"Here's the way I have it figured," I said.
"I
Cheap Louis Vuitton
Bags have it figured that you came here because of Creed, because
he convinced you that he could make a complete football player out of you. Or
more than that. It was more, wasn't it? There was something in Creed that
appealed to you. Not appealed to you—hit you, struck you as being important. He
conveyed some kind of message that caught you just right, the same message I
got, the sense of some awful kind of honesty that might flow back and forth
between you. There's something chilling about Creed. He seems always to be close
to a horrible discovery about himself. He's one of those men who never stops
suffering,
jordan heels am I
right, and he takes you in on it. If you're in his presence at all, you're
almost sure to perceive that he's in some kind of pain. He allows you to get
fairly close to it, not all the way but fairly close. And this is what makes you
trust him or at least relate to him if you're even slightly sensitive to the
man's reality, to that awful honesty he conveys. Am I right or not?"
"I'd have to put that whole subject in historical perspective," Taft
said.
"I'm anxious. I'm eager to hear it."
"When it became known
that I was leaving Columbia, a whole bunch of people started coming
nike jordan
heels around. An aggregation. Just a whole bunch of them.
Prospectors. Canny little men. Appraisers. All with wrinkles around their eyes
and friendly enough smiles that you could see them put the brakes to. They came
from all over. They came from the swamps, from the mountains, from the plains,
from the lakes. In ten days I heard every variation on every regional accent you
can imagine. And it was football all the way. It was facilities, plant,
tradition, pride, status. It was which conference is best. It was intersectional
rivalry and postseason games. Those people could talk football for six hours
straight, ten hours, one whole complete weekend. All but Creed.
激安 ルイヴィトン
バッグ Those people were all the same, compilers of digits, body
counters. Friendly enough. But all in that area."
"Then Big Bend walked
in."
"Creed was too much. He was part Satan, part Saint Francis or
somebody. He offered nothing but work and pain. He'd whisper in my ear. He'd
literally whisper things in my ear. He'd tell me he knew all the secrets but
one—what it was like to be black. We'd teach each other. We'd work and struggle.
At times he made it sound like some kind of epic battle, him against me, some
kind of gigantomachy, two gods at war. Other times he'd sweettalk me—but not
with prospects of glory. No,
Chanel bags he'd tell me
about the work, the pain, the sacrifice. What it might make of me. How I needed
it. How I secretly wanted it. He was going to work me into the ground. He was
going to teach me how to get past my own limits. Mind and body. He stressed that
more than once. Mind and body. And it would be all work, pain, fury, sweat. No
time for nonessential things. We would deny ourselves. We would get right down
to the bottom of it. We would find out how much we could take. We would learn
the secrets."