Thunder Patrons and Supporters…
On behalf of the Childress Family, we'd like to inform everyone that Daniel's surgery was successful and he is currently in recovery. There are still several hurdles to clear, but the family is hopeful for a return home in the near future with additional treatment to begin in the coming weeks.
Thank you for all of your thoughts, prayers, and support throughout this challenging and emotional time.
#ALLinfor61 #Nemaha @KanzalandSports@BrentKSHSAA@sportsinkansas
Wow that play reminds me of a couple memories of Dallas.
Last year we watched Mizzou beat Ohio State!
2014 we saw Shane Ray pick up a QB sack/ fumble and run it back for a Mizzou win!
Can we talk about now how Biden got 81M votes in 2020 (the most secure election in history)?
2004 John Kerry: 59M
2008 Barack Obama: 69M
2012 Barack Obama: 66M
2016 Hillary Clinton: 66M
2020 Joe Biden: 81M (???)
2024 Kamala Harris: ~67M
You only get one chance to play high school sports.
One chance to leave it all on the field, the court, or the track.
Don't look back with "what ifs." Make every moment matter.
Here's your game plan:
7 Powerful Ways to Play with No Regrets.
1: Pass the MIRROR Test - Can you look at the “Man/Women” in the Mirror and tell them you gave it your all? If you can do this daily, you have passed the Mirror Test. Give your BEST Effort. Pass the Mirror Test & live with No Regrets!
2: Accept Coaching - Be coachable. You can always get better, and you always have room for improvement. Accept coaching. Every coach teaches you something. Sometimes it will be good. Sometimes, it may not be good. But, accept coaching and learn, grow, and live regret-free.
3: Earn Confidence - Athletes, you earn the right to be proud and confident. Put in the time. Commit. Be Proud. When you do this, you believe you control the outcome.
4: No Skipped Workouts - Daily Habits Win. You can’t work out some of the time. Set a schedule. Have a plan. Then, go at it with persistence and relentless consistency.
5: Positive Attitude - You can always control your energy and attitude. Make sure it is positive energy. A good attitude will leave you with no regrets.
6: Show Gratitude - Many people are involved in your commitment and your athletic experience—especially your parents. Be thankful for the time and resources they put in for you. Show gratitude. It will go a long way and will help you reach your full potential.
7: No Deposit - No Return! - Live with this mindset -> live with no regrets. You get out of everything that you put into it. Put time and energy into your sport, and you will reap the rewards. Look back on your playing career and know you did all you could. Live with No Regrets!
INSANE: Professor at @UnivOfKansas says that men who don't vote for Kamala should be lined up and shot.
He then asks that line to be cut from the recording so the dean doesn't find out.
Any comment @UnivOfKansas?
@WashburnBruce @BigTenNetwork@SharpeGreg Thanks for sharing. I knew @SharpeGreg way back in the day in Topeka. He has always been a pro, and a gentleman. My prayers are for him and his family.
Aug 31 is a big day!
We’re not running against a candidate. We’re running against a machine. That machine has crushed the will of everyday citizens in BOTH parties, including Democrats. A lot of those Democrats are sick and tired of being lied to. Our message to them is this: you deserve a President & a party who tells you the TRUTH.
Wanted to share some additional thoughts about the tragedy at Hazelwood East High School, where a child's head was beaten into concrete during a fight. Many are wondering what produced the rage inside the other child. Why did the fight escalate to such a barbaric level?
Victimhood produces rage and animus. It's a cancer of the mind. Modern American culture preaches and rewards the victimhood mentality. It's a lucrative and effective tool to seize power. It's antithetical to Christ's life and tenets of Christian faith. Choosing Christ is choosing victory. We can achieve all things through Christ who strengthens us.
We no longer teach that as a society. We teach victimhood and grievance. Our young people are more callous and savage than previous generations because we've convinced them they're all victims of sexism, racism, homophobia, Islamaphobia, fat-shaming, transphobia, poverty, pronoun injustice, you-name-it, etc. They're all owed a debt. Unpaid debts foment anger.
I've been poor. Me and my father shared a 400-square foot, one-bedroom apartment in the 'hood in 1984-85. While captain of my high school football team, I slept on a couch and ate a lot of canned tuna and fast food. I was never angry. In fact, I was happy. I didn't dwell much on our situation. I wasn't a victim. I had two parents who cared about me (my parents were divorced and my mother moved to Kansas City with her factory job) and I had a belief that things would get better. God was on my side.
Poverty does not produce rage. A victim mentality, a lack of hope, the belief that the world owes you a debt, and the absence of parental love produce an endless supply of rage.
The causes of what is ailing our children are obvious. It's the absence of a heavenly Father and an earthly Father. Those two fathers are the cure for the cancer of victimhood. It's really that simple.
We should not be surprised by the savagery we're seeing from young people, whether it be school shootings or schoolyard fights. We've poisoned the minds of children. We feed them a steady diet of video game violence, movie and TV violence, rap violence. Our schools tell them the suffering and sacrifice of our ancestors did not produce a better world. No. The errors of the past are unforgivable and the life sacrifices to atone for those errors are woefully insufficient. Retribution (vengeance) and reparations (debt) are the only adequate solutions.
The solutions are antithetical to Christianity. They lead to rage and destruction. They lead to little girls beating each other into comas and insane adults shrugging it all off as an inevitable consequence of kids fighting.
Victimhood is a mental disease.