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Melbourne Mamma - Fashion | Food | Family | Fun | Shopping
Your local guide to the best fashion, food, family fun and shopping in Melbourne
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I can’t believe Easter is just around the corner. If you’re looking for some Easter gift ideas, check out these gorgeous goodies.
1. Oobi Bunny Ears $14.95 from Cradle Rock
2. Freckle Bunny $4.95 from Lark
3. 50 Easter Things to Make & Do $12.99 from Readings
4. Moss Bunny $7.99 from The Little Big Company
5. Easter Bunnies $22.00 by Boondie Baby
6. Paint Your Own Easter Eggs $12.95 from Lark
7. Butterfly Dish $13.00, Ceramic Egg $18.00, Eggs in a Teacup $17.00 from Red Bird
8. Littlehorn Bunny Love $39.95 from Moo said the cow
9. Bukowski Kannis Rabbit $26.95 from Button Baby
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Congratulations to all the lucky shoppers who won prizes at Melbourne Mamma’s Market on Sunday, 18 March 2012.
All of these prizes have been generously donated by fabulous local businesses, so please take some time to visit them, either online, on facebook or in person. They all offer a fantastic range of products or services essential to us mammas and our families.
So, without further adieu, the winners are:
Lucky Shopper Prizes
Melbourne Mamma’s Market VIP Ticket Sunday 15 April – Deborah Mortellaro
Melbourne Mamma’s Market VIP Ticket Sunday 15 April – Fabiola Beasley
Melbourne Mamma’s Market VIP Ticket Sunday 15 April – Aysha Huxley
National Sports Museum Family Pass (2 adults & 4 kids) – Linda Harper
Babysitters & More 90 day Super Solution Plan – Rebecca Jones
Babysitters & More 90 day Super Solution Plan – Linda Schwan
Babysitters & More 90 day Super Solution Plan – Rachael Lorkin
Project Paper Custom Printable Pack – Enza Bartolone
Total Relaxation Therapy Ultimate Relaxation Experience – Simone Saunders
Melbourne Lifestyle Management Voucher – Nancy Tripodi
Melbourne Lifestyle Management Voucher – Judy Swanson
Melbourne Lifestyle Management Voucher – Kylie Lewis
Mish Fit Double CD – Debbie Williams
Mish Fit Double CD – Sang Nguyen
Styled by Sally Personal Consultation – Nikki Marshall
Facial Fresh Facial Fresh Pack – Elizabeth Winter
Little Innoscents Gift Pack – Diane Lyne
Little Innoscents Gift Pack – Nicole Leyland
Funk Melbourne Voucher – Tenille Ahmet
Funk Melbourne Voucher – Laura Vojtisek
Funk Melbourne Voucher – Julie Vella
Funk Melbourne Voucher – Sarah Greenidge
Dressyu Personal Shopping Experience – Karren Wilson
Vivenda Sample Session – Donna Harvey
Ripple Effects Care of Self Cards – Anthea Foudoulis
Lifeline Design Voucher – Grace Fato
Lifeline Design Voucher – Sarah Ferguson
Toddler Tucker Voucher – Jacquie Plochino
Toddler Tucker Voucher – Hayley Riky
Hummingbird 60 Voucher – Olivia Sharkey
Nigel Lane 101 Practical Ways to Motivate your Child – Alina McGrath
Lady Calamity Gift voucher – Effie Tsoukalis
Sparkling Dragon Designs Personalised Necklace – Connie Buterra
Overcrawls Jacket – Jessica Davis
Holly Jean Breastfeeding Cover – Cathy Menniti
Inspiring Birth Stories A Modern Woman’s Guide to a Natural Empowering Birth – Michelle Grace
Katrina Christ Photography Package – Natalie Liparota
65 Main Accommodation Voucher – Maarja Valdmann
Ecotushies Voucher – Pauline Lucas
Melbourne Mamma’s Market VIP Ticket August 2012 – Jodie Hislop
Melbourne Mamma’s Market VIP Ticket August 2012 – Chrissy Robertson
Melbourne Mamma’s Market VIP Ticket August 2012 – Kelly Wilson
Lucky Door Prizes given out on the day
The Craft Box Craft Activity Pack
The Craft Box Craft Activity Pack
The Craft Box Craft Activity Pack
Lombards Party Hamper
Melbourne Baby & Toddler Show 100 Tickets – Fri 30 Mar-Sun 1 Apr
Kaiya Eve Australia Pettiskirt & Top
Prize winners please email melbournemammasmarket@bigpond.com with your details. Any prizes not claimed by Friday, 13 April 2012 will be redrawn.
Please note: all accounts of this day are not mine but are from those who were there on the day – my partner “A” (who is now my husband), doctors, police & emergency workers. I have no memory of this day or the days following.
Here is my story…..
My week had gotten off to a great start – I had just spent a fabulous long weekend in Lorne relaxing with A and I was on my way to work at my new job in the city, that I had started the previous month.
As I sat stationary in my car at a red light on a freeway off ramp, I was rear ended by a drunk (*asshole*) driver travelling at approx 80-100km/h, who was heading home (at 8.00am) from a big night in the city.
My car was pushed into the car in front of me and was then launched (apparently airborne and flipped 180 degrees) into oncoming traffic. Another car travelling in the opposite direction then t-boned my car on the passenger side. Police later told us that witnesses said my car looked like it was bouncing around in a pinball machine.
When paramedics arrived, I was unconscious. I remained unconscious as they cut me from the car and transported me to hospital. Years later I spoke with a fireman who attended the scene (he ended up being related to someone I knew), and he still remembered my accident and said that they assumed when they arrived at the accident that they were going to be removing a body – my body – from the wreckage, as it was pretty bad. He told me how surprised they were to discover I was actually still alive. (I felt sick to my stomach when he told me this. I had no idea)
I was then rushed to the hospital, where they discovered I had a broken pelvis, internal bleeding, fractured vertebrae, and head, shoulder and foot injuries. I was pretty beaten up.
Somehow I managed to tell them the name of A’s work (apparently I couldn’t remember his phone number or last name) and they eventually tracked him down to tell him what had happened. I can only imagine how it would feel to receive news like this – especially when he’d only kissed me goodbye a few hours earlier. He then had to call my parents (who lived interstate) and tell them what had happened – he said it was the hardest thing he’s ever had to do.
Apparently when he arrived at the hospital, I was angry and upset because they had cut my clothes off me and I had been wearing my brand new skirt (obviously the bump to my head hadn’t affected my love of fashion) and was not happy about it.
My parents arrived soon after and stayed at my bedside for the remainder of the week.
During that time A and my dad went to the wreckers to collect my belongings from the car. When they arrived, the guys there were avoiding them and acting a little weird until A mentioned that he had just come from the hospital to collect my stuff and they were shocked, as they had assumed that whoever had been in my car had been killed (A assumed this was why they’d been acting a little odd when he got there). My dad took one look at the car and walked out – A later told me, that my dad threw up when he saw what was left of my car.
The following month in hospital was a blur of pain, rehab and more pain. Lots of people came by to visit, some I remember, others I don’t. I hated being in the hospital and couldn’t wait to get home.
I haven’t included any pictures of what was left of my car here because some family members and friends have asked never to see them but here’s one of me in the hospital a few days after the accident.
One of the hardest things for me following the accident was relearning how to walk.
It’s strange as an adult having to learn such a basic task – something that we do every single day without thought. One of my therapists told me that learning to walk as an adult is the most difficult thing a person can do. Even though it had only been a couple of weeks since I had walked, my body had been through so much trauma and was in so much pain that my brain was not sending the correct signals to my legs. It was so frustrating not even to be able to put one foot in front of the other.
After five weeks in hospital, I returned home in a wheelchair, with a walking frame (my grandma had one the same). I would continue to receive threatment as an outpatient three days per week.
I remember celebrating the day I walked from the front door to the letterbox (approx 15m) – I felt like I had run a marathon – even though I had used the frame. I soon graduated to a walking stick (which made me really self-conscious – why was everyone staring at me?) and I used that for another couple of years.
It was nearly four years before I began to walk “normally” – ie without a limp. I had walked for so long with a limp that my brain thought that was my normal walk and even when then pain lessened, I still walked the same way. It took lots of rehab and walking in front of a mirror (for months and months), to retrain my brain into allowing me walking normally.
For the next few years I regularly attended rehab and a pain management program and had counselling as I became depressed and wasn’t coping very well with the pain, and how much my life had changed and the effect it had on my personal and professional life.
It took awhile for me to realise how lucky I was to have survived that day and that my injuries could have been a lot worse.
I was so fortunate to have such a wonderful and caring partner and be surrounded by family and friends who loved me. I could not have gotten through this without them.
I still have days where the pain is more than I can bear and I get angry and think “why me?”. But then I think about what could have been and realise, I am the LUCKIEST person in the world.
This afternoon I had the pleasure of meeting some girlfriends at Cristina Re “Where A Girl Goes” for High Tea, and it was DIVINE!
The food, the service, the decor, it was all wonderful.
I’ve been looking for somewhere “girly” (ie gorgeous tea cups, flowers and oh so pretty) for awhile, and I wasn’t disappointed.
We indulged in the Gourmet High Tea and received a delicious assortment of sandwiches, pastries, scones, cupcakes, macarons AND handmade chocolates.
The tea room is situated within the Cristina Re store, so you can treat yourself to a spot of shopping too.
If you’re looking for somewhere to go with the girls, make sure you add this one to your list. I can’t wait to go there again.