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The TV presenter is every inch the doting dad after detailing his 12-year-old daughter Arabella’s heartbreaking bullying nightmare.
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The TV presenter is every inch the doting dad after detailing his 12-year-old daughter Arabella’s heartbreaking bullying nightmare.

TV host Barry Du Bois walked out sweetly on Tuesday after opening up about his daughter Arabella’s heartbreak over her school bullying nightmare.

The Living Room star, 64, recently shared a heartbreaking post on Instagram detailing how 12-year-old Arabella was bullied at school.

Barry, who shares Arabella and her twin sister Bennet with his wife Leonie Carol Tobler, sought help from others on how to ease his daughter’s difficulties.

And this week, they were both seen crowding around Arabella at the launch of swimwear brand Hunting Hue’s Icebergs in Bondi, Sydney.

Barry, who lives with the rare blood cancer myeloma, looked up at the doting dad who doted on every inch of him as he sweetly wrapped his arm around Arabella as she smiled at the camera.

Arabella was smiling from ear to ear as she was excited to spend some quality time with her dad at the glitzy event, which was attended by a host of Aussie names.

Barry cut a stylish figure in a white T-shirt and black trousers all day long and combined it with a stylish blazer and gray sneakers.

He framed his face with his signature round glasses and flashed a big smile as he enjoyed the father-daughter bond.

The TV presenter is every inch the doting dad after detailing his 12-year-old daughter Arabella’s heartbreaking bullying nightmare.

TV host Barry Du Bois sweetly stepped out with his daughter Arabella at the Hunting Hue launch on Tuesday after opening up about her heartbreak over her school bullying nightmare.

Arabella wore a brown dress, a puffy hoodie, sandals, and carried a designer Louis Vuitton bag.

In August, Barry shared his heartbreak after Arabella went public about her bullying incident at school.

She shared a heartbreaking post on Instagram in which Arabella described how she was made fun of at school and detailed the helplessness she felt as a parent.

“I watched my little girl walk out the door of our home, a place where I knew she was safe and where she felt safe and belonged,” Barry began.

‘He goes to his school, to a place that does not provide the same security. As a parent, I am supposed to protect and guide him through difficult times, but this morning I was lost.

‘Yesterday Arabella came home from school claiming to be sick. This isn’t the first time this has happened. ‘He wasn’t actually sick but he’s being bullied again.’

Barry then painfully admitted that he didn’t know how to help her and asked his followers for some advice.

Weeks after going public about being bullied, TV host Barry Du Bois has revealed his proud hopes for the future of his 12-year-old daughter Arabella. Both in the picture

Weeks after going public about being bullied, TV host Barry Du Bois has revealed his proud hopes for the future of his 12-year-old daughter Arabella. Both in the picture

‘You can tell a child, ‘Don’t let them get you down. Just continue to be kind. What do you say when they say, ‘You’re not the terrible things they say?’

“He said, ‘I don’t want to be special; I just want to be liked,'” Barry admitted to feeling “weak, angry, confused and a little scared.”

Just a few days later, along with a photo of himself relaxing on the sand at Bondi Beach, Barry also revealed the parenting advice he was once given.

She captioned the post: “My beautiful mother used to say, ‘Leave your worries in your pockets and I’ll take them out in the washing machine.’

‘This was always followed by a warm embrace. I’ll try washing and rinsing it in Bondi’s salt water.’

In recent weeks, Barry also revealed his devastating blood cancer diagnosis and gave a heartbreaking account of how he hoped to live long enough to see Arabella get married.

‘I see myself walking my daughter down the aisle. “I’m determined to make as many memories as possible before I go,” Barry told New Idea Magazine.

The loved one said he cherished every moment he spent with his family after being diagnosed with the rare and incurable blood cancer multiple myeloma.

Barry recently invited wife Leonie and twins Arabella and Bennet on a luxury cruise in the Mediterranean to make some amazing memories.

The master presenter star shares his twins Bennett and Arabella with his wife Leonie, whom he married in 1999.

The master presenter star shares his twins Bennett and Arabella with his wife Leonie, whom he married in 1999.

‘You’ll live a fuller life if you act like you don’t have a lot of time. “I don’t take any of it lightly,” he added.

Barry was first diagnosed with solitary plasmacytoma myeloma in 2010, which later progressed to myeloma, a type of cancer that begins to form in the bone marrow.

Barry recently told how the birth of his beloved twins changed his life following his devastating diagnosis.

She told the Cancer Council: ‘The most important thing that ever happened to me was the birth of my twins Bennett and Arabella.

‘I feel like life starts over again after their birth. Staying positive and spending time watching them grow is now a priority for me. ‘It’s a great time for me.’

The veteran presenter shares twins Bennett and Arabella with his wife Leonie, whom he married in 1999.

What is multiple myeloma?

Multiple myeloma is a cancer that begins to form in the bone marrow.

While plasma cells help the body fight infection, in people with multiple myeloma, cells living in the soft bone marrow grow rapidly, causing tumors in the hard bone marrow.

It causes the hard bone to weaken, making it difficult for good blood cells and platelets to develop.

There is no cure for rare blood cancer.

Approximately 30,000 African Americans are diagnosed with multiple myeloma each year, the second most common cancer in the United States. Inexplicably, black people are twice as likely to contract the disease as white people.

Some medical experts believe occupational exposure may play a role in the development of the disease. People who work in jobs that expose people to oil, herbicides, heavy metals, and many other things are more likely to get blood cancer.

Most of those infected are over the age of 45 (96 percent). 63 percent of the group is over the age of 65.

Men are more likely to get multiple myeloma.

Those with a family history are four times more at risk. People who are considered obese are also at higher risk.

Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) has also been linked.

MGUS, the development of an abnormal monoclonal protein produced by white blood cells, may be thought of as unproblematic, but some have linked it to multiple myeloma.

Powerful cancer treatments such as surgery, radiation therapy, stem cell transplants, and various medications can help those living with multiple myeloma live longer lives.

Complications can include anemia, kidney failure, dangerously high levels of calcium in the blood, organ infection, and fractures or loss of movement.