meryl/maks

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6/01/2017 2:15 pm  #10601


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...

maksimc B R E A K F A S T
6eggs scramble w tomatoes and potatoes, two chicken breasts, rye toast, @livonlabs and ☕️!
@fratelli_cafe comes through with the ambiance 😎

https://www.instagram.com/p/BUxU39NFYm8/?taken-by=maksimc&hl=en


Ah, it is. It's the first day of autumn! A time for hot chocolatety mornings, and toasting marshmallow evenings, as best of all, leaping into *leaves*!
—Winnie the Pooh
 

6/01/2017 2:20 pm  #10602


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...



racing james pop and bonus quickstep pops that i gave sharna!! @spicegirl99






andjessicalange

i’m pretty salty because i just wrote up this whole massive post about it and the tumblr app ate it, so let’s try again. this is for @spicegirl99 and her anon, these are the funko pops i made for james! sadly i only took the one picture of the james pop because it was a pretty simple custom and i was more interesting in documenting the sharna one since i didn’t think that was something i’d ever be able to make. anyway, meeting a driver at IMS is like trying to meet someone at radio city or another insanely large venue. it’s not like going to something in the middle of nowhereville where you can have lots of time talking to the person, and it makes me wish that i had waited to give james the pops at a smaller race, but hindsight is 20/20. he was signing for people outside of his garage and i said, “i made these for you! this is racing james and this is dancing with the stars james.” (i can post the one i made of him in his firesuit, if anyone cares!) he looked at them and he was like, “wow, thank you so much, these are so cool!!” i had wanted to mention something about how beautiful sharna was in that outfit or SOMETHING, but it slipped my mind in the short minute we had before he got into a golf cart with fiona and becky and drove away. i was pretty happy to see he had them in the motorhome though, i was a little nervous becky would’ve thrown them out or something. 👀
spicegirl99Here it is, lol! I feel like I got to know a lot about you scouring your blog for this disappearing post though, so win/win! I can’t believe you painted them; I thought you custom ordered them that way. Amazing! And thanks for sharing the story of giving them too him. I definitely want to see racing James too! Oh and didn’t James say that those were his two favorite outfits of Sharna’s?!
 

Last edited by CEK40 (6/01/2017 2:25 pm)


Ah, it is. It's the first day of autumn! A time for hot chocolatety mornings, and toasting marshmallow evenings, as best of all, leaping into *leaves*!
—Winnie the Pooh
 

6/01/2017 2:20 pm  #10603


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...


Ah, it is. It's the first day of autumn! A time for hot chocolatety mornings, and toasting marshmallow evenings, as best of all, leaping into *leaves*!
—Winnie the Pooh
 

6/01/2017 2:30 pm  #10604


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...


Published on May 29, 2017Sharna Burgess partnered with IndyCar driver James Hinchcliffe on Dancing with the Stars. Burgess appeared on the red carpet at the Indy 500.


Ah, it is. It's the first day of autumn! A time for hot chocolatety mornings, and toasting marshmallow evenings, as best of all, leaping into *leaves*!
—Winnie the Pooh
 

6/01/2017 2:34 pm  #10605


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...

Well that will do for the afternoon news...Will hopefully back this evening to see if there is anything exciting happening...

I do think they started rehearsals for the Tour on Monday....

Have a great rest of the afternoon.


Ah, it is. It's the first day of autumn! A time for hot chocolatety mornings, and toasting marshmallow evenings, as best of all, leaping into *leaves*!
—Winnie the Pooh
 

6/01/2017 2:56 pm  #10606


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...

LuvSeason18 wrote:

View from the Crow's Nest wrote:

I am tentatively going to say that
tinypics works today.

whoo hoo.......will have to check that out.


ETA:   Still having issues with them.  It may be because my computer updated and is somehow blocking images to upload.  Not sure if this is possible, but I didn't have any issues before the update.....

I kept getting that message too.  "plug ins are being blocked"  or something like that.  But now even though it says that, if I let the "help us fight spam" thingy slowly do its thing, it has worked for me today.

?  ?

 


Let kindness attend every gift and good deed, and love warm every Christmas greeting.
     Thread Starter
 

6/01/2017 3:15 pm  #10607


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...

CEK40 wrote:

Luv...I got my prize and I love it...I agree with View !!!  Thank you so much!!!!  HUGS

YAY!!!  Glad it arrived.  In case you and View were wondering.....in our little game of pick a number between 1 and 25........it was 11.  View came the closest.  I would have liked for them to be both the same, but I didn't have any more "dream catchers" or "charms". lol   Anyway, glad they both arrived.


Friendship is a priceless gift that can't be bought or sold, its value is far greater than a mountain made of gold.
May this FriendSHIP always have wind in its sails and a sunrise on the horizon.
 

6/01/2017 3:17 pm  #10608


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...

View from the Crow's Nest wrote:

LuvSeason18 wrote:

View from the Crow's Nest wrote:

I am tentatively going to say that
tinypics works today.

whoo hoo.......will have to check that out.


ETA:   Still having issues with them.  It may be because my computer updated and is somehow blocking images to upload.  Not sure if this is possible, but I didn't have any issues before the update.....

I kept getting that message too.  "plug ins are being blocked"  or something like that.  But now even though it says that, if I let the "help us fight spam" thingy slowly do its thing, it has worked for me today.

?  ?

 

It is kind of crazy.  Most of the time it says, "failed to upload" or "image has been removed". Other times, when it does work, it will not upload "new" things, but if I try with an "old chart", it will work.  Strange. LOL


Friendship is a priceless gift that can't be bought or sold, its value is far greater than a mountain made of gold.
May this FriendSHIP always have wind in its sails and a sunrise on the horizon.
 

6/01/2017 6:43 pm  #10609


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...

Easily one of the best, if not the best, graduation addresses that  I have personally read or seen/heard.  It is Theo Epstein's speech to 2017 Yale grads. This is only a part of the speech.  On their web site Time Magazine published the speech in its entirety.  Based on posts that have made on this board and on getting to know each other for the past three, his words will resonate with us all.  He even mentions David Ross dancing on DWTS and making it to the finals.   This is the last part of Mr. Epstein's speech. 

"I joined the Cubs after the 2011 season amid an inordinate and uncomfortable amount of media attention. The Chicago Sun-Times, I remember, ran a full-page, front-page photo-shop of me walking on water across Lake Michigan, as if by showing up I was going to miraculously fix the team’s fortunes. Imagine their disappointment, then, when I announced a long-term rebuilding plan focused on acquiring young players and winning in five years. One season and 101 losses later, the same paper ran the identical picture on the front page, but this time the only part of me above water was the tip of my nose!One day in the early years, after a particularly humiliating double-digit loss at Wrigley, I was walking home amongst the fans in a bit of a foul mood and I remember I kept my head down, trying not to get recognized. A very charming elderly woman spotted me and came over to ask a question. “I appreciate what you are trying to do, young man, I really do. I understand why you are bringing in so many young players, but, tell me: exactly when are you planning on winning a World Series? I’m not sure how much time I have left.”  I was a little taken aback and all I could think of to say as I put my head back down to walk away was: “Ma’am, I hope you take your vitamins!” (That was five years ago. If it happened today I guess I would say: “Ma’am, I hope you don’t have any preexisting conditions!”)

After three years of arduous rebuilding, we had a nucleus of young players we believed in who were ready to break into the majors together. Many of these players were 21- and 22-years-old: your peers, your generation. Typically, it takes young players years to adjust to life in the big leagues and to start performing up to their capabilities. Most of the blame for this rests on these ridiculous old baseball norms that say young players are to be seen and not heard. That young players must follow and not lead. That young players must adhere to the established codes — from the dress code that requires them to wear suits and ties to the code that says major league players can't get too excited on the field or look like they are having too much fun.

Thankfully, we hired a manager in Joe Maddon who agreed it was time to turn these conventions on their heads. We asked our young players to be themselves, to show their personalities, to have fun, to be daring, to be bold. The dress code was changed from suit and tie to: "If you think you look hot, wear it!" Unburdened, and empowered, our young team flourished last season, winning 103 games, the most in baseball, and reached our first World Series since 1945. After fighting back from a three-games-to-one deficit against the Cleveland Indians, we faced a decisive Game Seven in Cleveland.


I watched Game Seven from the stands with my colleagues, my wife Marie, and my oldest son Jack, who was then eight years old. Jack, a big baseball fan and the math whiz of the family, kept me updated on the Cubs' win probability throughout the game. As we enjoyed a two-run lead after five innings, he tapped me on the leg: "Dad, we have a 67% chance of winning the World Series." "I know, buddy. It’s going well. But, remember, it’s baseball. Lots of things can happen." Later, we had a three-run lead with just four outs to go in the game, nobody on base, and the bottom of the Indians order coming up. Tens of millions of Cubs fans nationwide, counting down the outs, put their arms around loved ones – or called them – to keep them close for the big moment ahead.

=1remJack put his arm around me: "Dad, we have a 97% chance of winning the World Series!""I know, buddy, I know.” I said. “It’s so great. One batter at time, though. We still need four more outs. Don’t want to look too far ahead.”"But, Dad, first time in 108 years!"Then, out of nowhere, as storm clouds suddenly moved into the area: an infield single, a double, an errant fastball, a fateful swing, an impossible home run.... and a tie game.Indians fans erupted, rocking the stadium on its foundation with ear-splitting cheers. Cubs fans and I slumped in our seats, heads in hands. I felt another tap on my leg. "Dad, we definitely have less than a 50% chance of winning the World Series now." I couldn't think of anything wise to say, so I just sat up in my seat, stared stoically out at the field, put one arm around my son, and with the other I patted his leg as reassuringly as I could.

 Minutes later, the skies opened up and rain halted the action. It was just enough of a pause to ponder the magnitude of the situation. Extra innings in Game Seven of the World Series. An entire season, down to this one moment. A five-year plan, down to this moment. 108 years of patience and unrequited love from our fans, down to this moment.Still in a bit of a daze, I cut through our clubhouse toward a meeting about the weather. Turning a corner, I saw, through the window of the weight room door, the backs of our players' blue jerseys, shoulder to shoulder and packed tightly, all 25 guys squeezed into a space designed for half that many. It was an unusual sight. We hardly ever had meetings and never during a game. I inched closer to the door and saw Aroldis Chapman, the pitcher who had surrendered the tying home run, in tears. I lingered just long enough to hear a few sentences.“We would not even be here without you,” catcher David Ross said as he embraced Chapman. “We are going to win this for you. We are going to win this for each other.”
  Outfielder Jason Heyward walked to the middle of the room: “We are the best team in baseball” he said. “We’ve leaned on each other all year. We’ve still got this. This is only going to make it sweeter.”And then first baseman Anthony Rizzo: “Nobody can take this away from us. We have each other.”Kyle Schwarber stood up with a bat in his hands: "We win this right here!"I turned away, a big smile on my face, and headed to the weather meeting.Ten minutes later, the rain cleared. Schwarber led off with a single, Ben Zobrist doubled just past the reach of the third baseman, and we took the lead. In the bottom of the 10th, with the tying run on base and the winning run at the plate, at 12:47 a.m., Kris Bryant fielded a slow roller with a gigantic smile on his face and threw to Rizzo for the final out. We had won the World Series. My wife, Jack and I embraced in celebration – equal parts ecstasy and relief. I noticed Jack’s mouth agape; the young mathematician was shocked and overjoyed that we had for once beaten the odds.

Later that morning, back in Chicago, the team bus passed a cemetery on the drive from O’Hare to Wrigley. We saw countless Cubs hats and pennants already draped lovingly over tombstones for family members who did not quite live to see the moment. The next day, five million triumphant Chicagoans from every corner of the immense city gathered downtown for a victory parade. The sea of blue was a beautiful sight; Chicago, fractious and endangered, was united in the aftermath of the championship.     (KOS speaking: My older son and my only grandson were part of the five million in that crowd.)

After all the champagne had dried and we finally got a good night's sleep, I found myself returning to a simple question: what should I tell Jack and his younger brother, Drew, about this historic achievement; what is it, exactly, that I want them to hold on to?


  I thought immediately of the players' meeting during the rain delay, and how connected they were with each other, how invested they were in each other's fates, how they turned each other's tears into determination. During rain delays players typically come in off the field and head to their own lockers, sit there by themselves, change their wet jerseys, check their phones, think about what has gone right and wrong during the game, and become engrossed in their own worlds. That would have been disastrous for our team during Game Seven — 25 players sitting alone at their lockers, lamenting the bad breaks, assigning blame, wallowing, wondering. Instead, they had the instinct to come together.Actually, it was not an instinct; it was a choice.

One day I will tell Jack and Drew that some players — and some of us — go through our careers with our heads down, focused on our craft and our tasks, keeping to ourselves, worrying about our numbers or our grades, pursuing the next objective goal, building our resumes, protecting our individual interests. Other players — and others amongst us — go through our careers with our heads up, as real parts of a team, alert and aware of others, embracing difference, employing empathy, genuinely connecting, putting collective interests ahead of our own. It is a choice.

 The former approach, keeping our heads down, seems safer and more efficient, and I guess sometimes it may be. The latter, connecting, keeping our heads up, allows us to lead, and, every now and then, to be part of something bigger than ourselves, and, therefore, to truly triumph. I know, I will tell them, because I have tried it both ways.And I will tell Jack and Drew that we all have our rain delay moments. There will be times when everything you have been wanting, everything you have worked for, everything you have earned, everything you feel you deserve is snatched away in what seems like a personal and unfair blow. This, I will tell them, is called life. But when these moments happen, and they will, will you be alone at your locker with your head down, lamenting, divvying up blame; or will you be shoulder to shoulder with your teammates, connected, with your heads up, giving and receiving support? And I will tell them not to wait until the rain comes to make this choice, because that can be too late. We weren't winners that night in Cleveland because we ended up with one more run than the Indians. If Zobrist's ball were four inches farther off the line, it would have been a double play and we would have lost the game. That was randomness; like much of life, it was arbitrary. We were winners that night in Cleveland because when things went really, really wrong — and then the rains came — our players already knew each other so well that they could come together; they already trusted each other so much that they could open up and be vulnerable, and they were already so connected that they could lift one another up. We had already won. That's why I had that smile on my face as I walked away from the weight room door.

 And I will tell them not to wait until the rain comes to make this choice, because that can be too late. We weren't winners that night in Cleveland because we ended up with one more run than the Indians. If Zobrist's ball were four inches farther off the line, it would have been a double play and we would have lost the game. That was randomness; like much of life, it was arbitrary. We were winners that night in Cleveland because when things went really, really wrong — and then the rains came — our players already knew each other so well that they could come together; they already trusted each other so much that they could open up and be vulnerable, and they were already so connected that they could lift one another up. We had already won. That's why I had that smile on my face as I walked away from the weight room door.I learned later that the players’ only meeting had been called by Heyward, a 27-year-old who was suffering through a terrible offensive season, by far the worst of his career. Most players who are having seasons that rough detach from the team and isolate themselves — either to the disabled list or to the periphery of the clubhouse. But Heyward stayed at the center of everything: he never stopped being invested in his teammates, opened up to them about his own struggles, and bought them suites on the road for gatherings. The first to speak was Ross, the 38-year-old backup catcher in his final season who made a career out of being a wonderful teammate (and who is now in the finals of Dancing With The Stars. And you thought you were having a good year?) Rossy was always reaching out to befriend the loneliest players, organizing team dinners, breaking down the barriers that sometimes arise between players of different backgrounds in the clubhouse. The last to speak was Rizzo, the young team leader who all season long was reminding his teammates they were going to make history together, have a parade, and spend the rest of eternity linked with one another. Anthony, a survivor of pediatric cancer, just celebrated the World Series by making a $3.5 million gift to Chicago's Lurie Children’s Hospital. Schwarber, who raced out of the meeting and right into the batter’s box, had torn two ligaments in his knee in the third game of the season – a 12-to-15 month injury. Rather than disappearing to a rehab facility, Schwarber, just 23, stayed connected with his team, getting his rehab work done early so nobody would have to see him in that state, and then functioning as an extra coach for his teammates the rest of the day. He kept telling his teammates he was going to find a way to help them win. Shocking the doctors and everyone else, Schwarber returned in just six months, right in time for the World Series. He hit over .400, including the single to start the deciding rally in Game Seven. 

Early in my career, I used to think of players as assets, statistics on a spreadsheet I could use to project future performance and measure precisely how much they would impact our team on the field. I used to think of teams as portfolios, diversified collections of player assets paid to produce up to their projections to ensure the organization’s success. My head had been down. That narrow approach worked for a while, but it certainly had its limits. I grew and my team- building philosophy grew as well. The truth – as our team proved in Cleveland — is that a player’s character matters. The heartbeat matters. Fears and aspirations matter. The player’s impact on others matters.  The tone he sets matters. The willingness to connect matters. Breaking down cliques and overcoming stereotypes in the clubhouse matters. Who you are, how you live among others — that all matters. The youngest team in World Series history with six starters under the age of 25; they helped me get my head up.That is why, at the important moments in their lives, I’m going to keep telling my sons about the 2016 Cubs and that rain delay. And I’ll remind them – when they are graduating college or starting a new job, heading off to grad school or beginning a new life somewhere foreign – that they have a choice.

 So, to the Class of 2017, as someone who has already been uplifted by members of your generation, I am thankful and in awe of what you all can accomplish when given the space to be free, to let your personalities out, and to figure it out. I am truly inspired by the traits that distinguish your generation — your diversity, your boldness, your optimism, your tolerance, your treatment of each other based on substance rather than on the labels that used to divide us.I am so excited to see what lies ahead for you all. While there will undoubtedly be times here and there when you have to suck it up, follow the code, and put on that suit and tie, I urge you to remember that if you think you look hot, wear it! And please remember that even though so much can be quantified these days, the most important things cannot be. And, finally, when things go really, really wrong — and then when it rains on top of everything else — I ask you to choose to keep your heads up and come together, to connect, and to rally around one another, especially those who need it the most. It is likely to uplift you all."

 

Last edited by KeepOnSinging (6/01/2017 7:20 pm)


Maks (Bergen County Interview when asked about the kind of woman he would like to marry.)  "I'm drawn to success.  I want to be somebody's fan, excited about her life, her career, her choices." 
 

6/02/2017 8:19 am  #10610


Re: SEASON 24 is knocking at our door...

Good Friday Morning to you all...
Hope you all have had a good week and are doing well today...It is a beautiful day here in my part of VA. the sky is blue and there is a really good breeze and so far the humidity hasn't arrived today...LOL

I started cleaning out my pantry and kitchen cabinets yesterday afternoon and will finish that in a bit...it is amazing what you can find that you didn't know was there but hidden.  

April, hope Niecey is doing well and you are still home.  Hope you have had some time to catch up and rest too...HUGS

Luv...How are you, has winter left your area???  Done any gardening yet?  again thank you for a job well done with our game this season...

Jet, how are things on the west coast?  Hope things are going well for you.

Booky..hope your doing well.  Stop in and visit with us when you can.

View...How are you...so glad that Rio is doing well in his new home.  Did you get your garden finished???

Annie...am  hoping you are able to get your problem with the board corrected.  Send mea PM and let me know how it is going if you can,  Hope your doing well.

Gabriele, how are things going with you??? Did you find out anything about your hip problems???  Hope that is doing alright.  How is the little guy doing with is school and activities...Take care of yourself.

Vmmm Hope your doing well,,,I guess school is about done where you are...will you be doing summer school...I know your girls will keep you busy this summer...Stop by when you can.

Gunner...Hope this finds you well...Please stop by and say hi...we miss you here.  Take care.

KOS ,,glad you stopped by yesterday and thank you for the post...it was a very good speech I think. Thank you for all your interesting post and stories.  Hope your well and visit with us when you can.

Tango...I guess you are dancing away right now.  Hope you are having a wonderful time dancing with Tony and I hope you get to see Maks and Val...Can't wait to hear from you when you get back.  Safe Travels.

HRM, Havent heard from you on the board in a bit...Hope all is well there and things are warming up for you there.  Stop by when you can.

Tennessee...Did you ever get moved???  Hope your doing well and can stop by when you get straight.  

Lets see if there is any news to bring over this morning.


Ah, it is. It's the first day of autumn! A time for hot chocolatety mornings, and toasting marshmallow evenings, as best of all, leaping into *leaves*!
—Winnie the Pooh
 

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