2 minute read
Spoil Mumthis Mother’s Day at Q
Treat
Treat her to a coffee and a cake! Or even better, take her out to breakfast or lunch and make her day!
Skin to Soul Two Birds One Stone
Pamper!
Pamper Mum with a relaxing face, skin, body or hair treatment from one of our hairdressers or therapy retailers:
Skin to Soul • City Cave • Miracle Massage •GC Hair
Stellar Hair • Michael Dib • Marcus Edwards
Cosmetic Tattooing by Helen • Soie Nails
At Q Super Centre there is something to suit every budget!
Bellachino • Black Swan
Two Birds One Stone
Goldsteins Bakery
Seeds of Life • Fast Wok
McDonalds
Siam Street Thai
Tokyo Kitchen
Q Kebab House
Mr Potato • Seabites
Subway • NC Persian Bar
Therapy Fitness Smoothie Bar just shower her with gifts!
To celebrate MOTHER’S DAY we are offering a Mist Diffuser with gift bag as a gift for spending $35 in participating specialty retailers. TC’s apply.
Promotion runs from 8/5/2023 to 13/5/2023, 10am to 2pm. Please redeem at collection point opposite Coles. Receipts can be accumulated to total $35 at participating retailers. Strictly one mist diffuser per customer. While stocks last
For many women, overcoming debt can be an isolating and daunting experience. Get It Magazine speaks to Sandy Forster, founder of Wildly Wealthy, to talk about the journey from being $100,000 in debt and on welfare to running her own successful business and living a life she once only dreamed of.
What was life like for you in your early 40s, and what was your vision for the future at that point?
I met a boy in high school, went out with him for 11 years, then married him. Within a few years ended up divorced with a 3 year old and a 6 month old. With the money from our property settlement, I made a series of bad choices and experienced a series of money challenges.
From starting businesses that went further into debt each year, investing in the share market and losing the lot, joining an investment club just before it went bankrupt and getting financial advice from people who really didn’t know what they were talking about, I really didn’t respect or take care of my money. By the time I was in my early 40s I’d made every money mistake possible – except going bankrupt. By this time I was $100,000 in debt and on welfare, ashamed of my situation and very scared about my future.
How common do you feel it is for people to be in significant debt and not have others in their network aware of what’s going on?
People around me definitely didn’t know I lived in constant struggle. My entire life revolved around money or, more precisely, the lack of it. I knew I was a good person, so why was my life such a shambles? What had I done to deserve this? I felt embarrassed, ashamed, frustrated, guilty, angry, scared… you name it, I felt it.