And one is out ... No! Two are out 🤭 [Dynamite, February 5th 2020]
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And one is out ... No! Two are out 🤭 [Dynamite, February 5th 2020]
『ツーアウトフルベース』 Two Out Full Base “Poster”
Liverpool team news: Predicted line-up vs Burnley – Klopp defensive decision, two out | Football | Sport
Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp will have to make a decision on which of his defenders to play against Burnley.
The Reds, who are expected to challenge for the Premier League, have conceded in each of their first three games of the season.
That’s despite Klopp’s side arguably looking stronger defensively last season than they did going forward.
Joe Gomez struggled in the opening match of the campaign against Norwich and has been replaced by Joel Matip in Liverpool’s back-line since then.
Despite the regular conceding, Matip has impressed alongside Virgil van Dijk at the back and is set to start again at Turf Moor.
Cameroonian Matip scored the opener in the 3-1 win over Arsenal and said: “Our confidence is not bad, but everybody knows it’s so early in the season so we are just looking forward to the next game and then we will see.
“I want to score more goal and it’s nice that I could score, bit it’s early in the season and there’s still a lot to increase. Maybe I’ll get the opportunity to score a few more.”
Klopp is still without Alisson and Naby Keita, with both unexpected to return before the international break.
The rest of the team could be unchanged with the midfield trio of Jordan Henderson, Fabinho and Gini Wijnaldum impressing.
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Adam Lallana and James Milner all came on in last week’s win over Arsenal though Klopp is unlikely to make any alterations to his starting midfield.
Roberto Firmino has looked sharp alongside Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane up front and Klopp is unlikely to alter that line-up.
Divock Origi started the season after Firmino was rested following his busy international summer though the Brazilian quickly regained his place.
Xherdan Shaqiri was an unused substitute against Arsenal though scored in last season’s game at Turf Moor and could get his chance off the bench again.
Liverpool predicted line-up vs Burnley
4-3-3: Adrian; Alexander-Arnold, Matip, Van Dijk, Robertson; Henderson, Fabinho, Wijnaldum; Salah, Firmino, Mane.
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I HATE BIGHIT WTF DOES THIS SHIT MEAN
#bringbackwe'rethebangtanboyz2017
One In, Two Out
After hitting a wall in my search for the perfect method to manage my madness, I changed my strategy by starting to look a little at some other “projects” that were more strategies themselves. Most of the things that I searched for and looked for were ways to clean out your closet. More important than getting rid of things, though, was finding a way to keep the hoard from growing. Or, at the very least, to keep it from growing dramatically from all the little “regular additions”. I still wasn’t sure what I was looking for, exactly, but I certainly had some ideas about what I knew simply wasn’t going to work for me.
The One In, Two Out Project (or “rule,” or “method”) was something that I saw referenced a number of times. I saw variations on the theme as well, sometimes matching one in for one out. The idea was applied to everything in the home, but also to clothes. And it’s a very simple method to understand.
For every one thing that comes in, two must go.
That’s certainly one way to reduce how much you have. I thought it was also a good way to keep possible control over the future growth of the hoard. If the rule is in place, the size of the hoard can’t grow. It’s mathematically impossible.
But then, upon further thought, the whole idea seemed a little impossible for me.
I don’t think I could stick to this, especially not in its most literal terms. If I had to get rid of two things for every one thing I brought into my home, I’d probably end up having a panic attack the very first time that I purchased anything—even if it was needed.
What would I get rid of? What if I wasn’t ready to get rid of anything? What if I really wanted to keep everything I had and add the new thing?
Before I’d even begun to implement the rule, I could already see the ways that I would cheat it. I would start counting every single “thing” as a thing. If I brought in something big, I’d be tossing out two paperclips until I ran out of paperclips and had to buy another box of them (which would certainly count as one thing when it was coming through the door) so that I could toss them, two at a time, to allow for the things I acquired.
I would simultaneously be ridding myself over my guilt over buying things and creating a whole different kind of guilt over that very same practice.
The concept of having some kind of accountability was nice, but I wasn’t ready to dedicate myself to this rule just yet. I was being difficult, and I know that, but I felt like it was the same thing as it had been with some of the other projects that I’d seen. It was a good idea, but if I wasn’t going to stick with it, there was no reason to start with it.
It was certainly something to consider, and maybe something to use later, but it was just too dramatic (still) for getting my start.
There was still work to be done and ideas to uncover. Everything I’d found were great ideas, but they just weren’t right for me. Not exactly.
WOOHH JUST FINISHED DRAWING BETO AND IT'S AWESOME!!