Happy Valentineâs day y'all
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
DEAR READER
we're not kids anymore.

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I'd rather be in outer space đž
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One Nice Bug Per Day
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@canadiansfigureskating
Happy Valentineâs day y'all
Congratulations to our Team Figure Skating Olympic Champions. Team Canada.
âžïž Nadine Wang & Francis Boudreau-Audet
2019-2020 Senior Pair Short
đ2020 Canadian Tire National Skating Championships
đ· Danielle Earl/Skate Canada
isolation edit meme: [œ] âif the world was endingâ
tessa and morgan for great kitchen party | april 29th 2020
Tessa x The Sims 4 looks
If thereâs a game that have always been close to my heart, itâs the Sims! So, with the help of a lot of custom content (mainly from The Sims Resource), iâve recreated some looks that Tessa has worn in the past.Â
Let me know what you think of the outfits and which outfit should I try to do next ! â„
Omg omg omg l love that !!!!
Under two hours to go until Skate Canada begins!
Make sure to get your fantasy picks in here!
And if youâve entered, check that there arenât any errors with your entry!
⊠and will you skate to Floyd again?
When dramatic life changes happen you either cut it or dye it red.
YOU DO NOT HAVE BANGS. NEVER BANGS.
Bangs is making a comeback ... itâs trendy again from what I see in SM in the last months
Nadiia Bashynska & Peter Beaumont break the fourth-place curse that afflicted Canadaâs junior dance teams in the first three Junior Grand Prix events of the season, winning the bronze medal at 2019 JGP Chelyabinsk.
Now that thatâs done with, hereâs to everybody else doing better in their second events.
Yasss ! Everyone need to medal now ! đ€
Natalie DâAlessandro and Bruce Waddell at JGP Riga 2019 || RD | FD
adidasCA: Inspired by Varsity, reinvented by adidas. The VRCT Jacket, available now at http://a.did.as/6015ECR2NÂ
@tessavirtue
jmdufaux: Super journĂ©e avec lâexcellente @tessavirtue17 Ă #Toronto Tout un parcours pour #tessavirtue qui se culmine par 2 mĂ©dailles dâor aux #olympiques de 2018. Une fille hyper sympa, accessible et curieuse. HĂąte de vous prĂ©senter ça! What an amazing day with the great Tessa Virtue where we talked, among other things, of our passion for #Toronto, good #coffee, #architecture , #germainhotels and our love for @shawnmendes Thanks again Tessa! đđđ@legermainhotels @republik.social @eatassembly @sorrycoffeeco crĂ©dit photo: @virginielandry
siegehublot: Belle rencontre avec la championne olympique @tessavirtue17 à #toronto cette semaine. Hùte de vous présenter ça! @legermainhotels @republik.social @jmdufaux crédit photo: @virginielandry
Interesting in French ? Maybe I know who is the first interviewer he is known in Québec
leanne_hayward: I had the surprise and pleasure of seeing @tessavirtue and @ScottMoir when I took my son to his hockey practice this morning. I just quietly said good morning and I didnât fan out as I wanted to give them their space (and it was too early! ).
Alexandra Paul: Hereâs to forever â€ïžđ
We made it this far kiddo!
Max Gao: Now that youâve tried a little bit of producing for The Thank You Canada Tour, can you tell me a little bit about what that experience was like for you?
Patrick Chan: It was different. I mean, it can be stressful because you look at the tour as kind of Mount Everest and youâre just like, âOh, my God. How am I gonnaâââ?â (laughs). Thereâs just so many steps to get there and luckily, I wasnât leading the march. It was more Tessa [Virtue] and Scott [Moir] that were leading it and the producers. I was just more kind of like the commentating [at the Grand Prix Final]âââjust soaking it in and just understanding how it works and how to kind of do business with Tessa and Scott.
Also just getting involved on a deeper level in the skating world, the show world. It was very interesting, but I really find it fascinating and Iâm still developing my own skills in terms of artistically and creatively. Iâm still exploring that and I actually feel like that part of my being is growing as the months go by after my competitive career âcause I have the liberty to really think outside the box and not feel like Iâm so focused on the next competition, the next jump that I have to land, the next technical thing that I have to acquire.
M: Well, no, thank you! Things have definitely changed since then, and now we have a lot of Asian Americans who are actually trying to break through in sports right now, but we havenât really had many who have done so yet. I think youâre one of the few Asian Canadians who has been able to do so, so what do you think can be done to encourage little boys and girls, particularly those of Asian descent, to get into a sport like figure skating, or even just sports in general? Itâs very difficult for people like us sometimes because truthfully, we are built differently and we arenât always built to succeed in sports.
P: For sure, for sure. We look differently, too. I mean, I think I always believed that you should look inwards as opposed to outwards, to care less about what people think and the norm and what people think things are supposed to look like or how an athlete is supposed to look or act.
I was a pretty awkward kid. When I was younger, I look back at pictures of myself when I was competing at 18, 19, and Iâm just like, âOooh, he needs a better haircut!â (laughs). I donât know⊠I was an awkward kid, too, and thatâs normal. But you know what? My friends and the people I grew up with, like Eric [Radford], Jeff, Andrew [Poje], Scott and Tessa, [they really helped me]âŠ
Scott was a huge part of just the community and helping me be who I am and be my own personality and not be so shy to be from an immigrant family. They really helped me feel included because when youâre in sport, I think sport transcends race and gender.
I think [for those who feel different], just look inwardly and if youâre determined and if you have the dedication and the desire to do it and to actually push yourself to do it, thatâs all youâll need. The rest will work out (smiles). How you look, how you are stylized and how you physically look⊠that doesnât really matter as long as you get it done.
Look at Nathan Chen in the U.S⊠I think heâs a great representative of Chinese-American and Chinese-North-American athletes because heâs an extremely talented athleteâââexplosive, very slender and heâs just, like, a cool guy, man! (smiles). Heâs going to Yale and is a smart kid, really well-versed with a good personality so yeah, I donât know.
Donât feel discouraged by [thoughts like]: âOh, I donât look like a normal figure skater or whatever.â I think weâre entering a time when it doesnât matter; itâs more so about what kind of results you can produce.
âVAVEL
Scott was a huge part of just the community and helping me be who I am and be my own personality and not be so shy to be from an immigrant family. They really helped me feel included because when youâre in sport, I think sport transcends race and gender.