View Full Version : Transitions – Lance Armstrong
jseal
04-18-2005, 08:06 PM
Lance Armstrong will retire from competitive cycling after this year's Tour de France in July.
Mr. Armstrong, who beat testicular cancer before winning his first Tour in 1999, remains focused on a record seventh win in Paris. He will then call it quits on a 14-year career.
"Le Tour will be my last professional race - win or lose." he said.
Helluva cyclist.
MilkToast
04-18-2005, 08:35 PM
Jseal - you need another word other than "transitions" to use when people move on to other LIVE things... I though the dude had kicked the bucket!!!
Lilith
04-18-2005, 09:08 PM
It's not over til the fat lady rides a unicycle :D
It's not over til the fat lady rides a unicycle :D
Well Lil....guess what??? ;)
Lilith
04-19-2005, 05:36 AM
Where did you get that picture of me :D????????? You can tell it's me by the balloons :p
lakritze
04-19-2005, 03:41 PM
I will have to agree with Milktoast.When I firt read the title,I thought, Oh my God,We Lost Lance Armstrong? So many of your eloquent posts about the recent deceased have started out "Transitions."
jseal
04-19-2005, 07:25 PM
Gentlefolk,
I shall try to be more eloquent about the transitions of the living.
Irish
04-19-2005, 07:34 PM
I thought so too,when I read it!At least it would leave Cheryl Crowe
available. Irish
jseal
04-19-2005, 07:39 PM
Alas, it would seem that only the deaths leave marks on memories! :(
MilkToast
04-19-2005, 09:34 PM
Gentlefolk,
I shall try to be more eloquent about the transitions of the living.
[Pixies news] In an uplifting Pixie moment Jseal has decided to relegate the word transitions to the postings relating to that oh so touchy subject... DEATH. Many Pixietes were seen dancing in the streets at this transition in though.
How's this one for the blunt approach... for the living transitioning to new things.. keep "transitions"... for those that croaked use "dead"... of course that might be a little too blunt for some. I have talked with a few doctors over the past few years (just conversation, nothing else) and I found it interesting that many of them choose not to use the terms like "passed on" or "left us" and just opt for the much simpler "they died." I am not sure why, but I am guessing it is just the more clinical approach to it. While the whole idea of someone I care about dying does suck I still think of those conversations and find myself wording it like they did.
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