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Bir Yemin Ettim Capitulo 55 Completo HD

Ver Bir Yemin Ettim Capitulo 55 Completo HD Ennovelas. Bir Yemin Ettim Capitulo 55 Vídeo Dailymotion. Ver Bir Yemin Ettim (Hice Un Juramento) Novela turca Capitulos Completos en Español Subtitulado gratis online – [Capitulos Completos + Full HD + Descargar] – Bir Yemin Ettim (Hice Un Juramento) | Ennovelas.Lat

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Cooking legend Prue Leith’s child-friendly kitchen gadget she designed 50 years ago and STILL uses daily

DAME Prue Leith is known by most for her top-class cooking skills and honest judgement on Great British Bake Off.

But many people might be unaware of her other secret talent – engineering design.

Prue Leith at the Mary Poppins Returns European premiere.
Prue has carved a successful career in the culinary world
Getty
Prue Leith's bespoke lazy Susan spice rack.
The cooking legend had her bespoke lazy susan built by a carpenter

In a clip shared to her TikTok account, @dameprueleith, the famous restaurateur revealed her “number one most asked about item” in her kitchen.

It’s a bespoke, rotating utensil organiser she designed herself, 50 years ago!

Prue said to viewers she “drew it all on a piece of paper” while on a family holiday.

Once the brood had arrived home, she contacted a carpenter who was able to build it for her.

The rotating organiser is split into several levels, with wooden spoons, spatulas and other longer utensils at the top.

Prue Leith in her kitchen using a bespoke lazy Susan.
It makes fetching utensils a whizz

The level below wraps around it, and is designed to act as a knife block, neatly tucking away the sharp kitchen accessories.

On the third and fourth shelves below, Prue keeps her bottles of oils and spices – and there’s plenty of room for them.

When she needs something, she just gives the contraption a gentle push and it rotates to bring the item closer to her.

Where does the term lazy susan come from?

Surprisingly, nobody has been able to definitively trace the history behind the name ‘lazy susan’ – despite it being added to Webster’s Dictionary in 1933. There are a few theories:

  1. Some people reckon the term comes from servants in the 1700s being called ‘susans’. The term ‘lazy susan’ could be a reference to the supposed laziness of household servants. 
  2. Other people speculate that Thomas Jefferson invented the device for his daughter, Susan, who was often the last to be served at dinner. 
  3. While someone people credit Thomas Edison, believing he developed the device for his phonograph (a sound device) in 1877.

Prue explained that when she designed the organiser, her children were young – which posed a risk while she was working as a chef and frequently handling sharp knives.

While designing her custom lazy susan, she made sure it could store away any sharp objects, to keep her children safe.

“It’s brilliant because when the children were young I wanted the the knives out of their reach,” Prue explained.

And despite her children now being in their fifties, Prue’s kept the custom gadget ever since.

“I’ve had it for about 50 years now and it goes with me from house to house,” she said.

Viewers in the comments absolutely loved Prue’s design.

One person wrote: “It’s a Lazy Prue-san”

While somebody else said: “She should start selling these!”

You need to get yourself on Dragons Den with that, Prue

TikTok user

And another person wrote: “I’m going to ask my husband to make one for me. We have a small Victorian kitchen, and desperately need storage.”

Somebody else chimed in: “Girl! I will take 2!”

Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme – Sun Club.

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‘Fit & healthy’ promising footballer, 17, died suddenly shortly after running half marathon – leaving parents devastated

Collage of a young man running a marathon, and a photo of his family.

HEARTBROKEN parents have told of their grief following the sudden death of their son after running a half marathon aged just 17.

Promising footballer Ben Saunders started to suffer from chest pains and was tired all the time after completing the Bath run.

Runner in a polka dot vest participating in a marathon.
Ben was a fit and healthy teenager before his diagnosis
Two boys in Bristol City soccer jerseys holding trophies.
Ben (left) with his brother Charlie (right)
Family portrait in front of Buckingham Palace.
The family have received several awards for their charity work

That was in March 2019 – and months later parents Tom and Joanne Saunders were hugging their son for the last time.

They have now opened up about their shock when fit and healthy Ben was diagnosed with Synovial sarcoma, a rare and aggressive form of cancer.

Speaking to the Sun, Joanne said: “I wish he’d had a scan earlier, I think maybe if he had an MRI scan it would have been picked up.”

However, she and Tom explained how even if the tumour had been detected earlier, it would have been a “miracle” for Ben to recover.

“With Synovial sarcoma, sometimes you see people have part of their arm removed, or they have a limb removed. And that’s basically cutting the sarcoma away,” Joanne continued.

“The problem Ben had and why it was so rare. It was attached to his heart.”

DEVASTATING DIAGNOSIS

They went to the GP and the young lad was given painkillers after being told he had chest inflammation.

But after several trips to the hospital with severe chest pain, there was still no diagnosis, with ECGs and tests coming back normal.

The family kept pushing for answers after Ben had to be rushed to A&E with fluid around his heart, a condition called pericarditis.

They returned two weeks later as the fluid returned and were referred for a scan.

Synovial sarcoma

Synovial sarcoma (synovial cell sarcoma) is a rare type of cancer that affects soft tissues, like your muscles or ligaments.

It’s called synovial sarcoma because these cancer cells resemble the cells in your synovial joints (like your elbows, hips and shoulders).

Synovial sarcoma grows very slowly and may not cause pain.

Tumors can grow undetected for up to two years.

A lot of the time, those affected won’t have symptoms until the tumor grows large enough to create a lump you can see and/or feel.

Some people develop pain or numbness, especially if the tumor presses on nerves as it grows.

This type of cancer usually forms in joints like ankles, elbows, hips, shoulders and wrists.

In very rare circumstances, such as Ben’s, it can form in your chest, head or neck.

Once symptoms occur, they may include:

  • A lump you can see and feel – the lump might be painless
  • Numbness
  • Pain
  • Swelling

In the case of a synovial sarcoma in the heart, symptoms can include:

  • Chest pain
  • Shortness of breath
  • Pericardial effusion
  • Weight loss
  • Nausea after eating

Doctors thought they picked up a blood clot or cyst around Ben’s heart and it would need to be removed with surgery.

A cardiologist told the family Ben would be back to playing sports by January, four months after the operation.

But it wasn’t until Ben was in surgery that the tumour on his heart was discovered.

Altogether it took around seven months for Ben’s diagnosis since the first GP appointment.

However the family hold no animosity towards doctors or staff, Tom said: “We’re not looking to blame anybody. It’s incredibly rare.”

A woman and a man stand under an umbrella.
Charlie Saunders with Princess Eugenie at a Buckingham Palace garden party
Three people and a dog pose for a photo; one person holds a Points of Light award certificate.
The couple earned themselves a Points of Light award
Man in Ben Saunders Foundation t-shirt.
England and Man United captain Bryan Robson supported the cause
Two men in black Bath Rugby t-shirts stand in front of a Bath Rugby emblem.
Bath and England rugby players Charlie Ewels and Tom Dunn

Despite their grief, the resilient parents wanted to focus on two main points – Ben’s foundation and awareness of his condition.

Tom said: “Ben didn’t smoke. He didn’t drink. He plays semi-professional football to a high standard at 16, representing his county.

“Very handsome, he had the six pack he had everything, whereas, if you’re like me, you think people get cancer because they smoke because they’re overweight because they’ve not had a good lifestyle.

“He was about as far removed from that as you could possibly get.”

Joanne agreed: “Yeah, he ate really healthily. Didn’t do drugs.”

Tom replied: “He was still dreaming about being a professional footballer.”

‘PLUNGED UNTO AN UNKNOWN WORLD’

Joanne recalled the moment they were told their son had the rare and aggressive form of cancer.

“We were called in to be told while Ben was still in theatre. It’s just devastating,” she said.

“You just feel like you’ve been plunged into an unknown world.”

The mum-of-two, who has also lost both of her parents to cancer, continued: “It’s not the order of life. It’s it’s the most horrific thing that can happen to anybody.

“Bar nothing. There is nothing can be worse than than losing a child.”

The teenager was in intensive care following surgery, so Joanna delayed telling him until he could process the news.

Even four years down the line we’re still paying for Ben’s mobile phone

Tom SaundersBen's dad

Ben remained in ICU for eight days before being transferred to the teenage cancer unit, where he stayed for about two weeks.

He would be able to return home for around 10 days, before going back to hospital for a gruelling two weeks of chemotherapy.

Joanne heartbreakingly revealed the teenager had been scared to die.

“I knew that Ben was very frightened, and I said to him I would go with him if he was really frightened,” she said.

“He got really really cross with me and said ‘Mum you have a choice, I don’t. You have to stay for Charlie and dad'”.

The family were also hit by unexpected financial strain after Ben was diagnosed.

Joanne said: “You’ve suddenly got all these extra costs as well like parking charges.

“And you know there’s nowhere for you to eat at the hospital. So you end up buying sandwiches and things like that.”

Tom added: “I’m employed. So my employer was really good. Joanne was self employed and the financial impact it has on you things that you just wouldn’t even dream that you’ve got to do like phone your mortgage provider and ask them, can you have a six month mortgage break?

COPING WITH GRIEF

The couple also spoke about what it’s life to cope with grief alongside your partner.

Tom described it as going “through hell and back” as everyone deals with the heartbreaking process differently.

Joanne continued: “It can be little things like Thomas would watch television and have the television on quite loud.

“And I seem to become really sensitive to noise.

“So just living in the same house when you’re both grieving so differently, is hard and for Charlie as well.

“Charlie said not that long ago to me ‘you and dad had each other. I was on my own’.

“And I, said, Charlie, ‘Dad and I didn’t have each other because
we were all grieving in our own way’.”

Joanne also told how her son Charlie was the one who motivated her to get back to work.

Tom added: “And even four years down the line we’re still paying for Ben’s mobile phone.

“You go into his bedroom, and the bed’s still there, and all of his sweets are still in his cupboard, and obviously they get replaced and
put new ones in there.

“The wallpaper is the same, and you’re just praying that you’re in a bad dream, and you hope one day you’re gonna wake up from it.

“But the foundation is what we want to let people know about and
and to to grow it.”

BEN SAUNDERS FOUNDATION

The beacon of hope, which has helped over 370 families in just over three years, was started by Ben before he died.

When asked what Ben would say if he could see the work his foundation has done, his parents said he would be telling them to hit one million pounds in donations.

“Because he always told me he was going to be a millionaire,” said Tom.

Tom and Joanne now work alongside running the charity – which they do as volunteers.

The idea was sparked after another charity called the Reese Forley Foundation, in Norfolk, paid for Ben and his friends to go away to Center Parc, about a month before he died.

“We were struggling but for the two or three weeks after that trip, it was all Ben could talk about.

“He wanted that and designed his logo, he had all these ideas.”

Tom and Joanne raise thousands of pounds for each family to get away through Ben’s foundation.

They manage to maintain two lodges in the Cotswolds through donations and fund raisers.

Families are also given vouchers and money to spend while on their holiday.

And, the lodges are designed to make guests in treatment as comfortable as possible, with TVs, hot water bottles, fans, and homey decoration.

But, the foundation also helps people in other ways.

Tom recalled: “Last year there was a young lad who’s only 18 years old. He was estranged from his parents.

“He got cancer. He had nowhere to live.

“He’s waiting for his personal, independent payment to come through from the government.

“So we paid for his his rent for three months, and we paid for all of his travelling to go up and back to the hospital.”

Tom added: “If Ben hadn’t come up with this idea, I don’t think one of us would be here now. It gave us a reason to carry on.”

Joanne said: “What I still find difficult to cope with it that he was so so poorly when he was doing all of this. He knew what was happening so when he should have been resting he was just saying to me ‘get a notepad, write this down, what colours do you think we should do the logos’.

“He was organising fundraisers, he organised a head shave and a zumba event, there were hundreds of people there. It was incredible.”

Meanwhile Tom referred to the charity as his “obsession” after it became officially registered just two months after Ben’s passing.

The relentless couple continue to draw in donations from businesses and members of the pubic.

They’ve even seen a whopping £50,000 gifted from the National Lottery.

Another way they raise money is a 200 club, with a monthly draw, this almost covers the cost of one lodge for a year.

An annual ball in Ben’s name also rakes in thousands of pounds for the cause.

Meanwhile, over 60 football grounds now hang Ben’s banners on the sides of their pitches to raise awareness.

“The main driver for us is that Ben is never forgotten,” said Tom.

But the couple started from scratch, scouring charity shops for lodge decoration and having no money left over for things such as pitch fees.

“It was quite stressful, not knowing how we were going to keep that going, it weighed quite heavy at first,” said Joanne.

SUPPORT IN SPORT

The self-professed “football fanatic” family have been supported by former English footballer Kevin Keegan, who phoned them up at their home.

Brian Robson, Trent Alexander Arnold, and Roberta Cars all sent videos messages to Ben before he passed.

“There was Ashley Williams, who was Captain of Wales at the time, was in Azerbaijan, playing football, and he was phoning Ben up and having conversations with him at like 2am,” Tom recalled.

“So the whole sporting world, the way they’ve got behind Ben.”

Person in costume with blonde wig and hat.
Ben dressed up for a primary school play
Two boys in soccer jerseys stand outside a shop.
Ben and his brother Charlie

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Gladiator wows RTE Late Late Show viewers as she easily squats Patrick Kielty before discussing Ireland star brother

LYSTUS Ebosele is making a BIG name for herself in the UK as the newest Gladiator on the BBC’s modern version of the classic show.

And she made quite an impression back home in her debut appearance on The Late Late Show.

Woman carrying a man on her shoulders.
It was definitely easier for her than it was for Patrick Kielty
Screenshot from The Late Late Show featuring a man and woman; text overlay reads "Shut up! Lockjaw".
The fitness influencer can bench press 145kg

The Enniscorthy native outlined her hopes for the empowering message she’ll be able to send to girls with her new platform on a programme that routinely draws in 6 MILLIONS viewers.

Her chat with Patrick Kielty went up another level right at the end as the host got hoisted up over her shoulders.

He had quizzed her on her weightlifting maxes given that she was a champion powerlifter before embarking on this TV career.

Lystus AKA Cyclone mentioned that her best exercise is the squat which she has maxed out at 245kg.

At that juncture the Down man noted that he’s around the 83kg mark so it wouldn’t be much of a challenge for her to squat him.

Sure enough she was doing a full set of repetitions with ease a few moments later as the 54-year-old managed to throw to ad break despite being a little discombobulated.

Earlier in the snippet, she’d also touched on her brother Festy being a full Ireland international.

The speedster broke into the senior team under Stephen Kenny and was one of Ireland’s better performers when deployed by Heimir Hallgrimsson over the November window.

It just so happens that the right-back had had a…whirlwind 24 hours over the course of Friday too.

He has joined Turkish outfit Basaksehir for an undisclosed fee. 

The 22-year-old had his loan spell at Watford cut short by parent club Udinese to allow him to make the switch to Turkey

He has signed a deal at the Istanbul-based club until June 2028 and could make his debut this weekend against Samsunspur.

Basaksehir are currently seventh in the Super Lig, and beat St Patrick’s Athletic on their way to the Conference League group stages this season.

They won the league in 2020, though are traditionally one of the smaller clubs in Turkey though they have a collaboration agreement with Manchester City.

Ebosele has made the switch as he becomes the first Irish man to ever play for a Turkish club having impressed at Watford this season.

The former Derby County joined the Hornets on loan from sister club Udinese – where he made 38 Serie A appearances – last August and made 18 appearances. 

His form has also saw him become a regular in the Ireland set-up with seven caps for Ireland, including starts in the last two games. 

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Британські військові вперше застосували лазерну систему HELWS проти безпілотників (відео)

Під час випробувань використовували інфрачервоний лазер високої потужності на мобільній платформі, яка відстежувала безпілотники в повітрі в реальному часі. Британська армія вперше випробувала високоенергетичну лазерну зброю (HELWS) на мобільній платформі, знищивши під час тестів кілька безпілотників. Випробування відбулися на полігоні Раднор в Уельсі, де військовослужбовці 16-го полку Королівської артилерії успішно відпрацювали наведення та ураження цілей […]

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Із двома двигунами: перший кросовер Citroen продають за ціною Porsche Cayenne

Фото: Artcurial | Citroen 2CV Sahara — позашляхова версія моделі   Citroen 2CV Sahara — оригінальний позашляховий варіант моделі з повним приводом та двома моторами. Виготовлено лише 693 таких авто, а до нашого часу їх збереглося лише 30. У Франції на аукціон Artcurial виставили незвичний Citroen 2CV 1964 року. За непримітне бюджетне авто планують отримати […]

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Симптоми, які ігноруються: фахівці пояснили, за яких симптомів варто звернутися до психіатра

Що може викликати занепокоєння у поведінці людини? Багато людей уникають звернення до психіатра через страх осуду чи поширені стереотипи. Вони помилково вважають, що їхні проблеми не настільки серйозні. Проте звертатися за допомогою — це нормально, і в цьому немає нічого соромного. Фахівці назвали ознаки, які сигналізують про необхідність звернення до спеціаліста, інформує Ukr.Media. Одним із […]

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