Andrew Bohm retweetledi
Andrew Bohm
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Andrew Bohm
@AndrewBohm1
Purdue Baseball Alum | Romans 8:31, “If God is for us, who can be against us?”
United States Katılım Ekim 2011
400 Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
Andrew Bohm retweetledi
Andrew Bohm retweetledi

Michigan and UConn basketball players open up about their faith on Easter weekend ahead of the NCAA championship on Monday.
“Jesus wiped my eyes clean. My whole mind is different.”
“The way I talk, or act changed. The way I treat other people. It’s more not to get, but more to serve.”
Happy Easter!
Video: @cbnsports_
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Andrew Bohm retweetledi

A HARVARD psychologist says: “if you’ve achieved nothing by 25, you’ve avoided the most destructive illusion of youth”
> In 2021, a Harvard psychologist surprised a lecture hall with an unexpected statement:
“If you haven’t accomplished much by 25, you may have escaped one of youth’s biggest illusions.”
At first, the room laughed.
She wasn’t kidding.
> The illusion of early success.
In your early 20s, the brain seeks quick proof of worth ~status, attention, rapid achievements.
But psychologists warn that chasing recognition too soon can lock people into roles or paths they never consciously chose.
They decide too early… and spend years trying to undo it.
> The exploration phase.
Research on career development suggests that people who explore more before 30 often build stronger long-term directions.
Testing ideas.
Making mistakes in public.
Changing course.
At 25 it looks like confusion ….but by 35 it often turns into clarity.
People who feel “behind” in their mid-20s frequently gain something others miss:
Perspective.
Patience.
And a clearer sense of what truly matters to them.
That foundation often leads to better decisions later on.
At the end of the lecture, the psychologist left the students with one final thought:
“You’re not meant to have life fully figured out at 25.”
“You’re meant to discover who you’re not.”

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@GrantHorvatGolf For the low handicappers I’d agree the 7 is the trusty steed
Mid-handicappers feel like we’re in the golden era of the 4-Hybrid, lol
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Covenant over contract. Loyalty over leverage.
In this day and age of NIL and transfer portal, goes so much deeper than basketball man. That’s not a basketball decision to stay. That’s a character decision.
Thank you @3bradensmith @jmilly2410 @FletcherLoyer #BoilerUp
Purdue Men's Basketball@BoilerBall
Boilermakers for life. It will always be about family.
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Coaching baseball again and love being back in the game teaching the young guns.
One thing that needs shrinking in this era of travel ball: Boomboxes in dugouts.
There are 3 other games happening in a 200ft radius… this is baseball, not a night club #ReadTheRoom
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Andrew Bohm retweetledi
Andrew Bohm retweetledi
Andrew Bohm retweetledi
Andrew Bohm retweetledi

High Point Guard Chase Johnston shared The Gospel on @wakeupbarstool this morning & explained how Jesus Christ saved him though a convicting conversation with his brother 3 years ago.
Great job diving into this, @TBob53 👏
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Andrew Bohm retweetledi

Dam[n], that's a Quality Dub 🚂
#Purdue takes down #11 Oregon St. for its highest-ranked Win since April 2018. #BoilerUp @KarbachRRC

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Andrew Bohm retweetledi
Andrew Bohm retweetledi

The Purdue Football family is deeply saddened by the news of Rondale Moore’s tragic passing. An All-American with an infectious smile, Rondale was a joy on and off the field. Someone who left this world too soon, Rondale will be remembered as a legendary Boilermaker.
Our thoughts and prayers are with Rondale’s family and loved ones during this difficult time.

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BREAKING: Princeton transfer Caden Pierce has committed to Purdue, per @JoeTipton.
The Glenbard West legend is a two-time All-Ivy Leaguer and won Ivy League Player of the Year in 2024.
His brother is NFL wide receiver Alec Pierce.

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Andrew Bohm retweetledi

Today, I was visiting with a brother. This friend calls himself a Christian, but doesn't always act like it. Some days he’s on fire for the Lord, and other days life's struggles seem to get the best of him. So, as our eyes met, I really wanted to say something about it to him, but decided to just let the Lord speak to his heart, knowing nothing I could say would ever have the impact that the Lord making Himself real in his heart would make.
So I prayed with him. And after some time passed, I winked at him...
and walked away from the mirror…
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This woman woke up at 4 AM in 20° cold, worked out for two hours, faced a packed college Monday… and her first thought?
“I woke up this morning. I’m healthy. I get to move my body. I get to learn. And above all—Jesus loves me. Not because of anything I’ve done. Just because I’m His.”
No complaints. Just tears of gratitude.
A beautiful reminder: The greatest privilege isn’t the workout, the degree, or the sunrise—it’s waking up known and loved by our Creator.
If you’re breathing today, you’re already blessed beyond measure.
Don’t let the noise steal your thankfulness.
He loves you more than you’ll ever grasp.
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Her resignation letter made the CEO go silent for twenty minutes...
Emma cleared out her desk at 5 AM.
Left the letter on his chair.
No drama. No scene.
Just two pages of gratitude.
"Thank you for teaching me what leadership isn't."
Then came her lessons:
"When you took credit for the Harrison campaign, you taught me to document everything."
"When you promised three promotions that never materialized, you taught me words without action mean nothing."
"When you ranked us against each other quarterly, you taught me competition inside kills collaboration."
"When you called weekend meetings for Monday's agenda, you taught me fake urgency is about control, not deadlines."
Fifteen examples.
Fifteen lessons.
Each one specific.
Each one true.
The worst part?
She meant every word.
No sarcasm. No bitterness.
Just genuine appreciation for the education.
"You showed me exactly the leader I refuse to become."
He found it Monday morning.
Read it once.
Read it again.
Read it again.
Called her cell.
Straight to voicemail.
His assistant heard something she'd never heard:
Nothing.
For twenty minutes, he sat there.
One of his best people.
Gone.
No notice.
No warning.
And every word aimed at him.
When he finally emerged, he asked:
"How many others feel this way?"
His assistant looked at the floor.
That told him everything.
Emma?
She's running her own team now.
They've never met her old boss.
But they know him.
Through every decision she doesn't make for them.
Every credit she doesn't take from them.
Every promise she keeps to them.
Her team thinks she's a natural leader.
They're wrong.
She was trained by the worst.
And learned exactly what not to do.
Sometimes the best teachers
are the ones who show you
exactly who you never want to be.
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