Richard Silfen

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Richard Silfen

Richard Silfen

@richardsilfen

Husband of Amy and father of David and Nikki. #RollTide

Bryn Mawr, PA/Long Bay Beach Katılım Ekim 2010
2.1K Takip Edilen519 Takipçiler
Richard Silfen retweetledi
Sidelines - Bama
Sidelines - Bama@SSN_Alabama·
WAKE UP WAKE UP (partly because it’s a weekday and we should be waking up anyways) IT’S GAMEDAY!!!
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Science girl
Science girl@sciencegirl·
What would it be
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College Football Nerds
College Football Nerds@CFBNerds·
- Oregon at 3 for an OT win over a team 0-2 vs P4 teams - Ole Miss at 4 for a win over an LSU team who is 7 because they beat unranked Clemson - Alabama at 9 behind LSU even though they have a top 10 and top 20 win - Michigan at 15 behind (3-2) Notre Dame at 13 These are odd
Brett McMurphy@Brett_McMurphy

Miami edges Ohio State for the No. 1 spot on my @AP_Top25 ballot. New to this week’s ballot: Nebraska, Cincinnati & Memphis on3.com/news/brett-mcm…

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Ryan C. Fowler
Ryan C. Fowler@RyanCFowler·
Bama beats UGA Can I get a Roll Tide?
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Roll Tide #18™ 🐘
Roll Tide #18™ 🐘@jerrysandersRTR·
Mac Jones had a great game today... Built By Bama
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Graham Coffey
Graham Coffey@GrahamCoffeyDC·
Want to feel old? The offensive coordinator who has Robby Ashford and Wake Forest rolling up and down the field in this first half is this guy…
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Ryan C. Fowler
Ryan C. Fowler@RyanCFowler·
We made it! It’s game day, Bama fans! 14.5 hours until Alabama faces Florida State. Can I get a BIG Roll Tide?
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Richard Silfen
Richard Silfen@richardsilfen·
@CFBNerds @ByCasagrande I was present for the demolition. No rational person could reasonably conclude ND was the national champion.
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Michael Casagrande
Michael Casagrande@ByCasagrande·
Today I learned the official NCAA record book recognizes a 2016 Alabama national title (the year it lost to Clemson in the CFP championship in Tampa) by the same outlet UCF cites for its 2017 "championship."
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Alabama Football
Alabama Football@AlabamaFTBL·
The calm before the 🌊
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Barstool Bama
Barstool Bama@BarstoolAlabama·
What is something that Tuscaloosa desperately needs?
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Ryan C. Fowler
Ryan C. Fowler@RyanCFowler·
33 days away from Alabama Crimson Tide football. 48 hours away from Bama’s first practice Roll Tide!
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Richard Silfen
Richard Silfen@richardsilfen·
@BamaSaltyMarine As the son of a career USAF officer, I thank you for posting this message and for your service.
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Old Salty Marine
Old Salty Marine@BamaSaltyMarine·
I DID NOT WRITE THIS! But, it needs to be post on every Social Media Platform! These days, people look at me like I’m just a tired old man—but they forget I once crawled through the jungles of Vietnam with bullets flying over my head.” "Just a Soldier" A reflection for those who remember what dignity used to mean. I wasn’t always invisible. Back then—I'm talking about 1968—you couldn't walk into a diner in uniform without someone nodding, quietly paying for your coffee, or giving you a firm handshake. Not everyone did, of course. But when they did, it meant the world. Now? I stand in the pharmacy line behind some teenager arguing with the clerk about a TikTok coupon. No one makes eye contact. My cane slows me down, and people sigh like I’m the problem. They don’t know I once carried a buddy on my back for three miles through the mud with a shattered ankle and two bullets in my leg. I didn’t ask for a parade. I just wanted a little respect. I was drafted out of Arkansas at nineteen. Left behind a girl who waited—then didn’t. My mom hung a photo of me in uniform over the mantle like I’d already died. I guess part of me did. Vietnam was hot, wet, loud. You slept with rats and woke up praying your legs were still there. But you also learned things you don’t forget. Brotherhood. Grit. How to laugh during hell. I had a buddy named Frankie—loudmouth from Jersey, always had a harmonica in his shirt pocket. He didn’t make it out. Sometimes I still hear him playing under the trees. When I came home, people didn’t know what to do with us. The country was tired of war, tired of death, and some of that tiredness turned into anger. We didn’t get the hugs and banners. We got silence. Or worse. So I worked. Fixed trucks. Painted houses. Drove long-haul to keep food on the table. No pension, no benefits for a long time. The VA back then was a joke—lines out the door, paperwork lost in the mail. I had friends who never went back, who couldn’t deal with the wait, or the shame of asking. And still, we endured. My hands aren’t what they used to be. Arthritis is a cruel thing. Sometimes I stare at them and think, "These hands once loaded M16s in the dark, now they struggle with a jar lid." My knees creak like old wood. The back’s stiff from years under trucks and sleeping in strange motel beds with thin mattresses and thinner paychecks. But the hardest part isn’t the pain. It’s the feeling that none of it mattered. I remember when neighbors helped each other build fences. When a man’s word meant something. You didn’t need a lawyer for everything. We argued on porches and still shook hands afterward. Now, it’s all tweets and screens and screaming. Everybody’s offended, nobody listens. The worst is when young folks roll their eyes. “Boomer,” they say, like it’s an insult. They don’t know the hours we worked. The nights we went without so they could have more. They think we’re out of touch, but we remember a time when dignity wasn’t an app and truth didn’t change with the algorithm. I live alone now. My wife passed six winters ago—cancer. She was the only one who knew how to quiet the jungle in my dreams. Some nights, I still wake up gasping, hands clenched, heart racing like a chopper overhead. The VA counselor says it's normal. Normal. Funny word for nightmares. My daughter visits when she can. She’s got her own battles—divorce, debt, a son who barely looks up from his phone. I love her, but sometimes we sit in the same room and feel a thousand miles apart. You know what keeps me going? The little things. The smell of coffee at 5 a.m. Watching the squirrels raid my bird feeder like it's Normandy. That one neighbor kid who mows my lawn without being asked. He doesn’t say much, but he waves every time. That wave means more than he knows. And the flag. I still raise it every morning. Not because the country’s perfect—but because I believed in something once. Still do, deep down. Even if the news makes it hard some days.
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