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  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_007
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (TOMCo. Media / PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Laur

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_005
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (TOMCo. Media / PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Laur

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_002
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (Collect/ PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Lauren, wh

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_010
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (www.antonyrturner.com/ PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelli

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_001
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (Collect/ PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Lauren, wh

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_009
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (Lauren's Cows/ PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Laur

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_003
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (Lauren's Cows/ PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Laur

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_008
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (TOMCo. Media / PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Laur

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_006
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (Collect/ PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Lauren, wh

    (c) Dukas

     

  • SCHICKSALE -  Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    DUK10131308_004
    SCHICKSALE - Genesung: Epileptikerin malt Kühe und ist seitdem anfallsfrei
    Lauren Terry (Collect/ PA Real Life) *** Actress whose life was ruled by epilepsy swaps her
    fast-paced routine for running her own cow portrait
    business and has been seizure-free for two years
    By Laura Withers, PA Real Life
    A trained actress whose life was blighted by terrifying epileptic seizures believes that
    leaving the stage to paint portraits of cows has "cured" her of the stress triggers that led
    to her elliptic episodes.
    Seizure-free for two years, Lauren Terry 31, of York, stumbled on her unusual "treatment"
    back in 2011 when, a self-taught artist, she copied a picture of a cow from a greetings
    card and gave it to her dad, Justin, 64, a retired tailor.
    So impressed by her efforts that he had it framed, when the shop owner suggested it was
    good enough to exhibit, Lauren rose to the challenge - holding her first exhibition in
    Wykeham, North Yorkshire, in 2012.
    I had 18 cow portraits and at my first exhibition I sold six, which I was chuffed with, she
    said. They were sold for up to £450 each, which was a decent amount of money.
    Then, using £5,000 from her savings and with £1,000 invested by her mum, Jude, 63, now
    her business partner, she launched her new artistic venture.
    A side project until 2016, when she and her husband, James, 31, an area sales manager with whom she is expecting her first child in May - moved from London to Yorkshire, and
    she ditched acting to paint cows full-time, Lauren soon began to reap extraordinary health
    benefits.
    For her life had been blighted by epilepsy - a condition affecting the brain and causing
    seizures - since she was 10 years old.
    First experiencing absence seizures, causing lapses in awareness, she would briefly lose
    consciousness.
    It felt like Id gone into a deep daydream or into some sort of trance, she
    explained. Sometimes Id completely zone out and my teacher would assume I wasnt
    paying attention.
    Or, Id just stop in the middle of crossing a road and my parents would be yelling,
    Lauren, wh

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Baby Possum auf dem Weg der Besserung
    DUKAS_32989992_ACP
    Baby Possum auf dem Weg der Besserung
    Getreten: Das 4-Monate alte Opossum erholt sich von den schweren Verletzungen von Jugendlichen in Brisbane

    / 100813

    ***AUGUST 10, 2013: BRISBANE, QLD. 'Boots' the 4-month-old possum joey, who is recovering from serious injuries at the RSPCA after a group of youths kicked him into the gutter in Brisbane, Queensland*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Baby Possum auf dem Weg der Besserung
    DUKAS_32989990_ACP
    Baby Possum auf dem Weg der Besserung
    Getreten: Das 4-Monate alte Opossum erholt sich von den schweren Verletzungen von Jugendlichen in Brisbane

    / 100813

    ***AUGUST 10, 2013: BRISBANE, QLD. 'Boots' the 4-month-old possum joey, who is recovering from serious injuries at the RSPCA after a group of youths kicked him into the gutter in Brisbane, Queensland*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Baby Possum auf dem Weg der Besserung
    DUKAS_32989989_ACP
    Baby Possum auf dem Weg der Besserung
    Getreten: Das 4-Monate alte Opossum erholt sich von den schweren Verletzungen von Jugendlichen in Brisbane

    / 100813

    ***AUGUST 10, 2013: BRISBANE, QLD. 'Boots' the 4-month-old possum joey, who is recovering from serious injuries at the RSPCA after a group of youths kicked him into the gutter in Brisbane, Queensland*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS

     

  • Baby Possum auf dem Weg der Besserung
    DUKAS_32989985_ACP
    Baby Possum auf dem Weg der Besserung
    Getreten: Das 4-Monate alte Opossum erholt sich von den schweren Verletzungen von Jugendlichen in Brisbane

    / 100813

    ***AUGUST 10, 2013: BRISBANE, QLD. 'Boots' the 4-month-old possum joey, who is recovering from serious injuries at the RSPCA after a group of youths kicked him into the gutter in Brisbane, Queensland*** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS)

    DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS