loss phentermine study weight

When you can't depend on power and size, you have to "train to be passionate, to be quick and to have loss phentermine study weight," Hulewsky said. Some of the kids come from broken homes, he said. Some are undocumented. Many have money problems. About half couldn't pay their $75 registration fee to play this year, he said. Only an $872 donation from a local nonprofit allowed them to suit up. Players often miss practice or games because their parents need their help at work or home. Despite the odds, at season's end Nov. 17, Sunrise United finished in third place, with five wins, four losses and one tie. They played their first playoff game Saturday, losing to a team from Sacramento. In life, "their system is based on loss phentermine study weight," said Hulewsky. "It's taking whatever you can find to survive a little bit here and a little bit there." Some of that loss phentermine study weight comes right out of Hulewsky's pocket. He sometimes finds his players odd jobs so they can make money without feeling like "they're taking a handout." He's not looking for glory or to satisfy some charitable urge, he said. Coaching soccer, as he did for years at Cordova and El Camino high schools, is his way of paying homage to the game he loves. He was drawn to Sunrise United because he wanted to coach his 16 year old son. But since then all the kids on the team have become family to him. "This is their club, this is their second family," he said. "I think for many, that's all they have." He believes these young men can be champions if they stay together another year. Some might even see their dreams of soccer stardom come true. But childhood dreams die sooner for these kids than most. At 17, Luciano Orozco is the man of the house. His dad, he said, is simply "gone," and his mother has been nagging him more and more about getting a job to help her and his three siblings, all younger than 13. "My mom told me she needs help last week," he said, adding that he might have to cut high school short. "Life is hard, man." A skinny 14 year old nicknamed "Chicken" quit the team because his mother needed his help to sell things at Denio's Farmers Market and Swap Meet. Another player, whom The Bee is not naming because he is undocumented, grew up in Honduras and played barefoot until he joined his school team at age 13. His mother paid $6,000 for a smuggler to take him across Mexico and into the United States. The boy said he felt lost in the suburban sprawl of Citrus Heights until he met Orozco and another future teammate playing soccer near Birdcage Street. He's the player Hulewsky sees as having the potential to earn a college scholarship or eventually make a national team. But the boy's limited English, immigration status and poverty make those possibilities remote. A baby sister was born a year and a half ago, and there's a voice inside that tells him to give up the game, get a job and take over as the breadwinner so his mom can go back to Honduras. "When you're grown up, it's something you have to do," he said. It's a shame, he said. Another year as a team and "we could be champions." Hulewsky can only try to change his mind. He's told the boy "what a great future he has in front of him." That as a top soccer player "he'll make more in a year than I've made in my entire life." As a soccer star, he could be "an inspiration to those kids who have come up from the ghettos, like himself, I and many others." Most important, Hulewsky said, is to keep fighting for the dream. About the writer: Call The Bee's Stan Oklobdzija, (916) 608 7453. ... loss phentermine study weight