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EXCLUSIVE Noel Edmonds is 'a coloniser who's come in like Lord Of The Manor': Furious locals slam TV star over pub plans and say they 'don't give a s***' about his fame. Now he gives HIS side of the story - and reveals 'earth angel' helping him cope
EXCLUSIVE Noel Edmonds is 'a coloniser who's come in like Lord Of The Manor': Furious locals slam TV star over pub plans and say they 'don't give a s***' about his fame. Now he gives HIS side of the story - and reveals 'earth angel' helping him cope

Daily Mail​

time4 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Noel Edmonds is 'a coloniser who's come in like Lord Of The Manor': Furious locals slam TV star over pub plans and say they 'don't give a s***' about his fame. Now he gives HIS side of the story - and reveals 'earth angel' helping him cope

'Really, I don't miss anything,' says Noel Edmonds, excluding family and friends. The veteran broadcaster turned his back on his British career and moved 11,500 miles away to New Zealand with his wife Liz, but has no regrets. 'Because truthfully, I was already missing things while I was still living in Britain. I missed a sense of community, a slower pace of life,' he says, meaning that these things had already disappeared from this country before he left, in his opinion. 'What don't I miss? Congested roads. The pressure on education, healthcare and infrastructure. We don't have those problems here.'

Warren Buffett Calls Letting First Wife Move Out His 'Biggest Mistake' — Admits It Was '99%' His Fault, Yet She Introduced Him to His Current Wife
Warren Buffett Calls Letting First Wife Move Out His 'Biggest Mistake' — Admits It Was '99%' His Fault, Yet She Introduced Him to His Current Wife

Yahoo

time25-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Warren Buffett Calls Letting First Wife Move Out His 'Biggest Mistake' — Admits It Was '99%' His Fault, Yet She Introduced Him to His Current Wife

Even billionaires have regrets—and for Warren Buffett, it wasn't a missed investment or market move. It was personal. In his authorized biography, "The Snowball: Warren Buffett and the Business of Life," Buffett didn't shy away from reflecting on the one decision he wishes he could undo: letting his wife, Susan, leave their Omaha home. "It was preventable. It shouldn't have happened. It was my biggest mistake," Buffett told biographer Alice Schroeder, who spent five years documenting his life with full access to his files, family, and inner circle. "Essentially, whatever I did in connection with Susie leaving would be the biggest mistake I ever made." Don't Miss: Hasbro, MGM, and Skechers trust this AI marketing firm — Deloitte's fastest-growing software company partners with Amazon, Walmart & Target – Published in 2008, "The Snowball" offered readers a rare look at Buffett beyond the shareholder letters and stock picks. While many expected an investing playbook, what they got was something closer to a confession booth. "It was definitely 95% my fault—no question about that," Buffett said. "It may even have been 99% percent. I just wasn't attuned enough to her, and she'd always been perfectly attuned to me." The Buffetts married in 1952 and had three children. But by 1977, after 25 years together, Susan left Omaha for San Francisco. She wanted to pursue her own life—particularly a singing career—and perhaps needed more than a man consumed by balance sheets and annual reports. "She felt less needed than I should have made her feel," Buffett admitted. "Your spouse starts coming second. She kept me together for a lot of years... She didn't want to be Mrs. Big... She loved me, and she still loves me, and we have an incredible relationship. But still... it shouldn't have happened. And it's totally my fault." Trending: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing — Despite the separation, the two never divorced. They remained close—so close, in fact, that Susan introduced Warren to Astrid Menks, the woman who would eventually become his second wife. That introduction wasn't random. Susan and Astrid had become friends at The French Café in Omaha, where Susan occasionally performed and Astrid worked as a hostess. Knowing Warren's domestic blind spots, Susan asked Astrid to look after him. She moved in soon after. The setup was unconventional, but it worked—for all three of them. The trio even sent out joint holiday cards signed, "Warren, Susan and Astrid." After Susan's death in 2004, Warren and Astrid married in 2006. But even then, the legacy of Susan's presence in his life loomed large. "She loved him and takes care of him. If Warren didn't have a cent, she'd be with him," his daughter Susie Buffett told The New York Times in 2006, speaking about Astrid's commitment. She also described the connection between her mother and Astrid: "Astrid and my mother were very close—really loved each other."And of her parents' arrangement, she added, "Unconventional is not a bad thing. More people should have unconventional marriages." Susan had once told her daughter that she didn't want to simply be known as the wife of a billionaire. "She basically wanted a room of her own," Susie said. "They were very connected in a very deep way. They didn't need to be in the same room." In the end, Warren Buffett didn't lose Susan. He just lost the version of their relationship that looked traditional on paper. What they built instead was far more complicated—and in many ways, more enduring. And yes, she introduced him to the woman who would become his partner after her death. It's not your standard love triangle, but nothing about Buffett's life—not even the romance—has ever followed the market. Read Next: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: . 'Scrolling To UBI' — Deloitte's #1 fastest-growing software company allows users to earn money on their phones. Image: Shutterstock UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Warren Buffett Calls Letting First Wife Move Out His 'Biggest Mistake' — Admits It Was '99%' His Fault, Yet She Introduced Him to His Current Wife originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Sign in to access your portfolio

Married Women Are Sharing Their Biggest Regrets, And It's Heartbreaking With A Dash Of Sobering
Married Women Are Sharing Their Biggest Regrets, And It's Heartbreaking With A Dash Of Sobering

Yahoo

time25-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Married Women Are Sharing Their Biggest Regrets, And It's Heartbreaking With A Dash Of Sobering

Saying "I do" is a life-changing moment for any couple. But what happens when the wedding and honeymoon are all said and done? Reddit user Ok_Percentage6051 recently asked, "Married [women], what is your greatest regret about marriage?" Here's are the most impactful responses for past, present, and future brides: 1."Who you choose to marry will have the biggest impact on your quality of life. More so than your career choice or where you go to college. I was too passive and too accommodating. I didn't put my own needs on the table. I don't do that anymore, and I hope I am modeling that for my daughters. Choose wisely!" —u/anti-royal 2."Ignoring red flags because 'I've dealt with worse.' They build up, and you start to resent dealing with it. You resent them for things you knew about but thought they would change as they got older. It doesn't work that way for everyone. Anyway, I'm in the midst of a divorce right now, eager to close this chapter and move on." —u/KonnichiJawa 3."Not getting married sooner. If I had, my dad would have been alive to walk me down the aisle. He died unexpectedly months before my wedding." —u/sillylittlebean 4."Giving up all the life I had built to fit into his. I hope younger women are smarter." —u/Ok-Half7574 5."Getting married at 22 just because that's what you're supposed to do. It took me eight years to realize I was living someone else's dream and not my own." —u/PerfectBabygirl 6."The whole thing. I wouldn't do it again. The chances of you and your partner evolving in the same ways over time are slim. Just because you're perfect together at one stage of your life doesn't mean you'll be perfect together at another stage. People grow, people change, and that growth and those changes don't always align." —u/Nauti-Grl Related: 51 People Who Quickly Discovered Why Their Hilariously Clueless Partner Was Single Before Meeting Them 7."We've been together for 23 years. We have two kids and met when we were teens. We got married just before we had our first 17 years ago. We are currently in marriage therapy, and my only regret is not going sooner. It's made me see my husband in a completely different way. We are both working hard at our marriage, and I wish we hadn't left it until we were screaming at each other all the time to go." —u/lulubean1407 8."Not talking about the hard stuff and eventually just losing yourself along the way." —u/MadLove1348 9."Love your life independently before settling down. I moved from my parents' home to be with him at his home. I never experienced that independence. I lived in a dorm apartment, but that's not the same. I wish I had done solo traveling and figured out who I am." —u/wrknprogress2020 10."Not appreciating that love isn't enough." —u/smooth_relation_744 Related: 27 Horrifying Deaths People Can Never, Ever, Ever, Ever Forget Because They Were That Bad 11."Inviting people to my wedding when I knew they wouldn't be in my life for long. My husband is my ride or die, and I'm so happy we're married, but I'd do it over just to have another wedding with him. We truly had our wedding more for our guests than ourselves, which is sad because it's expensive as hell." —u/endlessmemoriess 12."Getting married to the wrong person." —u/Regular_Ingenuity_97 13."Not seeing a couple's therapist before getting married. We eventually did it, and it was a major improvement in all aspects of communication." —u/Lila007 14."Getting married at 22 because I thought that's what you're supposed to do after college. Don't get me wrong, I love my husband, but we both missed out on finding ourselves first." —u/Sexy11Lady 15."I got married six years ago. My only regret so far is having a wedding instead of an elopement." —u/alyssarcastic 16."I don't regret being with my husband at all, and I wouldn't change it, but I wish we had taken more time in the dating phase before giving that up. I'd still marry him and I'm happy, but I think there were some expectations set that could have been different if we'd gone slower." —u/confusedrabbit247 17."Time changes everything. After being married for almost 35 years, I still love my husband, but marriage is a mixed bag of compromise and acceptance." —u/phillygirllovesbagel 18."Married almost 27 years, and the only regret is that I changed my last name." —u/ReadAnEffingBook 19."I would change how I viewed marriage. For me, there was a lot of pressure to get married. And once you get married, it's forever. It's not an option to leave; you commit and have that one person who is your best friend forever. We were best friends, and I'm a perfectionist. We worked out every issue we disagreed on and talked about how we felt. We both felt strongly that no matter how bad it gets, we're partners for life. I wish we had gone in the opposite direction. If one of us is miserable, we can let this go. If our marriage gets bad, divorce isn't the end of the world. Sometimes things just don't work out. I wish I had gone in feeling like, 'marriage isn't this top goal for your entire life.'" "But it was an identity I had wanted my whole life. I wasn't going to be a quitter. To me, a failed marriage was just as bad as cancer or one of us dying. So when it got bad, I struggled to stay and try everything. And almost immediately, all the things that had mattered so much before marriage barely came up after. Just becoming a wife changed me, and a mother (again) changed me. I will never get married again. I think even living together is risky. I was so miserable being single in my 20s, I didn't realize the depths of despair and depression you can get to when married. I left a few years ago, and no matter how bad life gets, I'm so happy on my own." —u/Nwwoodsymom 20."You can't pick your family, but you CAN pick your in-laws. If they aren't supportive or actively undermine your relationship, it's a big struggle." —u/specialKsquared 21."My only regret is not marrying my husband sooner. I feel like my life truly began when I married him. But I believe everything happens for a reason. Maybe I met him at the right time, and that's what makes it so wonderful." —u/kapuyuaksirah Married people, do you have any regrets? Share your story in the comments! Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity. Also in Internet Finds: 15 Facebook Marketplace Items You'll Wish, From The Depths Of Your Soul, You Could Unsee Also in Internet Finds: People Are Confessing Their Absolute Pettiest "Revenge Served Cold" Stories, And It's Deliciously Entertaining Also in Internet Finds: My Innocence Has Been Destroyed After Learning These Terrible, Disturbing, And Creepy Things

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