| "Why I've had the mothers' names of all my ex-lovers tattooed on my torso" | |
| Welcome to Lessons in Lifestyle, and have you heard the news? Jennifer Aniston – FKA "poorJen" when her 2000 marriage to Brad Pitt broke down – has hard launched her new man: a transformational coach and master hypnotherapist called Jim Curtis (Lana Del Rey and her alligator tour guide husband better watch out). This week, Lydia Spencer-Elliott has the full low-down on the new couple and why going Insta official is a Big Deal in Hollywood. Elsewhere this week, Sophie Heawood looks at why female rage is, well, all the rage right now. From BBC's hit series Riot Women – about a group of five sixty-something ladies who start a rock band together – and Lily Allen's divorce album West End Girl, there has been an uprising of female fury in our storytelling, and we're lapping it up, writes Heawood. Read more here. On another note, Maja Anushka speaks to artist Harriet Richardson, who has inked the names of her lovers' mothers on her body, for her latest project. That's right: Richardson got a tattoo of the names of her 14 ex-lovers' mothers, all the way from her first teenage boyfriend to her most recent (and most grown-up) break-up. "I was very conscious not to use men's names," Richardson said. "The people that are, arguably, more important to me than the men – are the women who raised them." Find the full piece here. In this week's newsletter, you can expect: | |
| Jennifer Aniston has just gone official with her new boyfriend – now read between the lines | |
| As Jennifer Aniston posts a love message to her new man on Instagram, Lydia Spencer-Elliott looks at why posting is so monumental and why the politics behind it tells us everything we need to know about this new relationship | |
| Do you speak to ChatGPT about your personal problems? | |
| Last week, we asked whether it was normal to have more than 100 friends, based on a theory from academic Robin Dunbar, which suggests that humans' natural social circles are capped at around 150. As it turns out, a strong 94 per cent of you said that's way too many friends (I have to agree), while 3 per cent said it's normal, and another 3 per cent of you said it's not enough! Thanks for voting. |
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| The thing most people get wrong when exercising – and why it's costing them results | By getting the wrong intensity for your workouts, you can seriously hamper your results, says Harry Bullmore. Here, he talks to a fitness coach about how to fix it and what everyone should be doing for a well-rounded weekly exercise routine | |
| | Your essential guide to electric car pricing, finance and deals to help you know when to buy in a fast-changing EV market | |
| The best one-pot autumn and winter recipes for no effort and maximum flavour | From Mary Berry's Tuscan chicken to Jamie Oliver's salmon pasta and Nadiya Hussain's coconut fish noodles, these one-pot wonders prove you don't need a sink full of pans to eat well this season | |
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