Big Welling United and Millwall fan

Joined February 2011
419 Photos and videos
Chic – My Forbidden Lover - 1979
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Wonderful book. Great read. Thoroughly recommend
Every Millwall fan should read this book. RIP Kenny Jackett.
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Millwall Football Club is extremely saddened to announce the passing of former manager Kenny Jackett at the age of 64. Kenny managed over 300 games during his time with the club, leading The Lions to promotion from League One and to an FA Cup Semi-Final. Rest in peace, Kenny.
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Isaac Hayes - Theme From Shaft (1971)
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🥹⚽ ¡El gesto de Fabio Gruber que conquistó al Cuauhtémoc! Uno de los momentos más emotivos de la noche se vivió durante la ceremonia previa al partido España vs Perú, fue cuando el defensa peruano Fabio Gruber tuvo un noble detalle con un niño con síndrome de Down que lo acompañaba al ingresar al terreno de juego. Al percatarse de que el menor tenía frío por las bajas temperaturas en el estadio, el futbolista se quitó la chamarra que portaba y se la colocó sobre los hombros, permaneciendo atento a él durante el protocolo previo al encuentro. 📹limaorganicaperu #diariocambio #Puebla
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Earth, Wind & Fire knew exactly how to make you move.
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Al Green - Let's Stay Together (1971) Topped the US Hot 100 & the Soul Chart. Written by Al Green, Willie Mitchell & Al Jackson Jr, the classic song was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame & selected by the Library of Congress as an addition to the National Recording Registry.
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Earth, Wind & Fire. After the Love Has Gone
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They have soooo missed out !!
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Happy Heavenly Birthday, Prince. 🎂🕊️ 💎 Rosie Gaines. Diamonds and Pearls
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The S.O.S. Band. Just Be Good to Me
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Toto Ft. Cheryl Lynn Georgy Porgy - 1978 x.com/musicasjc5/status/2063…

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Yvonne Elliman – If I Can't Have You - 1977 x.com/musicasjc5/status/2063…

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Bobby Brown. Roni
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Can never get too much of Luther's classic.
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She ate lunch alone for 730 days straight. What this 16-year-old built from that pain now protects millions of kids worldwide. Seventh grade. Natalie Hampton carried her tray through a packed cafeteria and felt it — that specific, suffocating dread of not knowing where to go. She'd already learned what happened when you approached the wrong table. The silence. The turned backs. The whispered laughter that followed you all the way to the empty table by the wall. The one everyone could see. The one that said: nobody wants her. For two full years — 730 consecutive lunches — that table was hers. Alone. The bullying went further than whispers. She was shoved into lockers. Four physical attacks in two weeks. She came home with scratches and bruises. When she finally reported it, school administrators sent her to counseling — to find out what she was doing wrong. The isolation grew so heavy she was hospitalized for anxiety. Then ninth grade came. A new school. And almost overnight — everything changed. Students welcomed her. She made friends within weeks. She finally knew what safe felt like. But she couldn't stop thinking about the kids still sitting at the wall table. Right now. Today. She remembered what she'd needed most during all those lunches. Not a teacher. Not a pamphlet. Just one person saying: "You can sit with us." So at 16 — with zero coding experience and "a lot of enthusiasm," as she put it — Natalie built exactly that. She called it Sit With Us. The idea was simple and genius: students sign up as "ambassadors," keeping their table open. Other kids privately browse available tables on their phones before ever walking into the cafeteria — and show up knowing they're already welcome. No public rejection. No moment of judgment. Just a guaranteed seat. Within 7 days of launching: 10,000 downloads. Then the world found her. NPR. The Washington Post. CBS News. Messages from Morocco, Australia, the Philippines, France — kids who'd been eating alone for years, finally finding a place to belong. Sit With Us now operates in 30 countries. "Even if it helps one person," Natalie said quietly, "it was worth building." She turned 730 lunches of loneliness into a lifeline for millions. That's not just survival. That's transformation.
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Evelyn King - I'm In Love - 1981 x.com/musicasjc5/status/2063…

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Nobody asked them to do it. Nobody trained them for it. They were just two teenage boys — the kind you pass on the sidewalk and barely notice — leaning on their bikes in the summer heat when they saw something no child should ever have to experience. A man walked away with 5-year-old Jocelyn Rojas. She was supposed to be playing outside. She was supposed to be safe. And in that single, awful second — while most of us would have been paralyzed, reaching for a phone, waiting for someone with a uniform and a badge to show up — these two boys made a choice. They got on their bikes and they went after him. No hesitation. No waiting for permission. No "someone else will handle it." Just two pairs of legs pumping hard through the streets of Lancaster, eyes locked on a stranger who had a little girl that wasn't his. They tracked him. They stayed close. They didn't let him disappear into the afternoon like something that was never going to be found. And then they confronted him. Two teenagers. On bikes. Against a grown man who had already done the unthinkable. They forced him to stop. He let Jocelyn go. "The entire thing lasted only minutes." — Lancaster Police Minutes. Because two boys closed the distance fast enough to interrupt it. Because they were raised — by someone, somehow — to believe that other people's emergencies are your business too. When reporters asked one of them afterward why they did it, he gave the most deflating, most beautiful, most teenage answer imaginable. He shrugged. "I just felt like it was the right thing to do." No speech. No GoFundMe. No press conference. Just a kid who saw a little girl in danger and couldn't make himself look away. Jocelyn went home. She was reunited with her family. She got to grow up. Because of two boys on bikes who hadn't been asked, hadn't been trained, hadn't been paid — and did it anyway.
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Kool & The Gang - Summer Madness (1974)
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