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-   -   Whats the hardest thing you have ever done in your life? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=936167)

dropped9 10-30-2009 01:56 PM

Whats the hardest thing you have ever done in your life?
 
Curious what is the hardest thing you have ever had too do in your life?

Did you do it?

seeandsee 10-30-2009 02:07 PM

to walk few kms? :D

Arnox 10-30-2009 02:08 PM

50 KM ultra marathon, squatting 160 kgs.

Did both, with ease.

Daddy Big Nuts 10-30-2009 02:24 PM

Get married

mvee 10-30-2009 02:28 PM

Watch a friend slowly kill himself with Heroin

HorseShit 10-30-2009 02:29 PM

Bury my best friend and three weeks later my other best friend. Both from car accidents. This was 8 years ago.

After Shock Media 10-30-2009 02:36 PM

To summon the assorted Doctors and Physical Therapists and seriously, truthfully ask them "What's next" after being told I would be paralyzed for life without letting depression or despair set in.

96ukssob 10-30-2009 02:43 PM

physically? probably when i was training really hard to bench 325lbs. a lot harder than i thought to get from 285 to 305, then 4x as hard to get to 325

but probably the hardest thing ive had to do in my life was make the decision to move out of Los Angeles and back to PA about two years ago. i had setup a business there, had friends and a nice apt and LOVED the life, but all of my family and college friends were back in PA and I felt that I was missing out on a lot not being around.

it was really stressful because I just broke up with my gf that we were together for 5 1/2 years as well as having to say by to some really good friends in LA and the life I had there to go settle back in PA with family and knowing it would be a very slim chance that I would ever move back.

I think the toughest part was not just moving out of LA, but knowing that I moved there with nothing out of college, had just enough money to pay the first month and security deposit and struggled for the first few months to have enough money to eat. I would be in Ralphs thinking "i cant wait until i can buy name brand pasta sauce." :1orglaugh

So it was more of leaving a life accomplishment behind. when i would pull out my CA license and people would ask about living LA i felt proud that I did it when everyone (family and friends) said it was a bad idea to move there without a job

LeRoy 10-30-2009 02:44 PM

Learning to surf was pretty tough.

Choopa Phil 10-30-2009 02:50 PM

tell my biological father to eff himself, havent spoke to him in 8 years and then changed my last name to my mothers maiden name

Zayne E. 10-30-2009 03:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DLXphil (Post 16483268)
tell my biological father to eff himself, havent spoke to him in 8 years and then changed my last name to my mothers maiden name

Wow...it's been 13 since I did the same. I dropped my last name so my last name is now what was my middle name. But that was easy...

The hardest thing I ever did I am doing day-in and day-out. I am a single dad of a 7-year old boy with Asperger's Syndrome. It's just me and him 24/7, 10.5 months a year and has been since 2005. When he was first diagnosed back in '06 he was labeled hardcore Autistic with Dyspraxia. That was unacceptable to me. I took a long look at other kids his age and started working with him every spare minute to try and get him up to speed. It started paying off almost immediately as 3 months later his neurologist couldn't believe he was the same kid.

He continues to have struggles and challenges but he is learning to read, is very good at math and his speech is "close" to normal. He still has a long way to go and he is struggling in first grade...but the good news is, this year, he is in a mainstream classroom. He gets pulled 2 hours a day for intervention...and I have a tutor for him on Tuesdays and Thursdays. All-in-all I truly believe he will be normal, fully functioning and capable of living as an adult on his own. Most parents want their kids to be this or that when they grow up. I want my son to be able to hold a job, balance his checkbook and pay his bills without assistance.

Put that in your smoke and pipe it.

okny 10-30-2009 03:06 PM

lost a friend from cocaine, setup by a few people on fall street and ending up doing time for something i had no involvement in.

nakeddutch 10-30-2009 03:08 PM

http://i36.tinypic.com/2is868p.gif

Ok..It wasn't all that hard...It took about a minute....

Coming back for more, she said: "Why don't you shove you
nuts up my ass!"
Shit! .... 30 sec tops.... I got kicked out of the
house for about a week...:disgust

Babaganoosh 10-30-2009 03:14 PM

I finally had to face the fact that I really wasn't a designer and stop humiliating myself on a webmaster forum every time I tried to get a job designing. Wait...that wasn't me, was it?

bbwdollars 10-30-2009 03:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nakeddutch (Post 16483389)

thats hot!

HomerSimpson 10-30-2009 03:54 PM

two day Sahara trip...

Agent 488 10-30-2009 03:58 PM

had to move a heavy couch in college.

LexiLexxx 10-30-2009 04:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayne E. (Post 16483363)
Wow...it's been 13 since I did the same. I dropped my last name so my last name is now what was my middle name. But that was easy...

The hardest thing I ever did I am doing day-in and day-out. I am a single dad of a 7-year old boy with Asperger's Syndrome. It's just me and him 24/7, 10.5 months a year and has been since 2005. When he was first diagnosed back in '06 he was labeled hardcore Autistic with Dyspraxia. That was unacceptable to me. I took a long look at other kids his age and started working with him every spare minute to try and get him up to speed. It started paying off almost immediately as 3 months later his neurologist couldn't believe he was the same kid.

He continues to have struggles and challenges but he is learning to read, is very good at math and his speech is "close" to normal. He still has a long way to go and he is struggling in first grade...but the good news is, this year, he is in a mainstream classroom. He gets pulled 2 hours a day for intervention...and I have a tutor for him on Tuesdays and Thursdays. All-in-all I truly believe he will be normal, fully functioning and capable of living as an adult on his own. Most parents want their kids to be this or that when they grow up. I want my son to be able to hold a job, balance his checkbook and pay his bills without assistance.

Put that in your smoke and pipe it.

Great story!
I can only imagine the thing's you have had to set aside.

Sly 10-30-2009 04:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayne E. (Post 16483363)
Wow...it's been 13 since I did the same. I dropped my last name so my last name is now what was my middle name. But that was easy...

The hardest thing I ever did I am doing day-in and day-out. I am a single dad of a 7-year old boy with Asperger's Syndrome. It's just me and him 24/7, 10.5 months a year and has been since 2005. When he was first diagnosed back in '06 he was labeled hardcore Autistic with Dyspraxia. That was unacceptable to me. I took a long look at other kids his age and started working with him every spare minute to try and get him up to speed. It started paying off almost immediately as 3 months later his neurologist couldn't believe he was the same kid.

He continues to have struggles and challenges but he is learning to read, is very good at math and his speech is "close" to normal. He still has a long way to go and he is struggling in first grade...but the good news is, this year, he is in a mainstream classroom. He gets pulled 2 hours a day for intervention...and I have a tutor for him on Tuesdays and Thursdays. All-in-all I truly believe he will be normal, fully functioning and capable of living as an adult on his own. Most parents want their kids to be this or that when they grow up. I want my son to be able to hold a job, balance his checkbook and pay his bills without assistance.

Put that in your smoke and pipe it.

Is Asperger's a fairly new discovery? I've been hearing more and more about it lately.

JenniDahling 10-30-2009 04:04 PM

Wow got some deep stuff in this thread. I think for me it was being pregnant at 19 alone, then putting my baby up for adoption and leaving the hospital empty handed after 56 hours of labor.

She turns 24 on Dec 20th and I still think about her, especially on her birthday and Mothers day.

ahoy 10-30-2009 04:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Agent 488 (Post 16483701)
had to move a heavy couch in college.

Hahahahah! That made me laugh, only because I am there with ya! Oh ya, and one of those old school big ass TVs

Angry Jew Cat - Banned for Life 10-30-2009 04:25 PM

quit smoking...

oh ya, still haven't managed that...

The Heron 10-30-2009 04:39 PM

Figuring out this interweb thingy!

bronco67 10-30-2009 04:56 PM

Learning to surf, learning to play guitar.

GAMEFINEST 10-30-2009 04:59 PM

getting out of debt!

CyberHustler 10-30-2009 05:20 PM

Stopping myself from murdering the guy who gave my mom HIV on purpose...

Pixelbucks Eric 10-30-2009 05:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sly (Post 16483726)
Is Asperger's a fairly new discovery? I've been hearing more and more about it lately.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asperger_syndrome

potter 10-30-2009 11:04 PM

http://images.b105.com.au/2009/05/15...-Feature-1.jpg

american pervert 10-30-2009 11:56 PM

wood rep at l.a. county MCJ #1900

ahoy 10-31-2009 12:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberHustler (Post 16484191)
Stopping myself from murdering the guy who gave my mom HIV on purpose...

Dude.... if that is true, that really does take some self restraint. I know if I were in your shoes, that mother fucker would, at the least, not be walking on two legs right now.

cam_girls 10-31-2009 12:50 AM

the half dozen times I went to visit Eve, silly thing doesn't believe I'm Adam

SleazyDream 10-31-2009 01:12 AM

leave my ex wife

papill0n 10-31-2009 01:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberHustler (Post 16484191)
Stopping myself from murdering the guy who gave my mom HIV on purpose...

wow man that must be difficult - i feel ya there

Matyko 10-31-2009 01:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayne E. (Post 16483363)
Wow...it's been 13 since I did the same. I dropped my last name so my last name is now what was my middle name. But that was easy...

The hardest thing I ever did I am doing day-in and day-out. I am a single dad of a 7-year old boy with Asperger's Syndrome. It's just me and him 24/7, 10.5 months a year and has been since 2005. When he was first diagnosed back in '06 he was labeled hardcore Autistic with Dyspraxia. That was unacceptable to me. I took a long look at other kids his age and started working with him every spare minute to try and get him up to speed. It started paying off almost immediately as 3 months later his neurologist couldn't believe he was the same kid.

He continues to have struggles and challenges but he is learning to read, is very good at math and his speech is "close" to normal. He still has a long way to go and he is struggling in first grade...but the good news is, this year, he is in a mainstream classroom. He gets pulled 2 hours a day for intervention...and I have a tutor for him on Tuesdays and Thursdays. All-in-all I truly believe he will be normal, fully functioning and capable of living as an adult on his own. Most parents want their kids to be this or that when they grow up. I want my son to be able to hold a job, balance his checkbook and pay his bills without assistance.

Put that in your smoke and pipe it.

:thumbsup:thumbsup:thumbsup

kane 10-31-2009 02:22 AM

For me it was quitting a good job and moving to LA to take a shot at being a screenwriter. I didn't know anyone in LA and had no job lined up. I flew down and spend 3 days looking for an apartment then once I got a place to live I flew home, gave my 2 weeks noticed then loaded up the car and drove out there.

In the end it didn't work out, but I learned a lot about myself and I made some contacts, friends and learned some things that have really helped me out since then.

kane 10-31-2009 02:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayne E. (Post 16483363)
Wow...it's been 13 since I did the same. I dropped my last name so my last name is now what was my middle name. But that was easy...

The hardest thing I ever did I am doing day-in and day-out. I am a single dad of a 7-year old boy with Asperger's Syndrome. It's just me and him 24/7, 10.5 months a year and has been since 2005. When he was first diagnosed back in '06 he was labeled hardcore Autistic with Dyspraxia. That was unacceptable to me. I took a long look at other kids his age and started working with him every spare minute to try and get him up to speed. It started paying off almost immediately as 3 months later his neurologist couldn't believe he was the same kid.

He continues to have struggles and challenges but he is learning to read, is very good at math and his speech is "close" to normal. He still has a long way to go and he is struggling in first grade...but the good news is, this year, he is in a mainstream classroom. He gets pulled 2 hours a day for intervention...and I have a tutor for him on Tuesdays and Thursdays. All-in-all I truly believe he will be normal, fully functioning and capable of living as an adult on his own. Most parents want their kids to be this or that when they grow up. I want my son to be able to hold a job, balance his checkbook and pay his bills without assistance.

Put that in your smoke and pipe it.

Damn, kind of puts a lot of things into perspective.

Boobzooka 10-31-2009 03:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayne E. (Post 16483363)
Wow...it's been 13 since I did the same. I dropped my last name so my last name is now what was my middle name. But that was easy...

The hardest thing I ever did I am doing day-in and day-out. I am a single dad of a 7-year old boy with Asperger's Syndrome. It's just me and him 24/7, 10.5 months a year and has been since 2005. When he was first diagnosed back in '06 he was labeled hardcore Autistic with Dyspraxia. That was unacceptable to me. I took a long look at other kids his age and started working with him every spare minute to try and get him up to speed. It started paying off almost immediately as 3 months later his neurologist couldn't believe he was the same kid.

He continues to have struggles and challenges but he is learning to read, is very good at math and his speech is "close" to normal. He still has a long way to go and he is struggling in first grade...but the good news is, this year, he is in a mainstream classroom. He gets pulled 2 hours a day for intervention...and I have a tutor for him on Tuesdays and Thursdays. All-in-all I truly believe he will be normal, fully functioning and capable of living as an adult on his own. Most parents want their kids to be this or that when they grow up. I want my son to be able to hold a job, balance his checkbook and pay his bills without assistance.

Put that in your smoke and pipe it.

I don't mean to "troll" here, and I say this with the best of intentions, but I am intimately familiar with the intricacies and idiosyncrasies of Asperger's and your description of your son does not really resemble Asperger's much. While these diagnoses can cover a broad spectrum of attributes, with some overlap, I suspect the original label was closer to correct. One does not graduate from one to the other by working at it. If you prefer to believe your son is Aspie instead of some other label, it's none of my business, but if your (new?) doctor is calling this Asperger's then I recommend you consult other professionals. :2 cents:

Scott McD 10-31-2009 04:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CyberHustler (Post 16484191)
Stopping myself from murdering the guy who gave my mom HIV on purpose...

Woah! That fucking sucks... :(

OldJeff 10-31-2009 04:06 AM

Be a pall Bearer at my kid sisters funeral. She was 23.

bad_influence 10-31-2009 04:15 AM

Quit smoking cigarettes after 40+ years of nicotine bliss.


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