whatever you’re craving. Based in both Nadi and Suva, Kanu by Lance Seeto delivers a contemporary dining experience using natural ingredients and traditional techniques. Chef Lance Seeto has submerged himself in the Pacific way of life, history and communities for the past decade. His cuisine is a fusion of flavours and a reflection of his travels and experiences. Gaiatree Sanctuary, located on Taveuni, considered the “Garden Island” of Fiji, is abundant with fresh produce. Known as an organic spice plantation, day club and nectar lab, Gaiatree Sanctuary takes guests on a multi-sensory experience with tropical, locally grown delicacies.
PHOTOS: GETTY AND SUPPLIED. x DAY 5 Island hopping x Above: A plunge into one of the Tovoro waterfalls will leave you feeling refreshed. Left: Before you leave, enjoy one last cocktail by the pool. Before it’s time to say goodbye to the happiest place on Earth, dedicate the day to checking out some of Fiji’s most iconic islands. Monuriki Island is home to the set of 2001 Oscar-nominated film Castaway. Surrounded by an unscathed reef, the untouched volcanic island is only 1km long and 600m wide and is covered in rugged rock faces and lush foliage. Malamala Beach Club is the world’s first island beach club, and just a 25-minute boat ride from Port Denarau. Once you arrive, you can park up on a daybed with a cocktail in hand, take a dip in their picturesque infinity pool with a cracked coconut or indulge in some Asian and Pacific-inspired à la carte delicacies. Bouma National Park on Taveuni Island is home to the well-known Tavoro Waterfalls, three pristine falls surrounded by lush jungle. You can plunge into the largest waterfall, just a 10-minute walk from the entrance, or pack your walking shoes and embark on a three-hour return hike to pass all three falls. When you get to the third, you’ll be greeted by hundreds of prawns. What better way to end your holiday in a tropical paradise than by enjoying one last downtime session back by your resort’s pool? Don’t forget to shell out for an elaborate cocktail; after a week of relaxing, you deserve it. Woman | 103
Financial Advisor ANGELA MEYER Your financial best friend It’s high time we empower each other to strengthen our financial wellbeing, writes Angela Meyer. 104 | Woman ILLUSTRATION: GETTY. T here are 140,000 more women in don’t have the headspace to make a study of EFTs, Aotearoa than men. That’s the investment funds, retirement savings or ask for a pay equivalent of a city the size of rise? Mums on average have only 10 minutes of me Tauranga. Imagine if we were treated time a day – and that includes going to the loo! not as niche or a special-interest In any case, at the moment, a wedge of cheese group, but as the majority? What currently costs almost as much as a house with a would our society look and feel like? garden, drive-on access and a letterbox made of gold. In my wildest fantasy, sexism, racism and We are just getting by. capitalism no longer exist. In Women are sick of my not-so-wild fantasy, we the fresh-baked hell of have equal access to financial economic stress, financial wellbeing to grow our wealth abuse and negotiating all CONSTANT ECONOMIC and to feel supported and the obstacles they and STRESS NEGATIVELY AFFECTS gender-diverse people empowered. I suspect this might be a face: from the gender gap OUR PREFRONTAL CORTEX. fantasy for a fair few of us. in retirement savings, to a The 2020 Financial lack of pay equity and pay IT’S LIKE HAVING A BLOCK OF Capability Barometer Survey, equality, the pink tax, the CONCRETE WEDGED INTO run monthly through 2020 by motherhood gap and the the Commission for Financial childcare gap. THE TOP OF YOUR HEAD. Capability, showed one in It is exhausting. And five New Zealanders had there is also a pandemic relationship problems with going on. partners, family or close friends due to financial The women of Aotearoa are saying in Facebook concerns. Conflicts of this nature correlated with a groups, conversations at the school gates, over Zoom lack of long-term financial planning, a propensity to calls, in the loos at work: “We are totally, utterly spend rather than save, and reluctance to discuss exhausted. We need to get this concrete out of our money. heads to be able to live our full, joyful lives without Constant economic stress negatively affects our worrying constantly about money, so yeah, how about prefrontal cortex. It’s like having a block of concrete a bit of support and respect? How about some time to wedged into the top of your head. As a result, it’s actually think about this stuff?” really, really hard to make any decisions, including Let’s get our BFFs to be our FBFs – Financial Best those that will relieve that stress, like prioritising Friends. long-term financial planning. About as close as you Let’s get the women in our lives together, let’s can get to fantasy as Mariah Carey. normalise talking about money. As a starter, let’s Sound familiar? give these six steps a crack. Inspirational speakers But is it any wonder the women of Aotearoa optional. Wine most likely necessary.
FINANCE tahua XKnow where you are at x XKnow it’s surmountable x Take stock of what you’ve got. You may want to get a glass of wine for this one and put any sense of shame back in the box. Look objectively at your situation. Where are your credit cards at? How much have you got in your KiwiSaver? Everyday accounts? Savings? Remember they are numbers, not judgements. This is a game changer – when I was moonlighting as a backup dancer for a drag performer in London, living on peanuts and red wine and sleeping on a foam mattress in a mate’s lounge, I had no idea you could negotiate with creditors, take payment holidays, and ask for help in many places – without shame. Do it. Remember, we are not a niche, we are the majority, and if we need some help, we will ask for it. XKnow your everyday x What are you spending your money on? How are you managing your debts? What is the interest rate on your debts? How much are you spending on treats versus essentials? For the record, you get to choose what treats and essentials are. Maybe a gym subscription is an essential for you but for your friend, it’s a treat. It doesn’t matter – your budget, your choice. Make a plan to pay off the riskiest debts first, while making sure you protect your essentials. Again, these are numbers, not judgements. XKnow what you want x What does financial wellbeing feel and look like for you? What does security mean to you? How about freedom? Take a moment to set your goals and ask yourself what you want retirement to be like – if vision boards work for you, get amongst it. Likewise, a sea of Post-it Notes. XKnow you’re secure x It’s time to get a grip and stop wondering about the future. By normalising ˗˜˦˖˨˦˦˜ˡ˚Ѓˡ˔ˡ˖˘˦ with friends, we’ll collectively improve our Ѓˡ˔ˡ˖˜˔˟˪˘˟˟˕˘˜ˡ˚ and our overall mental health. Prioritise creating your “F*ck off Fund” to deal with emergencies or if you need to leave a bad relationship or job. I kick-started mine by going through my closet and selling a bunch of things on Trade Me. The goal is to have at least three months’ worth to cover all the basic expenses such as rent, groceries, electricity, phone – and cheese. XKnow you’re doing your bestt Say it with me now. Starting your financial wellbeing journey is better than not starting. Your FBFs are here for you. Woman | 105
ASTRO-GUIDE mātai whetū Astro woman Astrologer Colleen Coffey has surveyed the skies and has some intel for the month ahead. Gemini (May 21 - Jun 21) Taurus (Apr 20 - May 20) Taurus Ingress April 20, 2022, 2.24pm NZT The sun moves into the fixed Earth sign Taurus. Those born under the sign of the Bull are practical, fiercely loyal, and just a little stubborn. Ruled by the planet Venus, the Roman goddess of love and beauty, Taureans are said to be born with an inherent understanding of beauty and art. Many happy returns, Taurus Woman. Venus, bright and high in the predawn sky, ushers you into a birthday month that is rich in opportunity, with a touch of excitement and little or no interference from restrictive influences. The period from April 22 to May 5 sees Venus connect with the expansive influence of Jupiter and the mystical magic of Neptune in super-intuitive Pisces. Look beyond your practical “go-to” mode, and dip into your more aesthetic side. It may be something as simple as reconnecting with a lost love of theatre or art, or perhaps indulging in forgotten creative culinary skills. If you are already involved in an artistic field, at work or home, use this time as a creative reboot. On May 5, the sun meets up with Uranus. It may be disruptive, but it can clarify a new direction. The full moon on May 16 highlights the special people or a special person in your life while also bringing structure and grounding to a somewhat heady, but pleasant birthday month. 106 | Woman So, you like variety? Then you will love this month, because it is a doozy! Your twinkle-toed ruler Mercury starts the month in solid, dependable Taurus, but with a connection to chaotic Uranus, things might not go as planned. On April 22, Mercury forms a link with empowering Pluto. This puts power and drive into your arsenal, giving you an edge, but there is no need to push your advantage. On April 30, Mercury moves into its home sign of Gemini, bringing 10 days of happy motoring. Finish the unfinished, because on May 10, when Mercury turns retrograde, unfinished tasks can unravel and plans will change as Mercury retraces its steps. On May 16, the full moon brings challenges, but also much-needed structure as a variable month draws to a close. Cancer (Jun 22 - Jul 22) Despite some underlying agitation, the Taurus solar month is a comfortable one for you. The third quarter moon on April 23 in argumentative Aquarius could be taxing with emotional Pluto in the mix, but don’t engage. If you let it pass, it will dissipate quickly when the moon moves through super-tolerant Pisces. The new moon on May 1 is both challenging and exciting and highlights your friends and associates. The prompt is to experience something that takes you out of your comfort zone, a moment best done with friends. The first quarter moon on May 9 brings an energy spike that heralds a busy week. Saturn, master of control, goes centre stage at the full moon on May 16, bringing structure and a sense of purpose as the solar month draws to a close. Leo (Jul 23 - Aug 22) Lots of good, cooperative vibes are around you. The sun sits high in your career sector, with the emphasis on leadership – there is nothing you like better. Pluto (power) and Mars (drive) are on your side, but for the first week, watch for undercurrents or power plays, and listen to others before, rather than after the fact. On April 27, Pluto’s influence fades and unpredictable and brilliant Uranus joins with your sun until May 16. Expect disruptions, even change that could turn plans on their head, but go with it and be innovative. Around May 7, a sense of order and purpose will establish as Saturn, the planet of organisation, sidles into the mix. With help from Mars (action) and Neptune (imagination), things that were a challenge will now be easily completed. The full moon on May 16 will bring a sense of completion to a taxing but exhilarating month.
Virgo (Aug 23 - Sep 22) Your sights are set on knowledge gathering or following an ethical perspective about issues dear to you. With your ruler Mercury in Taurus, you may feel stymied in spite of brilliant thoughts courtesy of innovative Uranus. Hold those thoughts, as things are changing. April 30 sees Mercury flick into Gemini – a better place for open dialogue – followed on May 1 by the new moon, a reset of intentions and a reboot of your interest. Push plans ahead as you have planetary support from many quarters. Mercury turns retrograde on May 10 and there will be changes, so don’t sign the contract. Tread water and be flexible. Stability will come with the full moon on May 16, but the changeable “weather” will last. Libra (Sep 23 - Oct 22) A very congenial month. Your ruler Venus is gliding through gentle Pisces with no impediment. The focus is on your daily routine and personal well-being. In the first half of the solar month, Venus travels with benevolent Jupiter and imaginative Neptune. Venus and Jupiter together can only be favourable, and when you add in Neptune, it’s almost magic: time to concentrate on beauty, a love of art and/or music or creating beautiful things. On May 3, Venus moves into fiery Aries, so the ambience will be less passive and more ardent. Life may speed up a little, but it is still relatively laid-back. The new moon on May 1 and the full moon on May 16 tap into the only cautionary note for the month: watch how you spend money, because with these vibes, it would be easy to overindulge. Scorpio (Oct 23 - Nov 22) If previous months have been tedious, then the Taurus solar month is superbly passive. The focus is home-based and on all that grounds you. Your ancient ruler, Mars, all action and drive, is in gentle Pisces, connected to the Taurus sun, so you will forge ahead but without your usual ardent passion. You have time to smell the roses. April 28 sees Uranus join the mix, which could be disruptive, but also liberating, bringing the opportunity to try new and different things. The new moon on May 1 falls in your sector of partnership, and with Uranus still in the mix, it’s an ideal time for invigoration. The full moon on May 16 has stabilising Saturn caught between the sun and the moon. This is intense, but will bring much-needed balance, plus vision for the way forward. Sagittarius (Nov 23 - Dec 21) The hallmark for the Taurus solar month is consistency. Your philosophical ruler Jupiter, together with imaginative Neptune, glides through the tolerant sign of Pisces for the entire month. This is a superb time for ideas and fantasy, but your ideas may not get much traction until May 10, when action planet Mars joins the mix. April 23 sees Venus, the goddess of love, join with Jupiter. This combination in Pisces happens only every 12 years – it is extremely lucky in a “love and money” way. Buy a Lotto ticket if you wish, but, more importantly, make love the focus. Sharing with those who matter most, especially family, is paramount. The new moon on May 1 highlights work-related routine and it’s time to reboot neglected or outmoded plans. The full moon on May 16 will ground you after a heady month. Capricorn (Dec 22 - Jan 19) The solar Taurus month is a comfortable place as you relate to the practical, Earthy tones and appreciate the vibe of consolidation rather than the need for constant change and updates. Your stoic ruler Saturn is focused on things of value rather than idealistic dreams. With an argumentative connection between Saturn and Mercury, the planet of communication, it’s best to be prudent and keep your opinions to yourself, until the aspect eases around May 2. The new moon on May 1 falls into the sector of kids, creativity and fun. Reboot spontaneous things you enjoy and bring innovation back to your daily life. The full moon on May 16 brings in friends and associates, as a need for fun trumps your need for structure. Aquarius (Jan 20 - Feb 18) There’s a bumpy start to the month as you are caught between an old and a new order. It could be a new job or new systems in the old one. Saturn, your traditional ruler, is at odds with Mercury, the planet of rational thinking and communication, and this may rattle you. Work through it and don’t argue. Keeping your own counsel will serve you better. After May 2, there will be clarity as Uranus, your unconventional modern ruler, travels with the sun for a good part of the month. Don’t be surprised if doors open. The new moon on May 1 highlights home life, with Uranus still firmly in the mix. It’s time for some original thought, which may be about the house – or the people in it. The full moon on May 16 brings structure and a reminder to keep an eye on work-life balance. Pisces (Feb 19 - Mar 20) You have a full house! With your rulers, ancient Jupiter and modern Neptune, plus the prime planets of relating and relationships, Venus and Mars, basking in your sign, your cup runs over with good vibes. This is special, and love is spread around the whole zodiac. But it can also be draining and confusing. Mars in Pisces activates internally rather than externally, so don’t expect great bursts of energy. Instead, concentrate on an introspective journey and/or spiritual growth. Venus is exalted in your sign, and it will bring love and beauty. Add Jupiter and Neptune, and it’s a brilliant mix for any art (or craft) or aesthetic pursuit. The full moon on May 16 creates a sense of structure and a way for you to balance your subjective or personal world with your public or objective world. Aries (Mar 21 - Apr 19) A great month for quiet and catching up out of the public eye. Mars, your usually feisty ruler, is subdued in the calming waters of Pisces, so don’t expect record-breaking action. Instead, use the time to catch up on things left unfinished. On May 1, the new moon taps into the all-important sector of personal finance. Some consolidation here before the pressure builds again would probably be in order. The mood will change on May 3 when Venus moves into your sign, bringing more direct focus on you and taking you closer to the driver’s seat. On May 8, Mars meets up with mystical Neptune, and although it’s not an activating aspect, it will certainly hone your perception and awareness, and fit well with an already cruisy month. Enjoy it, Aries, as cruisy months don’t come your way often. Woman | 107
#mindgames Hexagon Word ˈ˦˘˧˛˘˖˟˨˘˦˧ˢЃ˟˟˜ˡ˧˛˘˦ˣ˔˖˘˦˜ˡ˧˛˘ˡ˨ˠ˕˘˥˘˗ hexagons. Each answer runs clockwise but can start anywhere in the shape. Where hexagons ACROSS 1 Pantyhose or socks 6 Concubines 107 Pimply condition 109 Climb down rope 110 Sacred book touch, they have the same letter. We’ve given you a word to start with. The letters in the white 10 14 Assailed (3,2) Drone’s home 111 Bird enclosure 112 Magician’s hey ...! hexagon reveal a mystery word. 18 19 Detested Door section 114 Innate 116 Blenders 1 B 6 A B A 5 20 Satirical show 118 Arena 21 Actress, ... Monroe 22 Relaxed 121 Iran’s former name 123 From Lone Star state 23 Communion table 24 Bout of housework 127 Distinct 129 Servery window 25 Be thrifty 26 Winged predator 131 Sanctuary 133 Outspoken G 27 Outward appearance 28 Printed (text) 136 Squirms 137 Lavender shade 3 30 Warms 138 Witches’ meeting 32 Formally withdraw 35 Awaited with horror 39 Procure 139 Card game 140 Raze 141 Fraudster 42 Titbit 46 US naval rank 48 East African country 49 Great anger 50 Spare cash for 51 Sleeveless garment 53 Eject 55 Rain heavily 57 Boot reinforcer 58 Observe 60 Take in (nutrients) 61 Capture 63 Musty 64 ˈˆˆ˅Ϡ˦Ѓ˥˦˧ˣ˥˘ˠ˜˘˥ 65 Ninny 66 Red salad tuber 70 Paradoxical 73 Pocket 74 Alcoves 75 Terminated 76 Cougars 77 Applications 78 That girl’s 79 Hearing-impaired 80 Ceases 81 Comedian, ... Murphy 83 Beef dish, steak ... 85 Washtubs 86 Legal standing 88 Sequence 91 V-shaped cut 93 Weak spots 95 Straighten 97 Stare lustfully at 98 Equivalent (2,1,3) 99 Moral crime 142 143 144 145 146 100 Personally 101 Debauched party 103 Petty (gossip) 45 Denude (3,4) 47 Lead-in 52 Freed from slavery B 2 G L E 4 CLUES 1 Commotion 2 Jabber 3 Horse pace 4 Placard 5 Excavator 6 Mismanage Anagram Square Rearrange the letters in each row to form a word. Write your answers into the ˕˟˔ˡ˞˚˥˜˗ʡˇ˛˘Ѓ˥˦˧˟˘˧˧˘˥˙˥ˢˠ˘˔˖˛˪ˢ˥˗ʟ reading down, will spell a mystery word. 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 108 | Woman Big Crossword F H S R B O U O E A P R I W L O G S G L R O A A E Weaklings “Green” cars Random chance Animal skins Forty winks DOWN 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 28 29 30 31 33 34 36 37 38 40 41 43 44 Reproductive gland Frigidity Actor, ... Ifans Union Army combatant Boat’s wheel Adjust Fencing blade Lady’s title Shut tight Model, ... Macpherson Spoken tests Roman emperor Sandcastle mould ʸ˟˘˖˧˥˜˖Ѓ˦˛ Skies Cellar Kitten’s dad Judges Brahma follower Parody (4,2) Crockery noise Cul-de-sac (4,3) Quarrels Kindle (interest) ˅˘Є˘˖˧˘˗˦ˢ˨ˡ˗ Clown Form of exercise Metal pin Artist, Pablo ...
PUZZLES panga 1 3 2 4 5 6 7 8 18 12 13 14 15 16 23 26 27 30 33 32 35 34 37 49 40 46 66 67 61 73 70 81 79 82 83 85 84 87 86 72 76 78 80 89 88 93 92 104 105 109 110 90 94 95 99 98 97 71 75 74 77 101 106 107 118 117 111 119 130 115 121 131 132 144 143 84 86 87 89 90 92 94 96 97 133 127 January 1 (3,4) Footwear carton Non-professional Check off one by one Hunting expeditions Mediterranean tree Lilo (3,3) Writer, Germaine ... Commercial production 102 Up ahead 104 Ancient language 105 Border upon 128 135 134 138 139 142 141 140 122 126 137 136 71 More eccentric 72 Stupid (remark) 82 Resistant to wear 120 125 129 102 108 114 124 Special provision Guiding Conches Stuffed quilt Fastening Resource Fabric insert Contains Concepts 96 100 113 116 62 65 69 68 54 60 59 64 103 47 50 58 57 31 41 53 63 112 39 52 56 91 38 45 48 51 36 44 43 42 17 24 29 28 54 56 58 59 62 67 68 69 70 11 20 22 25 123 10 19 21 55 9 145 106 108 113 115 117 119 120 122 124 146 Boyfriend Disbeliever Brighter Ship’s stabiliser Rubs out Geronimo’s tribe Frozen polar cover Responds to stimulus Premature 129 130 131 132 134 135 Gripped Musical symbol Chop roughly Message Obligation Flay 125 Freeze 126 Prevent (disaster) 128 Appropriately Woman | 109
Cryptic Crossword 1 2 3 4 5 8 6 7 14 Brilliance of wild IRA dance (8) 15 Safeguards families’ coats-of-arms (7) 17 Initially Captain leaves cars and takes lane back to 9 10 armoury (7) 20 Native deity loses heart in traditional Christmas scene (8) 11 12 13 15 22 Depraved United Nations holly left out (6) 23 Cod recoils when upset by reptiles you should never smile at (10) 14 16 24 Have a go at Billy (4) 25ˆ˔˩˔˚˘Ѓ˥˘˦˧˜˥˥˘˗˨ˣ˜ˡ˙˥ˢˡ˧ˢ˙ʶ˛˨˥˖˛ˢ˙ʸˡ˚˟˔ˡ˗ʛʩʜ 17 26 Listen to patients with calm perseverance (8) 18 DOWN 19 20 21 1  ʵ˜˥˗˔ˡ˗˕˔˧˚˘˧Ѓ˥˦˧˛ˢ˨˦˘˪˜˧˛˚˔˥˗˘ˡ˪˔˧˘˥˙˘˔˧˨˥˘ʛʫʜ 22 23 2 It’s all right for Kay to support nothing (4) 3 Beggar to get you into paper (6) 4 Rested about primary supplier of last meal course (7) 24 25 5 Foolishly lend Cara a list of dates (8) 6ʵ˔ˡ˚˟˔˗˘ʲˆ˛ʔʼ˧Ϡ˦ˣ˔˥˧ˢ˙ˆˢ˨˧˛ʸ˔˦˧ʴ˦˜˔ʛʤʣʜ 7 ʶ˟ˢˡ˘ʸ˥˜˖˧ˢ˥˘ˠˢ˩˘ˢˡ˘ˠ˔ˡˢ˙˧˛˘˖˟ˢ˧˛ʛʩʜ 26 ACROSS 8 9 10 11 12 Steal title and get pet one? (8) Sahara blessed heartland suitable for crops (6) Campaign launch for 500 Romans during sunlight hours (1-3) Pass greens cooked by travellers on trains or buses (10) Saw Sir mention a cup holder (6) 13 Somehow direct car to centre of Sudan for a component of the cashless society (6,4) 16 Cold wind lessens inside and gradually fades away (8) 18 ʶ˔˜ˡ˔ˡ˗ʸ˟˟˔˚˘˧ˠ˜˫˘˗˨ˣ˜ˡˣˢ˟˜˧˜˖˔˟˨ˡ˜ˢˡʛʫʜ 19 ʸ˫˧˥˔˧˘˥˥˘˦˧˥˜˔˟˟˘˔˩˘˦˖ˬ˖˟˘˧ˢˣ˦˙ˢ˥ˠˬ˧˛˜˖˔˟ˢˡ˘ʠ˘ˬ˘˗ creature (7) 21 Ida far out and very scared (6) 22 Sets up back to front and sends topsy-turvy (6) 24 Scottish Celt breaks a leg (4) Star Burst Hit, --Heartache Actor, --- Brynner Annie actress, Cameron --- The Queen’s Sylvia --Thriller, --- City Taylor Lautner’s Twilight role, --- Black G.I. Joe: The Rise Of Cobra’s --Miller Drama, The --Of The Day Actor, --- Jackson Infected cut Actress, --- Thurman Disney mermaid Tennis great, Jerry Denzel Arthur --Seinfeld animated Catch Me If Washington’s You --- The Book --- comedy American Beauty star, --- Birch Avatar’s --- Saldana Enid Blyton’s The Famous --- Russell Crowe drama, --- Hood Romantic comedy, --- You, Man Julia Roberts’ US police The office Pelican --Be Kind --- Gibson Rewind’s --- Def Runner Runner star, --- Arterton Inspector Wexford’s first name Singer, --- Sayer 300: Rise Of An Empire’s --- Green Hymn, Jason --- Maria Scott Lee’s Actor, Rapa --- --- McKellen Bing Crosby musical, Holiday --- Taylor Swift hit, --- It Off The Family Crooner, Stone’s --- King Cole Luke --- 110 | Woman Donald Trump’s daughter Beyond The --Sandra Bullock’s The ---
Code Cracker Sudoku Fill in the blank squares with Each number represents a different letter of the alphabet. Work out which the numbers 1 to 9, so that no number appears twice in each number stands for which letter to complete the crossword. We’ve given you two letters to start. All words are from a dictionary and no proper nouns are row, each column and each ˦ˠ˔˟˟˘˥ʦ˫ʦ˕˟ˢ˖˞ʡ used. All letters of the alphabet are not always used. When you have cracked ˧˛˘˖ˢ˗˘ʟЃ˟˟˜ˡ˧˛˘ˠˬ˦˧˘˥ˬ˪ˢ˥˗˜ˡ˧˛˘˕ˢ˫˕˘˟ˢ˪ʡ 7 4 9 5 7 1 6 3 8 3 5 4 1 5 7 6 8 7 2 15 18 3 16 2 21 5 10 7 3 16 4 8 17 10 7 6 8 8 7 8 6 1 6 1 7 16 8 22 4 5 10 15 20 13 5 5 15 8 6 11 18 6 6 6 5 5 8 1 1 6 7 6 10 14 6 16 17 18 13 13 19 6 10 18 6 19 7 20 8 21 9 22 10 23 14 3 6 18 10 7 5 8 17 6 13 7 7 1 6 19 6 10 5 16 16 6 5 1 10 6 15 7 10 5 C 4 14 11 5 3 9 18 10 S 4 6 17 10 1 3 18 17 5 2 1 12 18 16 18 8 14 5 15 15 5 10 7 6 7 5 15 10 16 10 17 8 18 16 14 7 10 5 10 2 16 20 17 10 6 7 20 5 8 4 10 6 24 12 25 13 26 8 7 1 18 6 6 14 2 14 2 6 7 21 6 8 18 5 13 5 4 5 9 5 17 17 16 14 6 1 6 17 2 4 9 3 5 2 Word Find Find all the words listed hidden in the grid of letters. They can be found in straight lines up, down, forwards, backwards or even diagonally. The leftover letters will reveal the mystery answer. 2 3 6 7 4 5 9 6 3 6 5 3 6 8 4 9 F M C M U R D O S O U N D A R S L D N B Q T I E N D E 2 7 Y P E H S N E I S S O R S A V I S S E Y T S I G S E I A O A R D E T O E N E S A N H E W L N N R E E C S S C E M O A I L C A W L T K I M M A I N E A O E C O A E N S T E S S D H O E N U S S E O H H U M R N L A Z U E S E E S M R W L S I S L V L L Y E B A D N A E T N I C O N R E H I H S C O T A D N S N I S C L W T D I Solutions can be found in ˧˛˘ˡ˘˫˧˜˦˦˨˘ of Woman. S A L S U M V C H L W N E N S C R P 7 1 5 2 8 1 5 9 Answer: 5 12 6 3 7 8 5 4 9 1 5 1 14 6 9 2 1 T U O S E T D U G N E P L S I A B L T B D F ANTARCTICA ALGAE BLUE WHALES BRUNT ICE SHELF COLD DAVIS SEA DOME A DOME C DRY EAST ELLSWORTH MTS ICE SHEET ICE STREAMS ICY LICHEN MCMURDO SOUND MOSS ORCAS PENGUINS PENINSULA QUEEN MAUD LAND ROSS ISLAND SCOTT SEALS SNOWSHOES SOUTHERN OCEAN VINCENNES BAY VINSON MASSIF WEST WILKES Woman | 111
#reviews EUPHORIA screening on NEON now Parents are freaking out, Vogue is obsessed with the ‘look’, and Lily Richards tells us why we should watch Euphoria. Euphoria is about a group of LA high-school teenagers who spin around Rue, an anxious, big-feeling addict whose dad died of cancer, leaving behind a gaping hole and endless prescription drugs. To her detriment, she discovers that big feelings can be dulled by pills – downers, K-Pin, xannies, fentanyl and (spoiler alert) eventually heroin. She falls in love with Jules, a trans kid who dreams of going to design school in NY and who puts herself on gay dating apps for casual sex with grown men. Other classmates include an introverted playwright, a sexually expressive cheerleader, a homophobic predator and an online dominatrix. Creator, writer, producer and director Sam Levinson brings a hard-won authenticity, as he spent most of his teen years as an addict. He treats time as non-linear, with music, chronology and perspective warped to mimic the experience of being on drugs. The cast are spectacular, with special mention going to the award-winning performance of former child model/actor and Disney wunderkind Zendaya. The show’s sophistication has led some to suggest it is irresponsibly glamorising bad behaviour. And to these critics, I say, “Stop assuming every form of controversial art is a tutorial!” The drug-taking is not the ducking-into-the-bathroom-type, where someone has the time of their life after dancing for 11 hours. Euphoria catalogues the depths of despair addicts struggle through. There is a scene involving an intervention that was so visceral and desperate that I forgot to breathe. Falling victim to gang members and running through peak traffic to avoid rehab are not aspirational scenes teens are likely to ape. This stuff is heavy but, remarkably, still full of heart. Just like teenagers. Instead of telling kids what to do all the time (as if we actually have it together), we should take notes. There’s a lot to learn here: from broadening sexual norms to male rage, female friendship and existential anxiety. That we’re still wading through shrieky condemnation of the basic, almost predictable, themes of any teen show (sex, drugs, alcohol, violence) is absurd. Now, more than ever, the world is on its knees. Of course, teen drama is going to be breathtaking in an “oh my god, they do that?!” kind of way. I suggest that instead of freaking out, we try tuning in. Altogether, Euphoria is a fearless, compassionate and refreshingly up-to-date take on big parts of the current human condition. MARCH PUZZLE SOLUTIONS BIG CROSSWORD G O L F E I N R T I C S L A E X P I I T I T A I A E L A R A I L S C B E M O L V A F R E N E C I A O H R E R D R A M N N I G G I E T A S K W E I N T I P O E R E E A C T H R E U S N K I S P R I A N I C S H E P B E V A T H L E E A D C O F F F N U M B E O E S O N A B L S A N R E A T E N R K B A A E S T A L L I T L O E A T E N K E S O P T U R E S T A R D B R E H A P E C A S T A W E R T T L A Y E R O V E R R E B E L S A E Y S A R D R U M S R N E L O G I S T O L L I N K U 112 | Woman D E E M A B U P T L A L C I D I O M P L A Y T T E R N D D U E A S S A P I G U A O N N A U G S S E H A R E I S M O R D I C S Q U O U M S P E N U S E W T E S S E S T R U P O D R U S E S N I E S T K U N A G E L A L L R S E E X C E N A L H T O D S A T A T E I L F L S E R S M O O C C H H E W A D O U L P T E U R O Q U I E U H I N M G E L S T E W D F A R E P E A R L L A E T A M R E N N D E D U I O S T A P A P M P A E R I F E W I A N D T E R L S Y N I X E N S E E R O U S L L S T R B L E L A A L M N C E D I M S A N C A S G E S T E E A R R A C E M D U I C K S A T H E D E D A M U N T E D CRYPTIC CROSSWORD SUDOKU 5 7 8 3 6 2 1 4 9 7 2 5 4 1 3 9 8 6 6 1 9 4 5 7 2 3 8 4 8 1 6 2 9 3 5 7 4 3 2 9 8 1 6 7 5 3 6 9 7 5 8 4 1 2 7 6 5 8 2 4 9 1 3 1 3 2 5 7 4 8 6 9 2 4 3 6 1 9 8 5 7 8 5 4 9 6 2 1 7 3 8 9 1 7 3 5 4 2 6 9 7 6 3 8 1 2 4 5 1 8 7 2 9 3 5 6 4 6 4 8 2 9 7 5 3 1 9 3 2 5 4 5 6 1 7 6 3 4 8 7 8 1 9 2 7 2 4 6 3 9 8 1 5 5 6 9 1 8 2 4 7 3 1 3 8 5 4 7 9 2 6 3 1 7 8 6 5 2 9 4 9 4 6 2 7 3 1 5 8 2 8 5 4 9 1 6 3 7 6 7 3 9 1 8 5 4 2 8 9 2 3 5 4 7 6 1 4 5 1 7 2 6 3 8 9 5 2 9 1 3 7 1 8 4 3 6 5 7 6 2 9 J V L V 8 4 STARBURST A N G E L S M O S O M E E N A O R I N A T E C H B R A N D B L O O D E A S T A F F D E S M E I T M W A C H E N H A R L I C A N O B S E S N E O B E C K I N S A H E R I T A G E F L O O R L I E V L E B Y R N E I M O T U S A S E S A R R Y C A A I S A L I E N D E D E R A N D A I D P R I S O C I R N T O G U G T E R N T R G A A N L O I D A R O N S S H S O R R E F U S U A T I L L E S I N R E S V E O L D B U I E C O C K T S E E CODE CRACKER WORD FIND P T E R T A R E O A L S A G E H E A T H C W I L H R Y S U O L A E J Y E A T V O I J S I A L O V E G H N H T E S H N E A D A D L D B O R S A N S N C L R E D R O U A N O G D K L N Y T N R S S N R E R O A I I S R C O N O M H A I S R N G A S I S A A S S A I N L T S L C D T G E T L E L I F F R A E U E O A B B O R H T S R K A E Y N E Y I F A I S E S H H C N P D R C O E D A I S P E T S N S R C Y T A P V I A H E S G A C E E E L R G L I O A K T R D O O W K N E M I L E T C O L R M R I I L L Y R O N E H E A B T ANSWER: ALEJANDRO AND CATALINA HEXAGON WORD 1. Arrays, 2. Actors, 3. Hoists, 4. Obtain, 5. Squirt, 6. Saying. MYSTERY WORD: ROSARY A=5, B=8, C=18, D=14, E=15, F=7, G=3, H=2, ANAGRAM SQUARE I=20, L=6, M=9, N=22, O=13, P=21, R=11,S=12, 1. Hello 2. Olive 3. Noble 4. Ember 5. Young T=10, U=4, V=17, W=1, X=19, Y=16 MYSTERY WORD: HONEY MYSTERY WORD: SHUTTER ISLAND
A VERY BRITISH SCANDAL on Amazon Prime Video from April 22 TEXT: TAMAR MÜNCH Above: Clare Foy as aristocratic socialite Margaret Campbell, Duchess of Argyll, in A Very British Scandal. From the writer of The Pale Horse and Dublin Murders comes this historical drama series starring Claire Foy as Duchess of Argyll, Margaret Campbell, and Paul Bettany as the Duke of Argyll, Ian Campbell. A true story, Argyll vs Argyll became one of the most notorious, bizarre and brutal divorce cases of 20th-century Britain. The series tracks the Campbells’ relationship over 16 years, starting when Margaret, an aristocratic socialite renowned for her charisma, beauty and style, meets the dashing Captain Campbell, holder of the Argyll title and land. Both are married to other people (foreshadowing perhaps?), but with their divorces already on the cards, it’s not long before they get hitched. Margaret and Ian appear well suited: each is as passionate, frivolous and selfinvolved as the other. They become the Duke and Duchess and move to the Argyll pile in Inveraray where Margaret starts renovating the rundown castle. As it transpires, Ian isn’t very good at paying his accounts, so that isn’t all she ends up footing the bill for. Over the course of this three-part series, we witness the unravelling of the Campbells’ marriage. Ian is a terrible drunk, and Margaret descends into vindictive treachery in retaliation for both his viciousness and his fiscal irresponsibility. Both are also guilty of infidelity. Their subsequent divorce featured accusations of forgery, theft, violence, drug-taking, secret recording, bribery and an explicit Polaroid picture. So, it’s no surprise the acrimonious split became the subject of both salacious gossip and a media frenzy in 1960s Britain. Watching Claire Foy in another ’60s-era drama and again playing a royal so soon after her stellar turn in The Crown may provide a strong sense of déjà vu, but she brings a self-assuredness to the role that helps highlight Margaret’s bravery and resilience in the face of public vilification and shame. The North Water Airing Sundays on Rialto Set on an 1850s whaling vessel trawling the Arctic waters between Canada and Greenland, The North Water stars Jack O’Connell (Skins, Godless) as a disgraced ex-army surgeon who signs up as the ship’s doctor, hoping to escape his past. Also on board is harpooner Henry Drax (Colin Farrell), a murderous psychopath. Not recommended if you want something light, but this is a brilliantly broody tale of survival in one of the world’s harshest climates. Cursed Films II New series premieres April 7, with episodes airing every Thursday A documentary anthology series that explores ˧˛˘˙˔˖˧˦˕˘˛˜ˡ˗˙˔ˠˢ˨˦Ѓ˟ˠ˦˧˛˔˧˦ˢˠ˘ˠ˔ˬ consider to have been “cursed”. The season opener is family classic The Wizard of Oz, and it has interviews with experts, fans and the children of some of the cast. Other titles showcased include Rosemary’s Baby, Stalker and The Serpent and the Rainbow. APRIL PUZZLE SOLUTIONS BIG CROSSWORD L I M E R E E A P U L L O O P E L A N C E E N R T E X A S S N F A M I N N L I M A G I S V R T R E M O B R A T I A R A G R I O V E R S U E S A U C E S L S C R U M S I O S T E E L U L D S I G N E R E H I N D U S I C H V E C K D E D L E S A P N I E N R A S A T T A U P R S N R N A N C D O U T R H A K A T E D R E R L A S P T I A R S A S H E A A U R G P A E U N G D I N G I R G A I N G F I F Y A T E S N A J O H K E A D I A T R A O A O M B S A C N L T R A B R Y N D E F L V U E N D R A E S S S H O R S T F A T L I L N G R L E D D R R O W U N SUDOKU B A R E C E S D H O V E E A E R G U E N A T I A N A B A N T O N E N B A C E T S I V T O R A Y B U N S I C V O E D U B A R G A I N T R A D E V R S S M T I L T E N U G E R N E R T A O T O R W B M O T O I S E X A E O N F W J A C A K H O M E N N C E S E R A D U L I F D O A N O S G R E N E D R A V I Z S A I D S C A E E N I N S T S L I N R D U C R E S L A C B E S L Y S M B C O A L E S S A V R A O L A B R A M R A N E M I E N A D D A L M A D N T A C E A D H E M T Y R A G F F T I C U S T I N N G S S A S T A D Y R A D P E S I N D E R S T I R E L E T E S R E R C T E A N G L L E CRYPTIC CROSSWORD 6 1 9 4 8 3 5 7 2 3 6 8 1 4 7 2 5 9 7 8 2 6 9 5 1 4 3 2 9 1 3 6 5 8 4 7 3 5 4 7 1 2 8 9 6 4 5 7 8 9 2 1 6 3 2 3 8 5 4 9 6 1 7 5 2 4 9 1 6 7 3 8 1 4 6 2 7 8 9 3 5 7 1 9 5 8 3 4 2 6 5 9 7 3 6 1 4 2 8 8 3 6 7 2 4 5 9 1 8 5 6 2 3 4 7 5 1 2 6 3 8 8 6 1 9 3 7 2 5 9 4 7 1 6 8 9 9 7 4 1 4 7 1 3 4 8 2 6 9 5 8 6 9 7 5 1 3 2 4 2 4 5 9 3 6 7 8 1 1 7 6 5 2 8 9 4 3 3 5 8 6 4 9 1 7 2 4 9 2 1 7 3 5 6 8 6 2 4 3 1 7 8 5 9 9 8 1 2 6 5 4 3 7 5 3 7 8 9 4 2 1 6 5 9 3 5 1 6 8 4 3 8 9 7 5 4 7 3 2 2 6 STARBURST S A S H A H A W K E A G M A R D I A N R Y O G H O S F A L S T U I S L D A N A D T M O W I L 1 L E R E X E I T T H E E N Q C U S A H L E R B U F L L E D O E G 2 A S H E L M S A I U N Y R U I T D E E A A S T R O I N O B U G W H T S T L A Z E R C N L Y O F F T H E O I F S H I T O R C E G S H E L L L F O M A T E U L N L G A R I A G H A A T A G O O D N E E O R E S T A CODE CRACKER R M O A N O L L O I G U G G E O N O J O E B O Y C A D V E A T H E A R T A C O D L E D O W S A E R S D U P N O K E E A M I P N T WORD FIND R U A L G I E S N T U O S A R R G U E M X T R E E A D S I R W O R S Z A M A O G E L G N U J J A P U R L D S T R I B U T A R A A C I R E M A H C L L B A A B R I S E F E T R R A N O I A K E L N P A T A I L R C E A A E A A N M O I P O S A I S S H M M S O C N L A B H N R R N A D N W I A I H T H R R S T W D A O A N O U G E A A E L C A N E V T R A P H B S N A L E T A E I E O I T A R A C E I F M U L E N N S S I B P E R A O N E R S T M A C A P A E A B C ANSWER: WORLD’S LARGEST DRAINAGE BASIN HEXAGON WORD 1. Okayed, 2. Whisky, 3. Single, 4. Values, 5. Primly, 6. Dyeing. MYSTERY KEYWORD: ASSUME A=24, B=23, C=5, D=13, E=22, F=21, G=12, ANAGRAM SQUARE H=16, I=15, K=19, L=2, M=4, N=1, O=18, P=20, 1. Ebony 2. Ledge 3. Facet R=9, S=7, T=11, U=10, V=8, W=6, X=14, Y=3, 4. Itchy 5. Noisy. MYSTERY KEYWORD: ELFIN Z=17 MYSTERY WORD: WISTFULNESS Woman | 113
Dame June Jackson “smoked up a storm, was a hotshot card player and swore like a trooper”. Her passionate crusade for rehabilitative justice meant she was the longest-serving member of the New Zealand Parole Board, following her appointment in 1991. She lived life to the brink and then some. A feisty fighter whose reputation and mahi are a part of the legacy she has left behind for others to follow. A mother, a grandmother, and an immensely inspiring human being. Read Moana Maniapoto’s beautiful tribute to Dame June Jackson on the E-tangata website: e-tangata. co.nz/reflections/the-matriarch-of-mangere. 114 | Woman PHOTO: HIKURANGI KIMIORA JACKSON. Haere atu ra te Kahurangi Te MurangaJuneJackson

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