[On the Chicago Cubs:] Being a Cubs fan prepares you for life - and Washington.
I love Chicago, but I didn't think I had enough soul to be a Cubs fan.
I'm a Chicago Cubs fan. I grew up in Libertyville, Illinois, and attended my first game at Wrigley Field when I was four.
Once a Cubs fan, always a Cubs fan.
I'm a Cubs fan. As a kid, the Cubs were my team.
I'm a huge fan of Chicago sports and Chicago food, and I love going home and my family is still there. I guess it's pretty easy to have a normal life in Chicago.
I live and die with the Chicago Cubs.
I live and die with the Chicago Cubs
I grew up in Kentucky, so we do not have a pro team. My family was split between the Cubs and the Reds. I would say I go Cubs usually. That's sort of where I grew up. My older brother was a huge Reds fan.
I grew up in central Illinois midway between Chicago and St. Louis and I made an historic blunder. All my friends became Cardinals fans and grew up happy and liberal and I became a Cubs fan and grew up embittered and conservative.
Someday, the Chicago Cubs are going to be in the World Series...
Jesus said, 'Greater things of these you shall do...' Become a peace builder, a bridge builder, not a destroyer, and the way you do that is through friendships and relationships, and through authentic character.
I didn't realize it was October until I saw the Chicago Cubs choking.
Chicago Cubs fans are ninety percent scar tissue.
The Chicago Cubs are like Rush Street-a lot of singles, but no action.
As an architect you are a builder. You are of course more than a builder. You need to be a militant, you have to be a poet, you have to be a visionary, you have to be an artist. But certainly you have to be a builder. Everything starts from there.