<i>Deborah Hill Cone</i>: NZ's problems more than hormonal
This country has more serious things to worry about than period pains.
This country has more serious things to worry about than period pains.
Hubbard, SFO, Hotchin - it's just too much to be taken straight*
Wealthy kids get the attention, but making it through the teen years is always a challenge.
It's easier to cling to old jalopy beliefs than change and start driving a Porsche.
Tooth and claw competition is what we need, not John Key's mothering.
We may imagine we're bullet-proof, but life's dangers are always lurking.
900 grand a year and all the fun of the turf - sounds just the job.
Power elite look down on the rest of us, but they still want to be admired. Well, tough.
I don't want a friend - just a bank that knows its place.
Striving for victory is good, but sometimes cooperating is better.
Forget Hanover - what matters is chairman's performance now.
Right wingers just want to see other people raising themselves up.
Why this continuing obsession with how other people rate us?
Recipe for change: Boundaries, work - and the occasional reward.
Deborah Hill Cone: As NZ loses its place in the international league tables, business as usual just isn't an option.
Never mind the cheaper carrots, try a few workouts instead.
Exports, not fawning over foreign visitors, is what we should focus on.
Our companies need fewer grey old worthies and more original thinkers.
Nana was right: It's never too late to put a little aside for a rainy day.
Whether it's the boss or the bureaucrats, the answer's the same: mind your own business.
No matter how big a cult you create, sometimes things go wrong. Just look at Apple.
Midlfe crises can be a time to discover what really matters. Maybe it's time New Zealand had one.
Everyone needs the occasional mental health day, so do your duty and get under the duvet.
Sure, we revere those who help others, but spare a thought for all the rest.
Fear of foreigners is the new fashion in our island hideaway.
Paying ever-rising taxes to local bodies is the ultimate grudge expense.
I may be a lone voice here, but where finance companies are concerned things seem to have got a bit out of proportion.