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Fergus
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You always have brilliant posts Chicago and i can relate to this one. Mum turned 94 today. She's been in a nursing home for about 18 months now while a nephew and his friend are minding the old house i grew up in. The family are thinking of selling soon , which is inevitable and i have no qualms with, but like you we have 4 dogs, guinea pig, tortoise, birds buried there. That's hard for me to get my head around as an animal lover. I at least hope whoever buys it lives in it as it's a weather board and the trend is to demolish and build units or new houses. If they do that I just can't bear to think about it - but they'll get the shock of their lives and think Norman Bates once lived there if they dig them all up!Our family home in suburban Chicago that we've had for almost 56 years went on the market today(in the US), one year to the day that my mum passed away(June 16) and 47 days after I left it. We moved in on Sept, 2, 1961, the day before my 9th birthday. It's not every kid that gets a home for his birthday.
After looking at the pics on the real estate site, it saddens me that I will never see it again. My first cat which died in 1975 is buried in the backyard along with the many turtles, frogs, birds, fish and our two ducks from the late 60s, Dick and Daffy.
My late father worked two jobs for many years so that we could afford a home in the suburbs and escape the city. This Sunday is Father's Day in the US. Thanks, dad, for the best gift ever. [emoji813]s:
What great memories Chicago.Thanks for that. I wish your mum a happy birthday. Having mum reach 90 was one of the greatest joys of my life. I'm so glad that I was able to keep mum in our home until one week before she died.
Seeing the pics of an empty house is heartbreaking. I saw my old bedroom that I occupied solely for 17 years and that I was packing up just two months ago. It was once shared with two of my brothers. In the 25 years I lived here from 1975 to 2000 I always knew that I had a place to go home to. I have no reason to go back now.
I miss feeding the local squirrels peanuts. They'd sometimes see me walking up the street from the store and would come running to get a peanut which I always kept in my jacket pocket. I swear that one or two knocked on the front door when I slept in and they were hungry. I once ran outside in the winter while wearing my pajamas when a hawk came swooping down toward one of my squirrels that was eating some sunflower seeds I had left out. It was about -5C with snow on the ground, but nothing was going to kill Stumpy(named so because the back part of his tail was missing).
We also had a birdhouse and feeders in the front garden. I once rescued a fallen robin that I kept in my bedroom until it recovered. It did poop all over, but it was worth it when I set him free and he didn't want to leave. He did fly away the next day, so I knew my job was done. We had a golden finch feeder by the front window and it used to give mum joy seeing them fly up close to the window since she rarely went outside the last two years.
I took great pride in the front garden where mum had a religious statue. I even had a gardenia bush out there which I got when it was small and brought it inside to live in our basement every winter. It never could have survived a Chicago winter. It got so big that my two nephews had to come over to carry it downstairs the last two years. I think we were the only home in our town to have a gardenia that huge in a garden. I gave it to my sister before I left and I'm sure it's dead now after over eight years.
My dad had planted pine trees in the front yard back in 1962. After he died I would cut branches off them and put them on his grave during the winter with a Christmas wreath mom had made. The lilac bushes he planted at the same time were blooming in the backyard when I left on April 30th.
We remodeled part of the inside of the house after my dad died so it was easier to maintain. While mum was in hospital three years ago, I redid her bedroom, painting it, getting a new mattress and fitting it with safety features including a commode. The worst part was scraping off the popcorn ceiling. Whoever started that painting trend should be drawn and quartered.
I guess it was all of these things that made our house a home. I can almost see my dad at his barbecue in the backyard making chicken for all of us on a hot summer's Sunday afternoon after church while we kids ran around playing "running bases".
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Most ridiculous race I think I've ever seen. I was going to bed over an hour ago. Couldn't stop watching. Going to pay for it tomorrow.Do yourself watch a replay of Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Pure insanity.
Most ridiculous race I think I've ever seen. I was going to bed over an hour ago. Couldn't stop watching. Going to pay for it tomorrow.
Holy ****!!! That was unbelieveable!!Most ridiculous race I think I've ever seen. I was going to bed over an hour ago. Couldn't stop watching. Going to pay for it tomorrow.
FMD that's just dumb. I doubt she'd beat anyone in the top 1000 tbhInterviewer: Let's talk about Serena Williams
McEnroe: I think she's the great female tennis player of all time
Interviewer: Why qualify it? Why not the greatest player period?
McEnroe: Because she wouldn't be able to beat a lot of the male players.
The world: McEnroe is a misogynist and a pig.
Strange times we live in. Had to laugh at Tony Jones suggesting she'd be Kyrgios. I don't like Kyrgios as much as the next guy but the bloke has beaten Djokovic twice this year.
Interviewer: Let's talk about Serena Williams
McEnroe: I think she's the great female tennis player of all time
Interviewer: Why qualify it? Why not the greatest player period?
McEnroe: Because she wouldn't be able to beat a lot of the male players.
The world: McEnroe is a misogynist and a pig.
Strange times we live in. Had to laugh at Tony Jones suggesting she'd be Kyrgios. I don't like Kyrgios as much as the next guy but the bloke has beaten Djokovic twice this year.
Serena is the greatest female tennis player hands down. She is a generation ahead of the curve in terms of her power game. You make a good point about some of her rivals but I have a feeling she would've been winning these grand slams still. Perhaps having a close rival may have pushed her to higher heights, we'll never know.
Now I'm not sure how the issue was originally brought up. If he brought it up in his book it is very floggish to start potting her and it's very disrespectful. And I'd change my stance in an instant.
It looked like the topic came up when he was doing an interview and I think the view is quite valid. It seems that people think adding 'female' to the line is doing a great disservice to her achievements and I'm not sure why that's the case. We don't ever talk about Lisa Leslie being the GOAT of basketball, or Meg Lanning being the best cricketer in the world.
The question only ever comes up in tennis. I agree that male tennis and female tennis are completely different sports so I wish the comparison would stop coming up. McEnroe would be loving the attention though.
I think it's disrespectful because when referring to a male sportsperson it's not usually said 'X was the greatest male player of all time' its generally just 'greatest player of all time'.
While I think for sports which are in the the formative stages on the women's side such as AFL this is acceptable and understandable because it's relatively new and you don't have much history to draw on in your judgement.
For sports such as tennis which have been professional on the women's side for over 50 years and has a great history of many incredible champions, the gender distinction should either not need to be made or made equally. This is why I think it was particularly acute in this instance.
I think it's disrespectful because when referring to a male sportsperson it's not usually said 'X was the greatest male player of all time' its generally just 'greatest player of all time'.
While I think for sports which are in the the formative stages on the women's side such as AFL this is acceptable and understandable because it's relatively new and you don't have much history to draw on in your judgement.
For sports such as tennis which have been professional on the women's side for a long time and has a great history of many incredible champions, the gender distinction should either not be need to be made or made equally. This is why I think it was particularly acute in this instance.
She should be referred to as the greatest female tennis player ever as there is no evidence to suggest she is the greatest tennis player ever (I.e. she has never beaten a male player), just as Federer is the greatest male tennis player ever for the same reason. The distinction is a logical one and the reaction to McEnroe's initial comments is wildly disproportionate.
McEnroe is still an idiot for getting sucked into it, though.
The definition of greatest could be different though.
You could say whichever player, male or female, has won the most grand slams is the greatest (overall). Rather than who could beat who in a single match.
Fair points from both.If that's the case you can't say anyone is the greatest ever, because there is no evidence to suggest it. There is no evidence to suggest that Federer would beat Laver so using the above as a template, all we can say is that Fed is the greatest player to play over the course of his career.