Shy Mom Gets Naked For Son

Shy Mom Gets Naked For Son




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Shy Mom Gets Naked For Son

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The Goop creator and the Coldplay frontman posed for a sweet selfie at the 18-year-old's ceremony. The former couple also share son Moses, 16.

Goosh, there it is! The two wellness gurus have teamed up on a sexy new scent inspired by Paltrow's viral "This Smells Like My Vagina" candle.

The birthday girl looked like a spitting image of her mom in a new pic shared via Instagram by the Goop founder over the weekend.

Meet "The Diapér," a "new disposable diaper lined with virgin alpaca wool and fastened with amber gemstones" — and priced at $120 for a 12-pack.

"Infused with a scent of jasmine and bergamot for a revitalized baby," reads the product's description in social media posts.

Loehnen says the company's cleanse culture "distorted" and "punished" her body. Others allege she's the toxic one. 

"Wellness culture can be toxic," said Loehnen, the company's former second-in-command.

Goop creator Gwyneth Paltrow took a nibble out of her vagina-scented candle for an UberEats ad that will premiere on Sunday, Feb. 13, for the SuperBowl LVI.

When asked by a fan if she loves Dakota Johnson - who's dating her ex-husband Chris Martin - the Goop founder simply responded, "Very much."

In honor of the anniversary of Roe v. Wade on January 22, the brand will donate $25 from the sale of each candle to the ACLU Foundation’s Reproductive Freedom Project.

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Washoe County Commissioner Alexis Hill
KIRKWOOD, Calif. – A mom and her son were safely returned to family members on Friday morning after becoming lost while skiing at Kirkwood Mountain Resort on Thursday, according to a statement from Alpine County Sheriff’s Office.
Half Moon Bay, Calif. residents Sally Coverdell, 55, and her 24-year-old son Robert Coverdell became lost in snowy conditions, but found shelter from the storm near Silver Lake, according to the statement. Silver Lake is less than 2 miles southwest of Kirkwood.
The pair were last seen at the top of Chair 6 around noon on Thursday, prompting an search by Amador County and Alpine County search and rescue personnel, according to the statement.
The initial search was unsuccessful and Alpine County and Amador County personnel were joined by El Dorado County, the U.S. Forest Service and a search helicopter from the Fallon Naval Air Station Friday morning.
The mother and son walked out to Highway 88 about 10:30 a.m. on Friday and met a Forest Service snowmobile unit that was preparing to search the area, according to the statement.
“They had become disoriented in the blizzard conditions the night before, and ended up in the Silver Lake area,” according to the statement. “They were able to get into a cabin where they spent the night, hiking out this morning.”
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SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — The Rock Tahoe Half Marathon is returning to Stateline on Saturday, June 18, after a 2-year absence due to the pandemic.

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Frances McDonald

Ross Ryan


For mother-and-son artists Frances Macdonald and Ross Ryan the sea is their muse, its unpredictability a constant source of creativity.
Living by the sea in Crinan, near Lochgilphead, they look out to Jura and Tiree. And the painters are used to seeing the elements at their peak – gales stirring the sea into angry, crashing waves or a sun-kissed calm creating a ripple on the gentle water.
Adding to their artistic challenge, sometimes both extremes can be witnessed in the time it takes each of them to get paint on canvas.
Both enjoy working outdoors – Frances in the calmer summer months and Ross in the winter wildness. And, while their art occasionally takes them to far-flung climes, in this year’s lockdown the artists’ inspiration has been on their doorsteps. The results of what they’ve witnessed from their Crinan base will be displayed in their first joint exhibition, with A Family Affair opening at The Scottish Gallery in Edinburgh later this month.
Both are excited to be displaying their work side by side, even though their approaches are significantly different.
Frances, who has been painting professionally for more than 25 years and whose work is on display in many private collections, said: “It’s nice we have been able to do this together. Most of my work this year has been looking out to what I can see around Crinan – Iona, Jura, Loch Sween, the Mull of Kintyre. I like to go out on the beach and work from there, if possible. I use a palette knife to paint these days. I used to use pen and watercolour. I like to paint in the summer, whereas Ross prefers to paint the gales in winter.”
Ross’s unusual approach could be referred to as extreme painting. “I enjoy being out in the elements – it makes it difficult, but also easier,” he said. “If it’s blowing a gale, I can’t sit and ponder, because it becomes a battle fighting the elements.
“The weather gets into the work, in a non-pretentious way. It’s like the storm is the conductor of the painting and I’m the musician taking direction.
“Some paintings are abandoned or damaged – the colours running while the rain is chucking it down. It all becomes a bit of a laugh, to tell the truth. I was on Tiree last winter when Storm Brendan came in and I was watching the big squalls approaching. It’s a bit risky, but I like it.”
Ross, 46, has always had a passion for painting but his mum never tried to influence him. He went to art school and then began travelling the world, painting in places like Spain and Berlin. He also sailed across the Atlantic, dropping messages in bottles into the ocean each day and then travelling to wherever they washed up to paint the area and interview its finder.
Frances’s path was different. “I’d always been able to draw and it’s what I would do as a child,” said Frances, who has also been running the Crinan Hotel since the 1970s. “I didn’t go to art school because my parents persuaded me to do something else as a career, but I continued painting as a hobby.
“It started off as watercolour sketches. I would paint one and put it on the wall at the hotel and hope someone would buy it for £50. But over time it turned more serious and I began to get into bigger galleries.”
While Frances enjoys spending time in her studio, Ross also likes to work from his wooden boat, Sgarbh, bought by his parents in 1979.
“The boat is quite dear to me,” he said. “I’ve been going on it since I was five. I rebuilt it over seven years, but to have a boat like that is an extravagance, so I need to work to keep it and I do charters in the summer.”
Frances, too, has a boat. For now it sits in the canal in front of her cottage, but she once enjoyed adventures on it with her husband. “Nick and I bought it in 1971 when we came to Crinan. It was just a little fishing boat, only 24ft, but we shipped her down to the south coast of England the following year and sailed the Channel and up the Seine to Paris. It was quite scary, to be honest.
“We sold it when we got Scarbh but eight years ago we saw it on the beach, looking a bit neglected, so we bought it and had her restored.”
Frances and Ross are looking forward to people being able to see their show in person, after Ross’s show earlier in the year at The Scottish Gallery was forced to go online due to the Covid lockdown. “I managed to sell half the paintings, but it was two years’ worth of work and I couldn’t even go to see them on the wall. So hopefully this time I can go over and see my paintings sitting side by side with my mum’s.”
Frances added: “I’m pleased to be able to share the space with Ross. It’ll be nice to do it together.”
Until then, both will be down by the water at Crinan capturing the weather.
A Family Affair, The Scottish Gallery, Edinburgh, Nov 28-Dec 23
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What age should you stop being naked in front of your kids?



This website is owned and published by Immediate Media Company Limited. www.immediate.co.uk © Immediate Media Company Ltd. 2022

And does it make a difference for boys and girls?

Hmmmm, now, here at MFM HQ this one’s a bit of a talker for us. Whether you’re a naked household, or prefer to keep your bod under wraps around the kids, is so different for everyone.
And it can change over time for people, too.
One of our mums, who’s always been pretty free and easy about being naked around the house, is wondering if it’s time she and her husband stopped now her daughter’s 6 – and at an age where she might say things at school about mummy and daddy being ‘nudey’ that could get taken the wrong way.
But what do our mums think? Here’s what you told us…
“I am personally not a fan of my kids seeing me naked at all.. my kids are 5 and 2 and I always wait until they are asleep before I shower, just my way of doing things,” says Sophie M .
Hayley W ‘s OK with it, up to a point, and tells us this: “My 8 year old has no problem with seeing me naked. The only thing I have started doing is telling her to knock before walking in on me on the loo.
“She is obsessed with boobs and because I laugh when she mentions mine, she thinks it’s OK to talk about them.
“Was in ASDA last week and there was a women probably in her 50s with the biggest boobs I have ever seen… and my little girl said very loudly, “Mummy I love her boobies, I wish you had them, I would want to squish them all day”. I smiled and very quickly walked to the next aisle. So embarrassing.”
Leanne S reckons it’s best to take the lead from your kids on when to stop being naked around them, though she reckons there are definitely benefits to letting your littles see you nude.
She says: “I guess I’ll know that my kids are uncomfortable seeing me naked when they stop walking in the bathroom when I’m in the bath or on the loo.
“To be honest I’d much prefer to have a poo on my own! On a serious note I do think it helps see ‘normal’ bodies as opposed to girls in music videos and magazines/posters etc.
“It’s OK if your body is not ‘perfect’.” Hear, hear to that ?
On the issue of whether you’d actually differently around a boy as opposed to a girl, Malgorzata H tells us:
“I’ll possibly never stop being naked in front of my daughter until her adulthood! In regards to my son probably when he reaches 3-4 years of age ?
“I think it’s when they start seeing differences in sexes and their speech is developed then is time to put some underwear on – when coming out of bathroom etc you wouldn’t like your little one saying at nursery ‘my daddy has a big willy!'”
And this advice, from Amy H – is, we reckon, probably spot on for lots of us: “I think as long as you’re ok with it and your child doesn’t feel uncomfortable then it’s fine.
“I will never make a big deal of nudity with my children unless they say to me, “Mum I don’t feel comfortable seeing you naked.”
“Then I would make sure they don’t have to. It’s just a body at the end of the day. We all have one.”
Do you go naked in front of your kids? Do you think what you do makes a difference if you have a boy or a girl? Tell us in the comments below or over on Facebook

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