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  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_034.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_039.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_036.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_037.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_035.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_040.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_041.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Battling a rare health condition that has left half of her face disfigured, a 24-year-old Indian woman says she tries to live positively despite jeers by people. Sasikala K, from Chennai, the capital of India’s southern Tamil Nadu state, suffers from plexiform neurofibromatosis, which has taken a toll on her face, affecting the right side. However, she admits her confidence has taken a hit of late. Sasikala, who prefers to live boldly and does not cover her face, likes dressing up and wearing make-up, much like girls her age, though she finds it difficult to execute them owing to her complications. She was only six-months-old when her parents noticed a part of her face swelling. However, they waited for another one and a half years to get medical help. “I have always been very bold, however, with age, the condition progressed and no one has come for help,” she says, adding, “I am slowly losing my confidence.” According to medical experts, her condition affects the face and craniofacial region of the body. It can also affect the neck and other parts of the body, depending upon the host. The family had not considered the deformity to be a big issue until Sasikala turned six and the face started to swell at an unusual rate. Now, almost 18 years later, she finds it difficult to execute daily chores like eating and brushing. The 24-year old is an employee at an embroidery unit run by a trust. Sasikala took it up as a means to support her family after completing her diploma in nursing and unable to land a job in the hospitality sector. Kumar, 54, Sasikala’s father, says his daughter has been under the knife four times, but it has only gotten worse. “She was six when doctors operated upon her for the first time,” Kumar says. “The result was satisfying and she looked normal,” he added. However, the joy was short-lived, as the tumours grew back again. Kumar says upon approaching the doctors again, he was told that it could be controlled but wou
    MEGA506733_028.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_002.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_003.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_004.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_005.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_014.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_001.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_007.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_008.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_012.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_016.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_015.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_006.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_011.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_009.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_013.jpg
  • America’s next top model, 24-year-old Minneapolitan Jeana Turner puts her wig back on and shows off her sexy bikini body on the set of a 138 Water Photoshoot in Santa Monica. On the 24th cycle of America’s Next Top Model, Jeana opened up about suffering from alopecia, which means since the age of 12 years old she’s had no hair on her head... 11/14/18. 14 Nov 2018 Pictured: Jeana Turner. Photo credit: FIA Pictures / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA307638_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_042.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_055.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_040.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_064.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
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  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
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  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_049.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_059.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_061.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
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  • EXCLUSIVE: English cricket sensation Jofra Archer growing up in his native Barbados. The 24-year-old found himself charged with the responsibility of bowling a super over in England's thrilling World Cup victory against New Zealand at Lord's. But the pace bowler grew up in humble surroundings in the village of Sea View community of St Philip parish, Barbados, where he first learned to play cricket on muddy streets with his friends. He attended the Christ Church Foundation School, where staff and coached remember his as humble boy who excelled at cricket from an early age. 16 Jul 2019 Pictured: where Jofra Archer first played cricket. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • EXCLUSIVE: English cricket sensation Jofra Archer growing up in his native Barbados. The 24-year-old found himself charged with the responsibility of bowling a super over in England's thrilling World Cup victory against New Zealand at Lord's. But the pace bowler grew up in humble surroundings in the village of Sea View community of St Philip parish, Barbados, where he first learned to play cricket on muddy streets with his friends. He attended the Christ Church Foundation School, where staff and coached remember his as humble boy who excelled at cricket from an early age. 16 Jul 2019 Pictured: where Jofra Archer first played cricket. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA466877_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: English cricket sensation Jofra Archer growing up in his native Barbados. The 24-year-old found himself charged with the responsibility of bowling a super over in England's thrilling World Cup victory against New Zealand at Lord's. But the pace bowler grew up in humble surroundings in the village of Sea View community of St Philip parish, Barbados, where he first learned to play cricket on muddy streets with his friends. He attended the Christ Church Foundation School, where staff and coached remember his as humble boy who excelled at cricket from an early age. 16 Jul 2019 Pictured: Jofra Archer's uncle. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA466877_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: English cricket sensation Jofra Archer growing up in his native Barbados. The 24-year-old found himself charged with the responsibility of bowling a super over in England's thrilling World Cup victory against New Zealand at Lord's. But the pace bowler grew up in humble surroundings in the village of Sea View community of St Philip parish, Barbados, where he first learned to play cricket on muddy streets with his friends. He attended the Christ Church Foundation School, where staff and coached remember his as humble boy who excelled at cricket from an early age. 16 Jul 2019 Pictured: Jofra Archer's uncle. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA466877_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_036.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_043.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_044.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_048.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_051.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_054.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_057.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_060.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: **NO WEB UNTIL 12AM GMT 17TH JULY** Reality TV star Holly Hagan seen sharing some suspicious looking white powder as she relaxes poolside on her summer hols. In full view of anyone staying at the swanky Spanish villa complex, the ex-Geordie Shore star can be seen dipping her little finger in a small plastic bag and apparently sniffing the contents and sharing it with her friends. Holly and new boyfriend and new boyfriend Motherwell FC's Jacob Blyth is also seen inhaling what looks suspiciously like ‘hippy crack’ - the fashionable, and potentially fatal, craze - also known as laughing gas, N2O and sweet air. It sells at the bargain price of £1.50 per balloon and gives users an intense euphoria which some have likened to the effects of heroin and crack cocaine. The 24-year-old blonde, wearing shorts over a skimpy turquoise bikini, was with a group of about ten friends at the villa complex in Marbella. Hagan recently posted about her battle with stress and anxiety - prompting more than 1,500 of the star’s young fans to 'like’ the Twitter post in support. ‘Hippy crack’ is the 'legal high’ drug du jour. Cheap, seemingly harmless and guaranteeing a night of raucous laughter, it's increasingly popular with celebrities and their well-heeled young fans. But experts say nitrous oxide is no more legal than it is innocuous. Despite being touted openly at music festivals and in bars and nightclubs, sale of the gas for recreational use is very much against the law. As for being innocuous, that is only true if one ignores the alarming side-effects it can cause: strokes, hallucinations, seizures, blackouts, incontinence, stress on the heart, chronic depression and even — in cases of prolonged use — depleted bone marrow. In March, Hagan announced she and Kyle Christie had ended their relationship after three years. The couple broke up after their relationship came to a “natural end” with friends of the couple saying it was all amicable. 02 Jul 2017
    MEGA51015_062.jpg
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