Jordan Misa

1.3K posts

Jordan Misa banner
Jordan Misa

Jordan Misa

@JordanAMisa

@reeferrolls NY OCM-PT3B-25-000116 @goldenhourhemp CBD & THCA online shop

New York, NY شامل ہوئے Haziran 2009
2.5K فالونگ378 فالوورز
Dave
Dave@GamewithDave·
For anyone who used a computer between 1990 & 2005… what’s the one game you still think about?
English
40.7K
692
14.1K
7.9M
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
NBA
NBA@NBA·
TOP 10 DUNKS OF THE REGULAR SEASON! 10. Aaron Gordon's handles to slam 9. Jaxson Hayes' two-hand hammer 8. Tre Mann's emphatic poster jam 7. Ant's cross to powerful slam 6. Brandon Miller's one-hand jam 5. GG poster ➡️ Wemby poster 4. Cam Whitmore's baseline slam 3. LeBron drives and jams it 2. Matas Buzelis ascends for the poster 1. Anthony Black dunks over four defenders
English
369
2.3K
33.6K
1.8M
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
MLB
MLB@MLB·
Four-time whistling champion and member of the Whistling Hall of Fame, Chris Ullman, whistled the national anthem in Baltimore tonight!
English
176
368
3.4K
835.3K
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
doomer
doomer@uncledoomer·
its crazy that for millenials this was just a mid throwaway indie pop one hit wonder amidst hundreds of others during a golden age of indie music destined to be forgotten, but has recently been rediscovered because music right now is just that fucking bad
English
1.3K
1.4K
34.5K
4.6M
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
文車泉
文車泉@huguruma_izumi·
アメリカはとても深いBBQ文化を持つ国と言うことを知りました。 カリフォルニアは何故か嫌われることが多い州だということを知りました。 フロリダは全裸男性がサケやドラッグをやりながらワニを殴ることが多い州だということを知りました。
日本語
1.7K
3.1K
40.9K
966K
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
Historic Vids
Historic Vids@historyinmemes·
Japanese people trying to pronounce "refrigerator" will make your day
English
403
1.3K
12.4K
1.7M
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
𝒵𝒾𝓀✯
𝒵𝒾𝓀✯@_Gottalovezik·
when you deliberately didn't buy snacks to avoid snacking at night, but now it's night & there's no snacks
English
485
26.2K
263.5K
4.5M
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
まだ面白い
まだ面白い@madaomoshiroi·
クセが強すぎる天才ピアノ少年ほんま🌱
日本語
183
753
5.5K
693K
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
DepressedBergman
DepressedBergman@DannyDrinksWine·
Masahiro Shinoda explains why it was impossible for the Jesuits to impose their religion in Japan: "Interviewer: Is 'Silence' (1971) critical of the very fact of the Catholics coming to Japan and imposing an alien culture on the Japanese? Shinoda: Japan is an island surrounded by the sea. Many cultures from outside have come here. Japan could not refuse them. The sea current itself conveyed these foreigners to Japan’s southern shores. Japan’s culture thus consists of many, many foreign cultures in a mixture. Sometimes it caused us to lose our essential Japanese culture. I’m not even sure sometimes what Japanese culture is. In the sixteenth century Christianity and the gun were introduced into Japan. The introduction of the gun was a traumatic event and had a much deeper impact than did Christianity. The Japanese people were perplexed, but they are a realistic people and they made their choices pragmatically, giving up the metaphysical. We are empiricists, materialists. Interviewer: If I had made that movie, I would have questioned the right of the Jesuit priests to come to Japan and impose their ideas on the Japanese. Shinoda: No, it was impossible for the Jesuits to impose their religion on the Japanese because of the animism believed in by this insular, island people. It was not to be destroyed by so severe a religion as Christianity. Christianity destroyed the Roman gods, but the Japanese gods were protected by the softness of Buddhism. Buddhism is so soft that it was absorbed into the Japanese culture of the time. The Japanese people believed that Buddhism could easily marry with Shinto, and thus Japanese culture is a mixed breed of both religions. Then Christianity came, but by this time the native animism of Shinto and Buddhism were already coexisting in harmony. I think that there was no room for an additional religion. All Eastern religions are in accordance with a belief in the oneness of man and nature, whereas Christianity deals with the relationship between one man and another. When movies, or film culture, were introduced into Japan they were already based on modern Western thought. But Japanese culture influenced the kind of films that would be made here, despite the Western origins of the cinema. I must categorize the films of the world into three distinct types. European films are based upon human psychology, American films upon action and the struggles of human beings, and Japanese films upon circumstance." ('Voices from the Japanese Cinema', Joan Mellen, 1975)
English
173
1.1K
13.1K
3.9M
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
Dimitri
Dimitri@thedimitri·
In Japan, if they don’t have a word for something, you just say it in English but make it sound aggressively Japanese to the point that you sound racist and now you’re pronouncing it correctly
Dimitri tweet mediaDimitri tweet media
English
327
1.2K
29.2K
2.3M
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
Jaynit
Jaynit@jaynitx·
Roger Federer: "Effortless is a myth. I worked very hard to make it look easy." "I left school at age 16 to play tennis full-time. So I never went to college. But I did graduate recently. I graduated tennis. I know the word is 'retire', but retired sounds awful. Like you, I finished one big thing and I'm moving on to the next. Like you, I'm figuring out what that is." Lesson 1: Effortless is a myth. "People would say my play was 'effortless.' Most of the time, they meant it as a compliment. But it frustrated me when they'd say, 'He barely broke a sweat' or 'Is he even trying?' The truth is, I had to work very hard to make it look easy." Roger shares the wake-up call: "An opponent at the Italian Open publicly questioned my mental discipline. He said, 'Roger will be the favorite for the first two hours. Then I'll be the favorite after that.' Everyone can play well the first two hours you're fit, you're fast, you're clear. After two hours, your legs get wobbly, your mind starts wandering, your discipline starts to fade. My parents, my coaches, even my rivals were calling me out. So I started to train harder. A lot harder." He explains the paradox: "I got the reputation for being 'effortless' because my warmups at tournaments were so casual that people didn't think I'd been training hard. But I had been working hard before the tournament when nobody was watching." Roger redefines talent: "Yes, talent matters. But talent has a broad definition. Most of the time, it's not about having a gift, it's about having grit. A great forehand can be called a talent. But discipline is also a talent. Patience is a talent. Trusting yourself is a talent. Embracing the process, loving the process, these are talents too. Some people are born with them. Everybody has to work at them." Lesson 2: It's only a point. "You can work harder than you thought possible and still lose. I have many times. Tennis is brutal. Every tournament ends the same way: one player gets a trophy. Every other player gets back on a plane, stares out the window, and thinks, 'How the hell did I miss that shot?'" Roger shares the statistic that changed his mindset: "In the 1,526 singles matches I played in my career, I won almost 80% of those matches. But what percentage of points do you think I won? Only 54%. Even top-ranked tennis players win barely more than half of the points they play." He explains what this teaches: "When you lose every second point on average, you learn not to dwell on every shot. You teach yourself to think: 'Okay, I double-faulted. It's only a point.' 'I came to the net and got passed again. It's only a point.' Even a great shot, an overhead backhand smash that ends up on ESPN's Top 10, that too is just a point." Roger shares the key mindset: "When you're playing a point, it has to be the most important thing in the world. And it is. But when it's behind you, it's behind you. This frees you to fully commit to the next point with intensity, clarity, and focus." He reflects on losing Wimbledon 2008: "Some call it the greatest match of all time. Okay, all respect to Rafa, but I think it would've been way better if I had won. Looking back, I feel like I lost at the very first point. I looked across the net and saw a guy who just a few weeks earlier crushed me in straight sets at the French Open. And I thought, 'This guy is maybe hungrier than I am.' It took me until the third set to remember 'Hey buddy, you're the five-time defending champion. You're on grass. You know how to do this.' But it came too late." Roger shares what champions understand: "The best in the world are not the best because they win every point. It's because they know they'll lose again and again, and have learned how to deal with it. You accept it. Cry it out if you need to. Then force a smile. Move on. Be relentless. Adapt and grow. Work harder, work smarter." Lesson 3: Life is bigger than the court. "A tennis court is 2,106 square feet. That's where singles matches happen. Not much bigger than a dorm room. I worked a lot, learned a lot, and ran a lot of miles in that small space. But the world is a whole lot bigger than that." Roger explains his philosophy: "Even when I was just starting out, I knew that tennis could show me the world, but tennis could never be the world. I knew that if I was lucky, I could play competitively until my late 30s, maybe even 41. But even when I was in the top five, it was important to me to have a life, a rewarding life full of travel, culture, friendships, and especially family. These are the reasons I never burned out." He shares what matters most: "Tennis has given me so many memories. But my off-court experiences are the ones I carry forward just as much. The places I've travelled, the platform that lets me give back, and most of all the people I've met along the way." Roger concludes: "Tennis, like life, is a team sport. Yes, you stand alone on your side of the net. But your success depends on your team, your coaches, your teammates, even your rivals. All these influences help make you who you are." His final words: "Whatever game you choose, give it your best. Go for your shots. Play free. Try everything. And most of all, be kind to one another, and have fun out there."
English
19
484
2K
248.3K
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
Fred
Fred@Grand_handsomer·
This is 10x more impressive than Babe Ruth calling his shot in a baseball game
English
216
4.2K
39.9K
2.3M
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
Free_Ricky_Bae
Free_Ricky_Bae@Mandi_Rae_1·
This man is a National Treasure. #Afroman
English
180
4.5K
31.7K
763.5K
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
Brian Schmid
Brian Schmid@SchmanthonyP·
I have never seen a picture of Jim Downey that looks like any other fucking picture of Jim Downey.
Brian Schmid tweet mediaBrian Schmid tweet media
English
55
219
5K
190K
Jordan Misa ری ٹویٹ کیا
Nostalgia
Nostalgia@nostalgiaa·
What is with Seth Macfarlane and just knowing these things
English
175
2.2K
31.5K
2.6M