OT: MGoFeelingsball - Things that make you cry

Submitted by The Mad Hatter on

Since there's nothing going on today I think is an original idea for an OT thread.

I've never been much of a crier, even as a kid.  I can count on my hands the number of times I've shed tears as an adult, and when it has happened no one saw it.  Not my wife or my kids.

So imagine my 16 year old daughter's surprise when she looked at the seat next to her in Hill Auditorium and saw her dad sobbing like a 3 year old that was just punched in the face and then told Santa wasn't real.  She has never once seen me cry and I freaked her the fuck out by doing it.

So there it is.  Handel's Messiah makes me cry like a little bitch. 

 

What about you?  A certain scene in a movie?  A dog food commercial?  Finding out that you were adopted?  What makes MGoBloggers shed some tears?

EGD

March 24th, 2016 at 12:33 PM ^

I bought my wife tickets to thier Seattle show for her birthday.  A few days before the show, she says, "Eh, I don't think I want to stay out late.  Plus, my friend's husband is a HUGE Neutral Milk Hotel fan.  Do you mind if I just give the tickets to them?"  

That was not a good week.

Beileiver

March 24th, 2016 at 12:29 PM ^

I was laying on my couch on a chill Sunday, and thought I'd check out ESPN to see what was going on - and noticed that they'd come out with an Austin Hatch documentary.

About twenty minutes later, I was a mess.

RockinLoud

March 24th, 2016 at 12:31 PM ^

Inside Out man. I won't give anything away, but I'm not sure that I've cried that hard at any other movie, let alone a "kids" movie. Being a parent has opened up new feelings and emotions I never knew existed and/or intensified others.

LSAClassOf2000

March 24th, 2016 at 12:46 PM ^

Not sure how old you are, of course, but if you were old enough to watch Valvano's 1993 ESPY speech, which they show portions of in "Survive And Advance", I can almost guarantee your eyes would not be dry at the end of the speech. I remember watching it live, mere weeks before he passed, and I don't think there was a dry eye at the ceremony either. I think part of it was that you knew this great coach was basically at the end of a tragically short life, but it was a genuinely moving speech. It still moves me when I hear the portions highlighted in the 30 For 30.