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Mary Terry Olinger
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Mary Terry Olinger
@mterry14
What kind of life are you living if you’re only serving yourself? UGA Track and Field Alum
Katılım Nisan 2009
715 Takip Edilen809 Takipçiler
Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

People are so good.
My son won a free frosty at Wendy's for reading 25 books last month.
I took my boys last night.
We walk in & he's hamming it up telling the manager how he read books & got this award. We chat a few minutes & order another frosty for my other son & a small fry.
I go to pay & the manager says,
"You know what man, I just love seeing a good dad with good kids.... no charge, enjoy it on us!"
We ate & afterwards I took my sons up & handed the manager $20 & said I appreciate your kindness & want to pay it forward.
Someone will walk in tonight or tomorrow & you'll JUST KNOW they could use some kindness so tell them a stranger paid for their meal.
He gave us a bro hug & fist bump & assured me he would.
I love that my sons are exposed to this.
There's so much gloom & doom ONLINE, but in real life 99% of people are GOOD!
BE THE CHANGE. ❤️🙏

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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

FINAL: The Wildcats secure the win, defeating Harker Heights 6-3! Fantastic teamwork and effort today. Let's keep this momentum alive! #GoWildcats

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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

Another stellar performance by Richard Whitehead in Boston.
The Paralympian won his division at the Boston Marathon with a 2:52:50 finish. He averaged 6:36 miles on a blustery day.
#BostonMarathon coverage presented by @saucony

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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi
Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

Temple student-athletes representing ATS, volleyball, football, and golf had a great time serving and helping at the annual Cancer Survivor Dinner.
Proud of our kids for giving back, staying involved in the community, and serving others. 💙 @templewildcats @TempleISD




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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

Peter Wang was a freshman at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. He was also an Army JROTC cadet who dreamed of attending West Point and serving his country.
On February 14, 2018, when the shooting started, Peter was in study hall. As panic spread through the corridors, he moved towards the exit. Not to flee, but to hold the door open for his classmates to escape behind him. He was shot and killed in a third floor hallway.
He was found still wearing his JROTC uniform. He was only 15 years old.
For his actions he was posthumously awarded the ROTC Medal for Heroism by the US Army, and also posthumously admitted to the United States Military Academy at West Point for the class of 2025.
The West Point class of 2025 voted to give Peter their Honorary Graduate Award, because as one cadet put it, he embodied duty, honor, and country before he ever had the chance to wear the uniform for real.
He never made it to West Point. But he already lived everything West Point stands for.

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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

HER: Adaejah Hodge 👑
1️⃣0️⃣.7️⃣7️⃣
🌎 2026 World Lead
📚 Tied No. 2 in collegiate history
📚 Tied No. 18 in world history
🇻🇬 National Record
🏆 School Record
#GoDawgs

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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

The records are falling like dominoes for @kctigerathletic (TX) senior Andrew Jones, who ran a NATIONAL RECORD 34.72 in the 300m hurdles at the @uiltexas 6A meet. 🔥💨
(via @Andrew_ja_hurdl | Bert Richardson )
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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

🏃♀️ Regional Qualifier! Congratulations to Kaurie Holleman on an outstanding performance in the Long Jump at the Area Meet! 1st place finish with a leap of 19'0! Your dedication and hard work continue to make us proud. #GoTemple

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🏃♀️ Our Track team is making waves and are Regional Qualifiers! Congrats to Analisa Terry and Maya Ramirez for their impressive finishes in the Area Meet 3200 Meter Run! #GoTemple

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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

🏅 Huge congratulations to Maya Ramirez for qualifying for regionals! 4th place finish in the 1600 meters at the Area Meet with a time of 5:30.99. Your hard work and dedication continue to make us proud! #GoTemple

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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

🏅 Major props to Ka'Myhria Freeman for taking home 1st place in Shot Put with an impressive throw of 38’1 1/4 at the Area Meet! You're a Regional Qualifier! Keep pushing! #GoTemple

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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

Meet Windee Skrabanek (@WSkrabanek) — the 2026 Perry Weather Athletic Trainer Excellence Award winner! 🏆
For 24 years, Windee has been the heart of Temple High School (@SchoolTemple) athletics in Texas.
She's revived an athlete in cardiac arrest, mentored student trainers into careers of their own, and earned the trust of generations of Wildcats who still call her years after they've graduated.
Out of 6,405 nominations this year, Windee stood above them all. Congratulations, Coach Skrabanek. You've earned every bit of this. 👏
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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

Congratulations to our Temple Independent School District Head Athletics Trainer, Windee Skrabanek, for winning the 2026 Perry Weather Athletics Trainer of the Year. Windee was one of 6,405 nominees! We are so proud of her dedication and commitment to serving our students. #TempleISDproud
See the FULL STORY HERE:
perryweather.com/athletic-train…
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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

NEW: Kirby Smart tells @Clowfb Georgia is recruiting differently than other programs:
"If you're coming here for a paycheck, then you're coming to the wrong place."
Smart later added: "We’re trying to motivate them to get the next check, the next level."
on3.com/news/kirby-sma…

On3@On3
NEW: Georgia's Kirby Smart to @Clowfb on winning back-to-back SEC titles but missing the "mark" in the CFP: "I will never apologize for winning an SEC title. I think it’s the hardest thing to do in sports, to win the SEC title in almost any sport. Our conference is so hard, and when we went to 16 teams, it made it harder. But we’ve missed the mark in the playoff two years in a row, and I give a lot of credit to those two teams (Ole Miss and Notre Dame)." Exclusive: on3.com/news/kirby-sma…
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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi
Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi
Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

Always a special week at @themasters, thank you to all the patrons for the support and to the members and staff for looking after us all so well. Congratulations Rory, such a special win!!


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Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi
Mary Terry Olinger retweetledi

When shots are falling—focus on the process.
When shots aren’t falling—focus on the process.
So much of success comes down to showing up, weathering storms, staying in the moment, trusting your training, and making the next best move. It’s true in golf. It’s true in life.
After last year’s roller coaster victory at the Masters, Rory McIlroy came out firing on all cylinders. After 36 holes, he led by 6 strokes, the biggest margin at that juncture in 90 years of tournament history.
But then, on day three, he played a terrible round that included 3 bogeys and a double bogey. His entire lead was erased—he was tied for first heading into the final round.
He began the final round with more erratic play and by hole six was multiple shots back.
It was hard to watch.
Throughout it all McIlroy stayed calm and collected. No thrown clubs. No poor body language. Just a focus on the next shot.
He hung in there. Stopped the descent. Then stroke by stroke turned things around. He reclaimed the lead on 11 and made birdies on 12 and 13 to go up two shots.
The rest is history.
McIlroy won the Masters for the second year in a row, becoming only the fourth golfer ever to do so, along with legends Nick Faldo, Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus.
"One of the things that I love is focusing on the process over the prize... I would say to myself a lot: 'Process over prize. Process over prize. Process over prize, just to take myself away from the outcome," McIlroy says.
"I can get real caught up in the outcome. I just really need to remind myself that the outcome will ultimately happen if you just focus on the process. It takes care of itself."
McIlroy's instinct is backed by research.
Multiple studies find that those who focus on outcomes—winning, rankings, scores—experience more anxiety and reduced engagement. People who focus on the process—technique, the next action, what's in their control—perform better under pressure.
The reason is that outcome goals activate threat responses in the brain. Process goals keep you in the present moment.
It’s easy to show up when everything is clicking. But things will inevitably go wrong. You’ll make a great effort and still fall short. The winds will blow one way, then another. You’ll face moments where your emotions flare and things fall apart.
What matters most isn’t the adversity. It’s how you respond. Again and again and again.
There’s a reason so few people repeat at the Masters. There are so many variables. It is so hard to stay focused and play to win with history riding on the line.
When you think you’ve got it in the bag, you’re almost always wrong.
In today’s final round, there were four different leaders and every single one fell off, except for one: Rory McIlroy, who maintained his lead for the last 9 holes.
It’s not that outcomes don’t matter. (They do.)
It’s that what gives you the best shot at achieving your goals is focusing on the process and digging where your feet are.
When you focus on the process you put the shot that could have been or should have been or might have been behind you.
You play where you are. Which is the best way to play.
In golf. In sport. In life.

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