![]() ![]() Ted is trapped between feelings of duty and disgust as we meet Dottie Lasso, Ted’s mother - who surprised her son with an unannounced trip. There are two driving forces in “Mom City,” wrapped in Richmond’s approach to facing Manchester City in the biggest match in team history. The penultimate episode of Ted Lasso is a study on how we cope with childhood trauma, how we move past it, and how we reconcile it with those who saw it, but didn’t have the capacity to help. If you’re lucky it’s minor, and has a very small impact on your life - but not everyone is so fortunate. Just wanted to share what a difference this silly little show has made in my life.On some level I think everyone has a little carried trauma from childhood. I like to think that Ted Lasso helped me send her into the weekend with a little bounce in her step. She dropped everyone else of the email and wrote just to me thanking me for such a kind note (it as literally a two sentence email) and said I made her day and wished me a great weekend and that she was always happy to help. In the same group email I thanked her and wrote “I appreciate you.” Instead of “it”. She is a great support asset and always willing to help. I reached out via email to the group and one member of the group I routinely work with responded very quickly and I was able to finish my task for the day. I needed a piece of information from one of my supporting groups for a big project I am supporting. I was astonished that it had an immediate impact. It isn’t the one single action you appreciate, it is the person performing the action (and likely many more that seemingly go unappreciated).įor some reason this really resonated with me and I tried inserting it into my vocabulary this week. The gratitude is more significant and real. By saying “I appreciate you” it is clear that you appreciate the person who performed the action. Your wife makes you a sandwich? You are saying you appreciate the action (making the sandwich) or the object (the sandwich). By saying “I appreciate it” you are saying that you appreciate the action or the object of the action. I routinely express appreciation to others but I always said “I appreciate it.” I gave this slight difference some serious thought and realized what a drastic difference what one little word makes. Perhaps it was just me, but it dawned on me that I had never heard nor used that phrase. He says it to Nate, the reporters, sideline officials (“Hey highlighter”), etc. Re-watching this show again this past week and picked up on something Ted says repeatedly to almost everyone: I appreciate you. S03E07: The Strings That Bind (Post Episode)ĪMAs Brendan Hunt (Coach Beard) 7/20/21 Cristo Fernández (Dani Rojas) 8/19/21 Brendan Hunt (Coach Beard) 6/1/23 Friends AppleTV Premier League Scrubs S03E08: We'll Never Have Paris (Post Episode) S03E09 La Locker Room Aux Folles (Post Episode) S03E10 International Break (Post Episode) Resources Frequently Asked Questions Ted Lasso Wiki Subscribe to AppleTV+ Season 3 Discussion Threads
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