West Fordham need I say more it comes, let it. If it goes, let it.嵐 ââď¸ . David Pratt ¡ Original audio
Shop Collectible Avatars. Scan this QR code to download the app now. Or check it out in the app stores. Call of Duty: Warzone. Watch Dogs: Legion. Atlanta Hawks. Philadelphia 76ers. reply. Reply reply Reply reply.
Avritt v. Reliastar Life Ins. Co., 2009 WL 1703224 (D. Minn. June 18, 2009) Alas, jurisdiction under CAFA was never meant to be for the defendant. In
In this context, âHayaan mo naâ does encompass all 3 phrases into one. Basically youâre saying âWhatever happens will happen so just let things happen and do not worry about itâ. Hayaan mo lang dumating, hayaan mo lang, hayaan mo na. Hayaan itong lumapit, hayaan lang ito, hayaan itong umalis (or pakawalan ito)
If it comes, let it come. If it goes, wonderful, let it go. Let things come and go. Don't let anything disturb your peace. Flow with life.
Ëâ*°â˘.Ëâ*°⢠SUBSCRIBE TO 1MIL & LIKE THIS VIDEO! â˘Â°*âË.â˘Â°*âËIf it comes let it, if it goes let it Subscribe to my other channels! ď¸Pinnacle
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And he that heareth, let him say, Come. And he that is athirst, let him come: he that will, let him take the water of life freely. GOD'S WORDÂŽ Translation The Spirit and the bride say, "Come!" Let those who hear this say, "Come!" Let those who are thirsty come! Let those who want the water of life take it as a gift. Good News Translation
And to You are all things. You deserve the glory (Oh Jesus oh Jesus) You are worthy of it all (Oh my God, my God) You are worthy of it all (Oh) For from You are all things (Yeah) And to You are
Let it be. And when the night is cloudy there is still a light that shines on me. Shine until tomorrow, let it be. I wake up to the sound of music, Mother Mary comes to me. Speaking words of wisdom, let it be. Let it be, let it be. Let it be, yeah, let it be. There will be an answer. Let it be.
5IcZ. level 1if by "a while" you mean exactly twenty seconds, 1What's even better is when you clean the dust out of your fan and you turn it on again and the wind about knocks you 2Most DIY stores will have "cut to fit" swamp cooler filter pads. If you mount a cut out piece on the back of your fan, it won't collect as much dust on the blades and front. Just replace it when the air stops flowing so easily. The DIY place by me sells 24" x 40" filters for $8. Its good for two uses on my 12" fan, and the ends fit perfectly wrapped on the back of my Vortex fan...level 2OH, yea, that sounds that reminds me, I need to do 1I did this last night, stupid shit we dolevel 1Gotta count your blessingslevel 1I do the same thing with the AC in the car. Living dangerously, I 1I did this last night and it took about 10 seconds of lying in bed with no breeze for me to fuck the electric saving off!level 1I got be hella close to having a heat stroke just to fully appreciate my fanlevel 1I trick myself into thinking that the AC is blowing warmer than usual, turn it off, wait 5 minutes and when I turn it back on and itââŹâ˘s exactly the same air. Damn it feels better thoAbout CommunityScreenshots of Black people being hilarious or insightful on social media, it doesn't need to just be twitter but obviously that is are unlocked in r/BlackPeopleTwitterCommunity Heroes
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Richard Bach? Jess Lair? Anonymous student? Sting? Peter Max? Chantal Sicile? Dear Quote Investigator: On his first solo album in 1985 the musician Sting released a song called: If You Love Somebody Set Them Free Recently, I heard more elaborate quotations that included the above statement: If you love something, let it go. If it returns, itâs yours; if it doesnât, it wasnât. If you love someone, set them free. If they come back theyâre yours; if they donât they never were. The statement immediately above was attributed to Richard Bach who wrote the enormously popular inspirationally work âJonathan Livingston Seagullâ in the 1970s. But I cannot find this saying in his novels. Could you tell me where this expression came from? Quote Investigator: QI has found no substantiation that Richard Bach created or used the phrases above. The earliest known evidence for a version of this saying appeared in a book titled âI Ainât Much BabyââŹâBut Iâm All Iâve Gotâ by Jess Lair that was privately published in 1969. Lair was a teacher, and he asked his students to create small writing samples. For each class meeting a student was supposed to write âsome comment, question or feelingâ on a three inch by five inch card and place it on a table in the front of the classroom. Lair read the short texts and made comments at the beginning of the class. The following was written on one card [JL69] [JL72]: If you want something very, very badly, let it go If it comes back to you, itâs yours If it doesnât, it was never yours to begin with. Lair stated that about half of the cards were unsigned, and he did not identify the person who turned in the expression above. Here are three other examples from junior and senior students: 1. I heard a very profound statement last night. Unfortunately Iâve forgotten it. 2. No gutsââŹâno glory. 3. Laughter is the song of the angels. Lair did not require the words to be original, and he did not request attributions. So the student may have gathered the quotation of interest from another unknown person. Top quotation expert Fred Shapiro, editor of the Yale Book of Quotations, obtained a copy of the 1969 book recently and verified the presence of the passage. Lair published multiple editions of his book, and in the past a 1974 edition was the earliest known and verified copy [JLYQ] [JLQV]. Here are additional selected citations in chronological order. In 1951 Esquire magazine published a short story titled âThe Tyranny of Loveâ by Harry Kronman, and it contained a quotation that prefigured part of the saying under investigation [EQHK]: âI mean, if you love something very much, youâve got to go easy with itââŹâgive it some room to move around. If you try to hold it tight like that, itâll always try to get away.â In 1969 the educator Jess Lair published a version of the saying which he obtained from a junior or senior college student as mentioned above: If you want something very, very badly, let it go If it comes back to you, itâs yours If it doesnât, it was never yours to begin with. In 1972 a compact version of the expression appeared as the caption of a one-panel comic by the graphic artist Peter Max who was part of zeitgeist of the 1960s and 70s. The phrasing of this version was closer to the most common modern variants. Max did not claim authorship; instead, he used the label âUnknownâ [PMCP] [PMNJ]: âIf you love something, set it free. If it comes back, it is yours. If it doesnât, it never was.â ââŹâUnknown The comic was part of a syndicated art series called âMeditationâ. Max prompted his readers to send in quotations by asking the following question: âWhat words of wisdom guide your life?â The words above were sent in by âChantal Sicile, Staten Island, But she did not claim authorship, apparently. The reward for a published quote was a poster autographed by Max. In April 1975 the Oregonian newspaper published a profile of basketball player Bill Walton in its Sunday magazine section. The article noted a picture that displayed a different phrasing for the saying [ORBW]: In the office of Bill Waltonâs San Francisco attorney, thereâs a picture that is captioned: If you love something very much Let it go free. If it does not return, it was not meant to be yours. If it does return, love it as hard as you can for the rest of your life. In December 1975 the saying was published together with several other quotations in an article called âPoints to Ponderâ in the mass circulation periodical Readerâs Digest. Jess Lairâs book was acknowledged, and the words were identical to those in the book [JLRD]. For several years the actor Lee Majors was married to the actress and iconic beauty Farrah Fawcett. In 1978 an interviewer for the UPI news service asked Majors about this relationship [LMFF]: âI have an old saying framed in my office. It goes like this, âIf you love something, set it free. If it comes back to you, itâs yours. If it doesnât, it never was.â Thatâs how I feel about a marriage partner.â By the 1990s the expression had implausibly been assigned to the author Richard Bach. Here is an example message from the Usenet distributed discussion system in 1994 [JLRB]: >In summary, Iâd like to add something I read by Alan Dean Foster:Ă âIf >you love something, set it If it comes back, it is yours forever. >If it doesnât, then it never was yours at all.â Actually it was Richard Bach, but Foster is a great author too! By 1999 a comical remark had been appended to the maxim [UNSL]: But, if it just sits in your living room, messes up your stuff, eats your food, uses your telephone, takes your money, and doesnât appear to realize that you had set it freeâŚ.. You either married it or gave birth to it. In conclusion, the creator of this general saying is not known. Jess Lair helped to popularize one version starting in 1969. He was given the statement by an anonymous student. Peter Max helped to popularize another shorter version in 1972. He was sent the expression by Chantal Sicile. (Many thanks to Randi who asked about this quotation and inspired the construction of this query and reply.) [JL69] 1969, âI Ainât Much BabyââŹâBut Iâm All Iâve Gotâ by Jess Lair, Chapter 19, Page 98, Privately published. (Verified on paper by Fred Shapiro) [JL72] 1972, âI Ainât Much BabyââŹâBut Iâm All Iâve Gotâ by Jess Lair, Chapter 20: Our Magic Cards, Quote Page 203, [Copyright: 1969, 1972], Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City, New York. (Verified on paper) [JLYQ] 2006, The Yale Book of Quotations by Fred R. Shapiro, Section Jess Lair, Page 440, Yale University Press, New Haven. (Verified on paper) [JLQV] 2006, The Quote Verifier by Ralph Keyes, Page 135, St MartinââŹâ˘s Griffin, New York. (Verified on paper) [EQHK] 1951 February, Esquire, The Tyranny of Love by Harry Kronman, Start Page 30, Quote Page 30, Column 3, Esquire Publishing, New York. (Verified on paper) [PMCP] 1972 September 16, Cleveland Plain Dealer, [Cartoon Panel: Meditation by Peter Max], Page 19-B, [GNB Page 31], Cleveland, Ohio. (GenealogyBank) [PMNJ] 1972 September 16, News Journal, [Cartoon Panel: Meditation by Peter Max], Page 3, Column 4, Mansfield, Ohio. (NewspaperArchive) (This newspaper mentioned Chantal Sicile and the request for quotations.) [ORBW] 1975 April 20, Oregonian, Sunday Section: Northwest Magazine, At Home with Bill Walton by Judy Hughes, Start Page 10, Quote Page 12, Column 3, Portland, Oregon. (GenealogyBank) [JLRD] 1975 December, Readerâs Digest, Volume 107, Points to Ponder, Page 201, Column 1, The ReaderââŹâ˘s Digest Association. (Verified on paper) [LMFF] 1978 July 5, Nashua Telegraph, Lee Majors Is No Mr. Fawcett, [UPI newswire], Page 15, Column 6, Nashua, New Hampshire. (Google News Archive) [JLRB] 1994 April 26, Usenet, Newsgroup: From: Rob Geraghty, Responding to: Michael Aulfrey, Subject: Re: What do women want??? I need a womanâs advice!! (Accessed online at link [UNSL] 1999 August 23, Usenet, Newsgroups: From: Bbaylarry, Subject: OTP: Joke â If You Love Something. (Accessed online at link