Why tomcat divorce




















The most common rumor surrounding the demise of the couple's relationship is that Katie Holmes wanted to remove herself and daughter Suri from any involvement with the Church of Scientology. Per InStyle , Tom Cruise himself appeared to back up this theory by admitting that one of the reasons his ex-wife filed for divorce came down to the controversial religion itself. During a deposition for Cruise's defamation case against Bauer media, the actor was asked by a lawyer if Holmes had divorced him "in part to protect Suri from Scientology," to which Cruise later responded, "Did she say that?

That was one of the assertions, yes" via HuffPost. During the deposition, Cruise also revealed that his daughter Suri, who was just 7 years old at the time, was no longer a practicing member of the Church of Scientology. B: Breathing. Lay your head down on its side near their cheek. Use your eyes to also look if their chest is moving up and down. Please note there is also a thing called Agonal breathing. C: Chest Compressions. Start 'em. This is why shouting for help is important. Often this is temporary.

Still keep doing compressions. If you put your phone on speaker, the person on the other end will walk you through it in real time. A: Nope! Mouth to mouth actually does little to help the patient and is arguably detrimental due to an exchange of germs. Just stick to chest compressions. A: No. If you think you are, push a little harder.

Push them so hard they make a hole on the floor if you have to. Oftentimes, the ribs have to break in order for you to actually have any hope of successful CPR. There is such a thing as not pushing enough. Should I risk it and perform CPR anyway? So even if the patient does wake up and your vital readings were wrong, the law should be on your side.

Just do it. A: You could, but breathing is much more reliable. Locating a pulse can take a while. Sorry about that, Tom. Loved you in Magnolia! The only thing the tabloids adore more than a rumoured celebrity pregnancy is a good ol' celebrity divorce and Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes's "shocking split", as People magazine adorably described it, was always going to be a doozy.

While the People magazine offices are presumably still in a state of "shock", as silent as a Scientologist mother giving birth who is biting back her screams of pain so as "not to traumatise the baby", the reaction of others is more akin to the tone conveyed by one headline on the gossip website Gawker: " Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes Divorcing Because They Couldn't Fake Being in Love Forever and Plus She's Not a Dude. Scientology may, ultimately, be no wackier in its beliefs than any mainstream religion but the image around it, fanned by articles such as the one that appeared in the New Yorker last year detailing screenwriter's Paul Haggis eventual abandonment of the beliefs, certainly make it seem weirder.

Heck, even Rupert Murdoch finds Scientologists "creepy, maybe even evil" , which feels a little like the death of irony. Combine that with the "Save Katie" campaign that began before their improbable marriage honestly, where's Pacey when you need him, eh? Within mere hours of the divorce announcement, such theories were springing up on the internet, an environment that encourages conspiracists like damp encourages moss. But how to keep them all straight? And how to discern the completely ridiculous from the completely ridiculous but probably true?

Allow me to guide you with my expertise knowledge, which is just as reliable and in-the-know as anyone else spouting off about this in the papers:. Katie couldn't take being controlled by psycho Tom any more and ran away in the dead of night to rip her high heels-wearing daughter from the evil claws of Scientology. Well, it certainly sounds and looks plausible. But it also sounds a little like the plot of that piece of cinematic ridiculousness, Not Without My Daughter , a film not coy with its racism, starring Sally Field in a permanently anguished expression.

So there's that, too. All of Tom's three marriages have all ended when his wife was Which was also the age Jesus died. So maybe each of Tom's wives was Jesus? Anyway, more relevantly maybe , the number 33 is significant in Scientology because it is known as the "Master Teacher" and why not, right?



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