Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
Jill Singer Melbourne Photo Shoot
By Alex Coppel
06 April, 2017
Jill Singer has married her “true and steadfast love’’ just weeks after being told she has six to 12 months to live.
A year of mental health misdiagnoses saw the distinguished journalist undergo four rounds of electroconvulsive shock treatment.
Singer says she was “two weeks from dead” when she finally discovered six weeks ago that she has a rare blood disorder called AL amyloidosis.
There is no cure for the disease, whereby amyloid-forming proteins in the blood attack the organs; in Singer’s case, her heart and peripheral nerves.
News of the terminal illness came as a strange relief for Singer, who has been crippled with pain for more than a year as doctor after doctor wrongly diagnosed her with depression.
“I was in so much pain I was actually sobbing and punching my stomach and of course I had no pain relief because I was told there was nothing wrong with me,” the former Channel 7 Today Tonight host said in an exclusive interview.
“Now there is a full year of damage. My heart’s fairly ­destroyed. There is very little cardiac function left.”
Singer, 60, says life takes on a certain poignancy when you are given a death sentence. 


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