Ray Reid
477 posts

Ray Reid retweeted
Ray Reid retweeted
Ray Reid retweeted
Ray Reid retweeted

When MJ did not make his Varsity basketball team, his Mother did NOT:
1) complain to the school
2) call the coach
3) demand a meeting with the AD
Deloria Jordan simply told MJ “work harder.”
~ via @JMMontgomeryCo

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Ray Reid retweeted
Ray Reid retweeted

Separates Winners and Losers. And Don't get caught on the wrong side.Some people just expect it to happen for them.
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi
Steve Jobs explains why motivation can't be forced:
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Ray Reid retweeted
Ray Reid retweeted
Ray Reid retweeted
Ray Reid retweeted

There you go!!!!
NBC Olympics & Paralympics@NBCOlympics
JACK HUGHES DELIVERS AMERICA'S GOLDEN MOMENT IN OVERTIME.
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Ray Reid retweeted

"THE BEST OF THE BEST"
AirJordans23@AirJordans2323
Happy Birthday Michael Jordan! "It's not about the shoes. It's about knowing where you're going. Not forgetting where you started. It's about having the courage to fail. Not breaking when you are broken. Taking everything you've been given and making something better. It's about work before glory and what's inside of you. It's doing what they say you can't. It's not about the shoes. It's about what you do in them. It's about being who you were born to be." @Jumpman23🐐 🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 #HappyBirthdayMJ Credit - ScottColeShow
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Ray Reid retweeted

Happy Birthday Michael Jordan!
"It's not about the shoes.
It's about knowing where you're going.
Not forgetting where you started.
It's about having the courage to fail.
Not breaking when you are broken.
Taking everything you've been given
and making something better.
It's about work before glory
and what's inside of you.
It's doing what they say you can't.
It's not about the shoes.
It's about what you do in them.
It's about being who you were born to be."
@Jumpman23🐐
🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
#HappyBirthdayMJ
Credit - ScottColeShow
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Ray Reid retweeted

Alan Alda Was Forgetting Who He Used to Be - So Mike Farrell Brought Hawkeye Back—One Last Ride at Dawn
Alan Alda was forgetting things.
Not big things.
Small things.
The small things that make a life feel like your own.
January 2026 — Los Angeles
Alan Alda was 89 years old.
In eight days, he would turn 90.
The man who once was Hawkeye Pierce—
sharp, fast, fearless—
now lived behind a quiet fog.
Parkinson’s had taken so much.
First, his hands.
The hands that performed surgery on MAS*H for eleven years—
now trembling.
Then, his walk.
Once confident.
Now careful. Measured. Afraid.
And now…
his memories.
Not gone.
Just fading.
Like old photographs left in the sun—
still there, but harder to feel.
Mike Farrell came anyway
Every week.
For five years.
Because that’s what B.J. Hunnicutt would do.
And that’s what Mike Farrell did.
He found Alan in the living room.
Sitting in his favorite chair.
Holding something.
A photograph.
Alan’s fingers traced it slowly—
again and again—
like it might disappear if he let go.
Mike leaned in.
And his chest tightened.
It was them
1983
The final episode.
Goodbye, Farewell and Amen.
B.J. on the motorcycle.
Hawkeye behind him.
Smiling.
The last ride out of the war.
“Hey, Alan.”
Confusion first.
Then—recognition.
“Mike.”
A small smile.
But real.
“You came.”
“I always come.”
Alan lifted the photo.
“I remember this.”
“You do?”
“The cameras. The crew. The bike.”
He paused.
Searching.
Then his voice broke.
“But I don’t remember how it felt.”
“I remember it happened,” Alan said.
“But I don’t remember the wind.
The freedom.”
He looked at Mike.
“I’ve lost the feeling.”
Tears followed.
“I’m losing myself, Mike.”
Mike held his trembling hand.
“You’re still here.”
“Not to me,” Alan whispered.
“I forgot Arlene’s birthday. Sixty-eight years. I forgot.”
Silence.
The kind that hurts.
That night, Mike couldn’t sleep.
I don’t remember how it felt.
The words wouldn’t let him rest.
3:00 AM
Mike stood in his garage.
Under a dusty tarp—
a motorcycle.
Untouched for years.
Because every time he saw it,
he saw Alan.
1983
The last ride.
He cleaned.
Polished.
Checked the engine.
His body ached.
But his heart didn’t care.
5:30 AM
Alan Alda’s driveway.
Dark.
Quiet.
Then—
“HAWKEYE!”
Mike’s voice cut through the dawn.
“YOU’RE TOO SLOW!”
Lights snapped on.
Arlene appeared.
Then Alan.
Confused.
Until he saw Mike.
On the motorcycle.
And then—
a smile.
Big.
Real.
Alive.
“B.J., you’re CRAZY!”
“I KNOW!”
Fifteen minutes.
Stairs.
Slow steps.
Careful hands.
Alan insisted.
“I need this.”
They helped him on.
Just like 1983.
“Ready?”
“Ready.”
They rode.
Slowly.
Carefully.
Two old men.
At sunrise.
Alan held on tight.
Not like before.
Not casual.
Like this mattered.
Like this might be everything.
“Mike,” Alan said softly, face against his back.
“I remember now.”
“Remember what?”
“How it feels.”
Wind.
Movement.
Freedom.
For one hour, Hawkeye was back.
When they returned, Arlene was crying.
Alan’s eyes were clear.
“I remembered,” he said.
That night, Alan slept holding the photograph.
And beside it—
a new one.
2026
Same pose.
Same smiles.
Older men.
Still together.

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