All of us probably have someone like that in (and now out) of our lives. It is sad that she is being so deliberately hurtful.
Mine is guy with whom I shared season tickets to a local baseball team for four seasons before he moved to Florida. When his son was failing, he gave a kidney. We fondled Marilyn Chambers together at the premiere o…
All of us probably have someone like that in (and now out) of our lives. It is sad that she is being so deliberately hurtful.
Mine is guy with whom I shared season tickets to a local baseball team for four seasons before he moved to Florida. When his son was failing, he gave a kidney. We fondled Marilyn Chambers together at the premiere of Insatiable forty years ago. Today his TDS is so great that he refuses to communicate with me at all. When Doc was pitching his one and only no-no for the Yanks one evening I called him in Florida to alert him so he could tune it in. We had sat together during that magical night in September of '84 when Doc shut down the Cubs in that overpowering one-hit performance. But maybe he'll come around. Siddhartha said, "I can think. I can wait. I can fast." Heaven knows anyone who sees me knows that I don't fast all that often, but I can think, and I can wait and I shall do both. With hope. He is a good man at his core and one of my favorite parables is The Prodigal Son.
Here's hoping your friend someday feels more understanding.
Wow, you donated a kidney to this guy's son - I would think that having done something so noble, so kind, so humane, and so selfless that any political differences would be treated as "reasonable people can agree to disagree" and not talk politics. I have lost friends over this political atmosphere, but you and your family didn't deserve to be treated like this after the kindness you showed to him and his family.
No. I apologize for evidently being unclear. My (former) friend was the one who gave the kidney. Truly, I am sorry for being confusing. My point was that Steve is a good, caring man and I have hopes that he will get over his hostility.
All of us probably have someone like that in (and now out) of our lives. It is sad that she is being so deliberately hurtful.
Mine is guy with whom I shared season tickets to a local baseball team for four seasons before he moved to Florida. When his son was failing, he gave a kidney. We fondled Marilyn Chambers together at the premiere of Insatiable forty years ago. Today his TDS is so great that he refuses to communicate with me at all. When Doc was pitching his one and only no-no for the Yanks one evening I called him in Florida to alert him so he could tune it in. We had sat together during that magical night in September of '84 when Doc shut down the Cubs in that overpowering one-hit performance. But maybe he'll come around. Siddhartha said, "I can think. I can wait. I can fast." Heaven knows anyone who sees me knows that I don't fast all that often, but I can think, and I can wait and I shall do both. With hope. He is a good man at his core and one of my favorite parables is The Prodigal Son.
Here's hoping your friend someday feels more understanding.
Wow, you donated a kidney to this guy's son - I would think that having done something so noble, so kind, so humane, and so selfless that any political differences would be treated as "reasonable people can agree to disagree" and not talk politics. I have lost friends over this political atmosphere, but you and your family didn't deserve to be treated like this after the kindness you showed to him and his family.
No. I apologize for evidently being unclear. My (former) friend was the one who gave the kidney. Truly, I am sorry for being confusing. My point was that Steve is a good, caring man and I have hopes that he will get over his hostility.
you were clear as a bell David!
J David wrote “.When his son was failing, he gave a kidney.” So I think he means the other guy donated his kidney to his (the other guy still) son.