Monday, December 23, 2024
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Birth changes women’s bodies for ever – and we need to get real about it

The tennis player Naomi Osaka opened up this week about how she feels physically since having her daughter. Both athletes and non-athletes will have nodded in recognition

‘My biggest issue is that I don’t feel like I’m in my body,” Naomi Osaka wrote this week on Instagram. A year after her daughter was born, the Grand Slam champion, who returned to the competitive circuit in January, is struggling to find her form. “I try and tell myself ‘it’s fine you’re doing great’ … Internally I hear myself screaming ‘what the hell is happening?!?!’”

That is awful, but how fantastic that she is talking about how she feels. Traditionally, vulnerability is not welcome in elite sport, an environment of “stigma surrounding mental health issues, a high threshold for help-seeking behavior, and a low sense of psychological safety”, as one study described it last year. Yet so much of elite athletes’ success is in their heads; of course they falter, habitually exposed to pressure that would crush us normal people (unsurprisingly, research suggests they may be at higher risk of deleterious mental health symptoms.

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‘It’s very silly and it feels like fun’: bubble skirts are making a comeback

On the catwalk and on the street this summer, a new generation has revived the 1950s, 80s and 00s puffball

Originally dreamt up in the 50s, popular in the 80s and again in the 00s, the bubble skirt – sometimes known as a puffball – is having another moment in 2024.

With its rounded shape and short length, it is a silhouette made for parties rather than professionalism. Dazed declared earlier this month that “the bratty, indie sleaze-era bubble skirt is this summer’s biggest trend”.

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‘Resurrected’ Democrats look toward 2024 convention with renewed hope

Kamala Harris’s ascent in the race for the White House has imbued the party with joy and galvanized ranks

Tens of thousands of Democrats are expected to descend on Chicago this week for their party’s convention, bubbling with a feeling few had anticipated: pure, unconfined joy.

At the end of their four-day fete, when the red, white and blue balloons tumble from the rafters of the United Center, Kamala Harris will have become the first woman of color to accept a major party’s presidential nomination in American history. The moment will cap a frenzied few weeks for Democrats, following the vice-president’s sudden ascent to the top of the ticket in a development that has transformed the race for the White House and galvanized a party once resigned to a rematch between Donald Trump and Joe Biden.

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US to survey dairy cattle brought to slaughter to study bird flu infections

Regulators will inspect cows to see how widespread virus is and determine whether ageing and cooking inactivate it

The US will track bird flu infections in dairy cows brought to slaughter to understand the ways the virus infects meat and will also continue testing raw milk cheeses to see whether the virus is inactivated in the ageing process.

The renewed focus on the US food chain is the latest front in the effort to combat the infectious bird flu virus, or H5N1, which has triggered alarm bells across the world as a potential future pandemic.

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GDP growth is strong but it masks UK plc’s deep-seated structural problems | Larry Elliott

Rachel Reeves must show how the Tories failed to tackle longstanding productivity, investment and trade deficits and stress how Labour can

Britain had the fastest-growing economy in the G7 in the first half of this year. The unemployment rate is coming down and so is wage inflation. As Jim Callaghan never quite said as he arrived back in the country during the winter of discontent: crisis? What crisis?

Last week’s release of key economic indicators were not exactly supportive of the government’s argument that it was handed a country in worse shape than at any time since 1945. That’s quite a claim when quarterly growth is running at 0.6%, the annual inflation rate is 2.2% and unemployment is 4.2%.

Overall, we are sceptical of talk that the UK is now experiencing ‘Goldilocks’ conditions. But it’s clear that there has been a shift in the narrative away from weak growth and high inflation, towards stronger growth and weaker inflation.”

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10 of the best regions in Europe for sparkling wine

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The bubbles don’t just stop in champagne country. Here’s where to find the fizz from Germany to Romania via Dorset and Catalonia

Germans drink more bubbly than any other nationality, with riesling sekt (from the regions of Baden, Pfalz and Mosel) absolutely the top quaff. The best way to seek out sekt is along the 85km-long German Wine Route (the country’s oldest) – an idyllic rural stretch studded with castles and encompassing hiking and cycling routes that wiggle through villages, vineyards and forests all the way from Bockenheim down to Schweigen. Along the way, make the most of the opportunity to enjoy tasting sessions at sustainable wineries. Map out a route to include affordable accommodation and great restaurants through german-wineroute.com.

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The evolution of Kamala Harris: from activist in pigtails to presidential candidate

The daughter of civil rights activists has an unbroken history of working to change ‘anything that wasn’t right’, friends say

It was the first week of July. News of the presidential election had been mired, for eight days, in alarming assessments of Joe Biden and that shambolic debate. The president had started but not finished sentences, slurred words and at points stood with his mouth slightly agape while his opponent, Donald Trump, ignored questions and lied without fact-check.

Now, on 6 July, inside New Orleans’s convention center, the 30th annual Essence Festival of Culture was under way. Kamala Harris was set to speak, one of the vice-president’s biggest in-person events since Biden’s performance had seemingly upended the race. The attendees – mostly Black women, drawn to this long-running music-festival-meets-women’s-expo – were waiting to see Harris. Some were chattering about the possibilities: did her future lie at the top of the Democratic party’s ticket? What could, or should, happen next? The press corps now trailing Harris had swelled in size, and began to scribble notes and scramble for a look as Harris walked across the stage as the defiant second chorus of Beyoncé’s Freedom boomed. A rousing cheer came from the standing-room-only crowd in the cavernous, 600-seat room.

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Notes on chocolate: English treats for country living

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A bar called a Sweet Tart reminded me of the kinds of things which make me feel really at home

When I first moved out of London to live in the countryside, it took me a while to feel at home. For the first few weeks I felt very out of sorts. ‘Bake a cake,’ my partner said, not remotely altruistically since I had not made any homemade goods since we’d moved in. So I did. The first thing I made was that most English of tea time treats, a Bakewell tart. I make a really good Bakewell tart, from a recipe found long, long ago and never bettered. And it worked, I felt at home.

I thought of this as I opened a bar, a big bruiser of a bar, by Fatso (I really can’t decide if I love or loathe this name – my two Gen Z babies cannot believe such a name is acceptable). Anyway, the new bar they’ve just launched is called Sweet Tart, £6.75 and I really liked it. Not in a I-could-eat-a-whole-half-a-bar but in a one-piece-is-lovely-thank-you way. (I feel I need to point out it also has coconut in it which I couldn’t really taste but gave a nice mouth feel to the proceedings.)

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Have laptop, can travel: the rise and rise of the commuter student

High rents and living costs mean almost half of students are travelling to campus instead of living on it. But are they missing out on the social side?

The university experience used to be characterised by moving away from home, living in halls, and being immersed in campus life. But with rents and living costs soaring, more students than ever before are staying at home and commuting to university.

Blackbullion, a financial education website for university-goers, describes the “relentless rise of the commuter student” in its Student Money and Wellbeing Report 2024.

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Behold the new sexy Pirelli calendar, a perfect example of Post#MeToo creep | Barbara Ellen

Tasteful nudity is back in business – it’s as if the last seven years had never happened

I know what you’re thinking: “Whatever happened to sexy tyre calendars? I really miss those.” You’re in luck. The 2025 Pirelli calendar has been shot ultra-sexy, with tasteful nudity/near-nudity again. This is after the Italian company spent years reacting to #MeToo and accusations of pandering to the male gaze by shooting clothed campaigns.

Annie Leibovitz was involved in taking the photos at one point. There were photos of Yoko Ono, Serena Williams, Patti Smith and more… but they had their clothes on, so who cares?

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