Teresa and Joe Giuduce
IN PHOTO: Teresa and Joe Giuduce Reuters

Teresa Giudice is doing everything she can to cope with life in prison, including teaching an exercise class and passing time helping out in the kitchen. She has been in prison for four months now, and her lawyers surmised that she is adjusting well to the restricted life and not acting like a diva at all.

People magazine reports that Giudice is coping well to her prison life by making sure that she still gets to do what she loves -- exercising. Her lawyer James J. Leondard, Jr. said his client is helping out in teaching exercising classes and has even managed to draw fans. The lawyer detailed that women in the prison where she is in take turn in leading classes and occasionally, the reality star would take the lead.

Apart from teaching these classes, Giudice also spents a large chunk of her time working in the kitchen. The lawyer added that Giuice enjoys doing that. The star reportedly loves her kitchen duty because it makes the time go by more quickly and offers her the chance to interact with other inmates. The lawyer added that working around the kitchen helps Giudice stay strong because it reminds her of home. The lawyer added that even though the prison has a rigid schedule and system for doing things, his client is adapting well.

As for reports that she is starting to turn into a diva, the lawyer said this is not possible. "Any reports that she is behaving like a diva in prison and not getting along with inmates and the staff is 1,000 percent false,” Leonard said. "She is getting along well with everyone -- staff, inmates -- all the way down the line."

The lawyer also announced that the reality star would be out of prison on Dec 23 and serve the remainder via home confinement until early February 2016. Unfortunately, earlier news reports claimed that the star and her husband’s mansion in New Jersey has already been foreclosed by the bank. According to CBS Local, the moment that Giudices’ new real estate agent decided to "aggresively" market the mansion, the bank that holds the couple’s mortgage began foreclosure proceedings.

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