
Lee Suckling: I don't want children - anymore
"I used to want kids but now I don't." Lee Suckling on why it's okay to change your mind.
"I used to want kids but now I don't." Lee Suckling on why it's okay to change your mind.
COMMENT: Sex addiction is real and those damaged by it can be helped.
Beck Vass: How is stopping non-athletic kids from participating helping anyone?
Tinder makes it easier to find your match but there's a big thing we've lost in process.
COMMENT: I'm tired of reading articles in which a CEO claims to rise at 5am.
COMMENT: Father's Day is a great day to remind dad how important his health is.
Superwoman belongs in comic books. Living up to that title is too tough.
COMMENT: I've had a friend stolen like this. In NZ it's rare to find anyone who hasn't.
COMMENT: Lee Suckling explains the dirty side to your part-time habit.
My friends are going insane over the gender reveal of our baby. This brings me great joy.
COMMENT: The biggies are really smoking and alcohol.
COMMENT: For your eyes' sake, put the phones to bed early.
COMMENT: This odd practice has Lane Moore scratching her head.
A good orgy, writes Lee Suckling, needs an organiser; a ringleader of sorts.
One of the joys of being a parent is getting to deliberately embarrass your kids, right?
COMMENT: The finer arts of swearing starts in the playground.
COMMENT: Folic acid is important for women in the early stages of pregnancy.
CrossFit has reached its 10th birthday and there are now 127 CrossFits nationwide.
OPINION: Fathers are turning childbirth into a contest and natural births are the trophy.
Scientists find most people try to land dates who are 25 per cent "hotter" than them.
It's the painful question women without kids dread. Here's why it's a form of harassment.
COMMENT: "Why do we not pay mothers who choose to stay home and provide full-time care?"
"Being a mummy's boy enables young men to grow sure of themselves, but not ghastly."
Two of the country's biggest fitness stars are preparing for their toughest challenge yet.
Lee Suckling loathes being asked this question. Here's why you shouldn't ask it.
'It could be worse,' isn't what someone who's confided in you probably wants to hear.
"At the tender age of five-and-a-half, my daughter has just hit me with THE question."