Showing posts with label chris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chris. Show all posts

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Oscar-winning actress Gwyneth Paltrow spent Valentine’s Day with her estranged husband Chris Martin.


 


The Mortdecai actress and the Coldplay frontman were seen walking together on the beach in Malibu along with their children, son Moses and daughter Apple, reported Ace Showbiz. (Also Read: Gwyneth Paltrow Asked Johnny Depp For Break-up Advice)


 


In some photos, Gwyneth could be seen linking her arm to her estranged husband‘s. The Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow star donned black sunglasses, a black tank top, navy capri pants and a pair of flipflops. (Also Read: Wish Chris and I Had Stayed Married, Says Gwyneth Paltrow)


 


Chris, meanwhile, walked barefooted. He sported a blue baseball cap with smiley logo, blue tee and navy shorts. (Also Read: Chris Martin, Gwyneth Paltrow to Spend Anniversary Together)


 


The couple were seen laughing and joking during the outing. At one point, they were seen sitting side by side on the sand with their daughter sitting on his lap.


 

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The makers of Oscar nominated film American Sniper omitted a final scene that would have depicted Navy SEAL Chris Kyle’s gory death after the soldier’s widow urged them to leave it out, the film’s writer revealed.


 


Screenwriter Jason Hall said he wrote five scenarios on how to approach the scene, but the team eventually decided not to use them following a request by Taya, Mr Kyle’s widow, reported the New York Daily News. (Also Read: Could American Sniper Sneak Up in Two-Horse Oscar Race?)


 


“Five days after Chris was murdered, (Taya) called and said, ‘This is going to be how my children remember their father, so I want you to get right’,” Jason said.


 


“In the end, I think we felt that this was a film about Chris’ life and not about his death. We also wanted to be careful not to glorify the guy who did it,” Jason added. (Also Read: Michelle Obama Praises American Sniper)


 


American Sniper tells the story of Mr Kyle, claimed to be the most lethal sniper in the US military history. He died in February 2013 after he and a friend were shot by a troubled veteran. The trial for the same is still underway.

In 2011, Chris Francis, of Newport, Australia, underwent radiotherapy after having a small skin cancer removed from her shin. Not only did the treatment destroy the cancer cells, but also the surrounding tissue. According to Chris, ‘I had a great big hole in my leg. Just to stand up and clean my teeth and go back to bed was agony.’ Eventually, she was referred to a therapy that would improve her wellbeing forever.


In January, Chris went to Sydney’s Prince of Wales Hospital’s hyperbaric unit. It took six weeks of daily therapy and regular wound care until her ulcer was ‘looking really good’, and now it has all but disappeared. The main health concern that people believe hyperbaric oxygen therapy is used for is “the bends” or decompression sickness in divers. However, most of the patients undergoing hyperbaric therapy at hospital-based hyperbaric units across Australia are similar to Chris; with half of the patients at PoW being treated for damage to bone or soft tissue incurred during radiation therapy. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is also used to improve the wellness of those with necrotising infections, carbon monoxide poisoning and Crohn’s disease.


While in normal air under water is 21% oxygen, for the treatment you sit or lie in a sealed chamber and breathe 100% oxygen at depths equivalent to 10-20 metres. Your lungs are saturated with oxygen while the increased atmospheric pressure drives the gas into your body’s tissues much more quickly than under normal atmospheric conditions. Therefore, your tissues can get the blood and oxygen it needs to heal to begin the healing process.


Associate professor Mike Bennett, a doctor at the PoW unit and president of the South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society, explains that for some people with cancers in the pelvic area, for example, and have suffered tissue damage during their treatment, ‘their problem is just unremitting and the only solution until recently [has been] very major, radical surgery – removing the bowel, removing the bladder, having all sorts of bags and tubes permanently attached to your tummy.’


‘Hyperbaric has turned around some of these people’s lives,’ he notes. ‘It allows the tissue to repair itself, so the bowel or the bladder or whatever’s damaged, over a period of weeks to months, slowly repairs itself and normal function, or close to normal function, is restored.’ Chris enthuses, ‘Just to be able to walk outside and hang the washing on the line, do housework – I never thought I’d enjoy that, but I’m just enjoying all that. Being free.’