Diane webber mermaids of tiburon5/31/2023 Gwyneth Paltrow launches Goop Sex! Star's controversial platform boasts kinky tips for 'how to achieve the perfect orgasm' Lottie Moss looks the image of big sister Kate as she steps out in London sporting a figure-hugging maxi dress and black leather jacket Lily Allen 'wouldn't be married' without sobriety as she discusses alcoholism and 'reacting' to body shaming trolls on social media 'But I want to have more time in this next phase of my life to find out who Nicola Sturgeon the person is.' 'I'm not leaving politics, there are issues I care deeply about – I want to make a contribution. 'So I have spent my whole life being Nicola Sturgeon the politician. 'I joined the SNP when I was 16, I've been in parliament since I was 29, I became deputy first minister when I was 37, I will be 53 this summer,' she said. The SNP leader revealed she was hoping to 'find out who Nicola Sturgeon the person is' once her long career in frontline politics ends. So I'm not saying I'm about to rush to a counsellor but I recognise what you're saying.' 'The emotional impact of that – I don't think I've even begun to process that. 'I'm not complaining about this, my job wasn't the most difficult in the country at all, but I probably went a year of standing up every single day, speaking to the country, I didn't take a single day off,' she said. Ms Sturgeon also spoke about the toll of leading Scotland through the Covid pandemic when asked if she would consider counselling once she stands down as First Minister. The 52-year-old suggested leaving frontline politics would allow her to deal with the 'emotional impact' of her long spell in office I've been doing that to one extent or another for all my adult life.' 'You effectively don't deal with it, you don't process it. 'Looking at me, looking at that photograph now, it's clear I'm in a lot of pain.'Īddressing how she dealt with the loss, the First Minister said: 'I can only speak for myself, but I think it's more common than just me – you just bury it. 'When I look back to when I had a miscarriage, at the very end of Hogmanay in 2010, I think back then if there had been some way of recognising it, that would have brought quite a lot of comfort at a really difficult time,' Ms Sturgeon said.ĭescribing how she attended the Ibrox disaster memorial event just days later on January 3, the First Minister added: 'If you go online and Google, you can find a photograph of me at an event, actually while I was still having a miscarriage, a public commemoration for a disaster that happened many decades ago in Scotland. The new initiative will give women who have miscarriages, or lose babies before 24 weeks, the opportunity to record it and apply for a certificate to recognise the loss. Speaking to ITV's Loose Women this afternoon, Ms Sturgeon acknowledged how her establishment of a baby loss memorial book – in one of her final acts in office – was partly motivated by her own experience. Ms Sturgeon noted how photographs from that day reveal the 'clear' anguish she was experiencing
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