Finding life after loss, Two Dancing Widows dives into the stories of resilience, hope, and transformation. Hosts Toni and Hettie welcome new guests each week, from widowers and life coaches to those battling severe illness, who share their journeys through struggle and their paths back to joy. This podcast is for anyone navigating grief or simply looking for inspiration to live and love deeply again. Tune in for heartfelt conversations that remind us all that healing, while challenging, is a dance worth stepping into.
Coming up on this episode of Two Dancing Widows.
Today, you know, I knew that I was going to do this interview, so I listened to the
prologue on her book.
And I was just amazed because every time I hear it, I hear something different or I learn something different.
And I just don't, you know, we all have these brilliant children,
but not all of our children unleash their own, they're not unleashed their natural talent
or it's stifled at some point in their growth.
We're lucky when they do.
When they have the ability to have their talents unleashed.
That girl was unleashed.
Yes, she was.
Yes, she absolutely was.
I'm very proud of that.
Absolutely, and that girl was super loved.
Yeah, that girl was super loved.
The super loved.
Welcome to Two Dancing Widows.
The podcast where host Tony and Hedi explore life after loss and the strength we find in each other's stories.
Before we begin, a quick invitation for you.
If you're enjoying the show or if an episode has meant something to you,
head over to twodancingwittos.transistor.fm.
That's where you can listen to every episode so far.
Find links to the show on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and Amazon Music,
and connect with the two dancing widows Facebook community,
or listeners share stories, encouragement, and sometimes a little laughter in the middle of life's hardest chapters.
So if you haven't visited yet, go take a look.
We promise there are no pop quizzes, no membership cards, and absolutely no required dance skills.
Now, today's episode is a deeply personal one.
In this conversation, Tony turns the microphone toward her co-host, Hedi,
to talk about someone who meant the world to her, her daughter Brandi.
Brandi was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer at the end of 2024,
and passed away on June 25th, 2025, after a heartbreaking six-month fight.
In this episode, Hedi shares memories of Brandi from the very beginning,
who she was as a child, the joy she brought to her family,
and what it means to carry forward the love of someone whose life ended far too soon.
This is a conversation about grief, courage, and the unimaginable experience of losing a child.
But it's also about love, the kind of love that never disappears, even in the face of loss.
So take a breath, settle in, and join Tony and Hedi for this powerful and deeply personal episode
of two Dancing Widows.
Welcome back listeners.
Today's episode is deeply personal.
We are creating space for grief, for love, and for the complicated work of continuing to live after an unimaginable loss.
Today, I'm going to interview my co-host, Hedi Collins, and she's going to talk a little bit about her daughter Brandi,
and I'm going to travel down memory lane a little bit.
Hedi's going to start with Brandi from a baby, and I want her to give you a really good glimpse of who Brandi was,
and what Brandi meant to her family.
I acknowledge today, Hedi, the tremendous amount of courage that it takes to do this episode.
So I thank you for that.
I'm one of the most courageous women I know.
And if you ever had to go into battle for anything, land property, love, you want to put Hedi in that boat with you because she is nonstop.
And I admire that in her.
So today, let's talk a little bit about who Brandi was.
Thank you, Tony. That was a really good introduction.
Well, not because you said nice things about me, but because it was warm.
And I guess I'll start with first of all saying that I lost Brandi just this past June 25th, 2025, and I lost her to pancreatic cancer.
She was diagnosed in December 31st, really January 1st, and lived just barely six months thereafter.
So starting from the very beginning as to who Brandi was, well, she was everything to us.
I mean, she is the baby of four children. However, she's the one we got stuck on that we couldn't kind of produce, if you will.
And we wound up having to, you know, maybe go to fertility clinic and all this stuff. So we really wanted her.
And we were able to overcome those challenges and she was born in front of mom when she was born.
She was just this really independent little child.
And all of you who have more than one child, you know, they can be vastly different, even though raised in the same home.
And it's like anything else people receive love differently. People exhibit behavior differently based on what they received.
But she was super independent as a kid. She was a fast learner. She was smart. She was bright.
All little kids are, but I'm telling you she walked early eight and a half months.
She talked early. People were always surprised that she could, you know, have a complete sentence.
I think kids when they're about two can say three words of put it together. Hi, mommy. Bye, daddy.
They kind of understand different things. Brandi have five or six words in her vocabulary. She could complete a sentence.
And she understood a sentence and so when people would say things that they thought.
I don't know that she would not understand. She always didn't. If she responded to something they said they would literally be surprised.
And I knew that because they would say something like, oh, did you say she was their whole.
And she, she always could do that. And she, she sang early. I remember her dad sent me one day. He says, listen, she's singing the words to that song.
By then she was almost three. And I thought, no way she is singing the words to a song.
But she actually was. And at the age of four, she was recording because her dad had a recording studio. He considered himself sort of a, you know, DJ.
Back in the day, but he still kept things like that. And she learned how to operate that stuff. And she would say no daddy, no daddy, when he would try to help her.
So she was super independent. And she was a bright young girl. She grew into a very bright young woman. And we were proud of her all the way up. She was smart.
I mean, she was a writer from the time that she was young. She won in a couple of different categories, young author in the state of Illinois. She won the category of poetry when she was about six.
And when she was 12 or 13, she won for short stories and essays and received a scholarship to tough university for a summer program for young writers. So we were very proud of her.
Now talk a little bit about brand, I only met Brandy as an adult, but one thing that she did that I found just so.
It was just so much of carnivores brandy to listen to people in a way that most of us don't.
I mean, that's something I have to work on now at my age is stop trying to form a response when someone is talking just listen to what they're saying.
And she had deep listening skills. I mean, you always felt like she was really taking you out of what you were saying.
She really did. She was a very excellent listener, profound listener, if you will, because she would kind of sit on the outside of the room. Brandy was not the kid that came bursting in the suit of room trying to sit in on the adult conversation, but she was certainly listening.
In fact, the joke was, okay, which room is Brandy in with a book because she was always from the time that she was young, she was an early reader.
And she always had a book somewhere. And when people would visit, they would say is Brandy upstairs reading if they didn't see her.
But after David leaves, she would say, well, mom, what did so and so mean by this or why were they laughing at that?
And she would always kind of catch things, even things that I didn't catch that someone said, she said, well, do you think so and so really meant this or what did they mean by that?
And it might have been something that just simply rolled off my back or that we were all laughing about, or sometimes being a part of several different women's groups and sometimes the girls come over.
And we would have a conversation about different things. And later on, she would say, why didn't you say this? And she always wanted to know what it meant as a matter of fact, it was so funny because her oldest sister is 13 years older than her.
And so when Brandy was in, you know, I think a freshman herself or in high school, her sister was I think working on her doctorate or whatever.
And one day she told me that she was the brightest person in the house. And I said, excuse me, you're the smartest person in the house.
And she said, well, yeah, mom, other than you, I said, so you're smarter than you're smarter than your sister who's working on a doctorate, you're smarter than your dad, she goes, well, not you and dad, but yeah, I'm the smartest of your kids.
And I said, okay, well, since you're so dark on smart quit forgetting your keys to the dog on house and I have to bring them up to the school in order for you to get in.
It was just funny, but she, but she always knew that she was a little bright, even though that is an example that may not resonate with some, but she really didn't, she wasn't boisterous about it.
She was a very quiet child that knew how to speak to all people at any age or any level.
It's just a special affinity for, for seniors or people with disabilities.
Yeah, I just think about how you and I when we talk and sometimes we, although we practice not to do it, we do it even on our show, is we talk over each other.
We're so excited about saying the next thing and Brandy would listen to you and then she got us and then she replied.
So it was never like me, just reaction, you know, like that. She always would make you feel special and she worked with us on getting this podcast together and she's drunk gold because we are quiet into some where we're learning.
So yeah, she wrote out our instructions, but yeah, I always called her formulating her attack because, you know, she was really good.
I mean, I will have to say that later on, she when she went to undergrad, she majored in history at an all women's college.
And I think that it was Agnes Scott in Georgia right outside Atlanta.
And I think that that also gave her a bit of chops, you know, she was able to do certain things and she graduated, you know, near the top of class and she went on to University of Wisconsin law school where she wrote for the women's law journal there.
She also cloaked for the state Supreme Court.
So she did have some writing skills, but she also had to have good listening skills and and you know, sort of like it's funny because I am a chatty person and people will say, oh, I can tell that you probably a good attorney because you like to talk.
And I always said, that's not true. The best attorneys don't talk. They listen.
Tell us about that, not me because I just want to my favorite stories about Brandy at nine in Russia and looking at the graffiti.
And I thought it was her takeaway from that graffiti was profound to me. So share that.
Yeah, well, we went to we want to trip her dad. It was a business trip, but it was a trip where we went to see the ball. We went to the Baltic States there are Baltic countries, I should say over in Russia, want to read and you know several of the other ones.
Anyway, Brandy, I had I hadn't ever seen so much graffiti in my life. And you know, when we think of graffiti, oftentimes we think of it as being a sort of a negative thing or a bad thing or I know my my odds at my family, they're like, why are people defacing the building? Why are they doing this? And you know, and the fact that people have to a lot of times these artists, they have to create their craft, create their art.
Look at the split, you know, as fast as lightning is like lightning striking and yet and still get their message out and say what they want to say. And so Brandy wanted to go around and she would see all of this graffiti. And she said one day she said, you know, mom, we should think about this differently. And I'm like, what do you mean think about it differently? She goes, these are the people's voices.
This is what they want to say. She said, this is what oppression looks like when people don't have a space in which they can speak. If they don't have a newspaper to broadcast their thoughts or radio station or anything like that, then they will they will be heard. They refuse not to be heard. She goes, so these people are oppressed and these people are exercising rights that they don't actually have in this country.
And she says, I think it's a beautiful thing. And so after that, I really started paying attention to graffiti. And I started looking at the message. And it was funny because when she did get married a number of years later, of course, as an adult, one of her friends, one of her closest friends turned out to be a graffiti artist that you would never, ever, ever look at this very buttoned up, very straight, lace, beautiful young, tiny girl.
And think that she was a graffiti artist. And I remember when I got married, she went out and I guess they call it tagging or something. She went out and tagged a few, a few buildings that took pictures of it. And I decided, it was so beautiful. I put it on a cup and had some cups made with her tag on there. But yeah, she thought about things differently than what the average kid, her age would think of things.
And I was very, very, that through for the rest of her life, she became a voice for the voice was she did it. And so tell us a little bit about career. I know we don't have a year to do that. But that being because her career was quite extensive. So tell us how she became that voice for the voice.
Well, you know, after after law school, she actually went over to London and lived for a year. She worked for Goldman Sachs and she was actually accepted to the London School of Economics. And she thought there that she would do some, some work on her on a master's and law.
And she just found other things far more interesting and important, especially in the world of finance was where I think she first began to understand that access was power and that people without money didn't always have access.
And those people with lots of money had lots of access. In fact, those people that she worked with because she was on the lower tier, you know, they were just the people with the little 401s that were calling and asked questions. And she realized quickly that people with lots of money had their own financial advisors. They had people that were calling them telling them what moves to make it all of that.
And I'm not sure that that's that well with her. And so I think from that point on when she came back home, she wound up working at a place called Safer Foundation, which was working with people that have been incarcerated that were attempting to return to work.
She left there and went to the Center for Media Justice. And then she worked. She was one of the people that worked in what was that color change?
Color of change. Oh, how can I forget that? I mean, she was a huge voice in the color of change.
And then she went to color of change and marching and trying to get a very strong messages at the time. But she always looked at it from the disadvantage of the disadvantage disadvantage to people. And that's why she became somewhat of a privacy expert.
And so she was a very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very, very,
very, very, very, very, very, very important that it's, I mean, very, very important with people who are working to build a new company that has Эv group of kindergartenarent, expanding the company community.
based on all these other people and she's calling these people by their first names.
And she was trying to get them to change their message.
She was trying to get them to just get permission and also to let people know how they were using their information
and how they were pushing technology based on the algorithms.
If you look for one thing, next thing you know, you got 20 things in your email trying to sell you
or persuade you in that direction.
And she didn't feel like she was getting very far with them.
So she went on a campaign against them and she went to Ben and Jerry's and date fact wanted
making an ice cream or with a special flavor and all these other sort of things to sort of get out the message
and to give to people and they would be there at rallies that she was trying to hold.
And her organization, Color of Change, agreed to take a million dollars from Amazon.
And Brandy told them, you know, she sent in her resignation.
She said there is no way that I will continue to work for you if you will accept this type of money
because if you don't understand it, they're trying to buy you and suppress the voices of others
then you don't understand anything.
So the end result of that is that they wound up turning down the money and keeping Brandy.
So that's how strongly she felt about that.
That was very powerful.
And I remember attending a, was it a seminar or a workshop at the Art Gallery where she really had me think about
I'm a person that loves stories.
And she, she reminded us to always think about from who's perspective that story was told
because there is a difference in the truth, if you will, based on who's perspective it was.
Yeah, it kind of goes back to that saying that there's, you know, there's your truth, my truth,
and then there's the real truth somewhere in the middle.
Oh, right.
But what Brandy found out in the press was that a lot of times the story, she did a dig dive
and she wanted to doing an exhibition at several different spots, galleries and museums.
And this was called a black news stand.
And what it was about, she went back and researched all of the black newspapers and sources of information
and how black people received information from, you know, like the 20s, 30s on up to the current day.
And she, one of the things that she did was she looked at the same story, if it was a real important story,
of how it was told in a white press and how it was told in the black press.
And in the white press, she found that, you know, black people were demonized and made to look all sorts of different ways
whereas in the black press, it was, they told a story that was completely different.
And it was almost as if the character in the, in the story that there were two different people
that they were talking about or two different stories.
And sometimes like even live witnesses were not interviewed.
People that were very important were not, were not interviewed.
Kids had been killed in a street shot.
The police told one story, the white news ran with that story, and then the black news would look into it
and even go in as far as getting the corner support.
They were fine that these kids had been shot in the back, shot while running.
And anytime a threat is being eliminated or alleviated, the police are not supposed to shoot.
Now they can run and catch you and all that kind of stuff, but they're not supposed to shoot you in the back.
So even if it was a, you know, and usually these were not the type of egregious type of problems
where somebody a kid had killed somebody, it was maybe a theft, attempted theft, or something else.
But it wasn't something that even if they had gone to jail, there were sentence would not have been death.
And so it was really fascinating to see how she put that entire thing together, including a digital display,
as well as a visual display that people could look at.
And she put together a panel, a panel of guests who were in fact,
Pulitzer prize winning reporters discussing how they, you know, would cast stories.
It was fascinating to me.
And what else was just heartwarming to me?
I had nothing to do with the actual meat potatoes of that day.
But when I went outside to go to my car, it was windy, chilly, and I ran into this young man that I thought looked familiar.
And I thought that guy looks kind of familiar to me.
And then I realized it was David and David Dexter, it's what's Randy's husband.
And he was working because he was on the phone outside, but he had come in to make sure that everything was in place for her.
And he could help in the supporter in any way.
And if you listen to David's interview, which we did in the fall season one, I'll never forget how he described the first time he saw Brandy.
And he saw her on the CTA in the summer, you know, hot and sweaty on the CTA.
And he thought he had seen the most beautiful woman that he'd ever seen.
And so he got up early to ride that bus to make sure that he got to see her.
And then they found out they worked together.
And so from that day on, she was his heart.
And I just love that part about the story.
And she was funny too.
We've talked about her and her academics and how brilliant she was and focused and dedicated and helping others.
But Brandy was playing a lot of fun too.
She was.
She had her dad used to say, oh, she got jokes.
Oh, yeah.
I had the privilege of knowing her just for a short time as an adult.
But we took girls trips.
And I can't say girls because we did have George on the one trip.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
But yeah.
I can't eat any.
Yeah, I can't eat out my son.
We had a fun trip, but we took some trips out of the country and had a blast.
Yes, we did.
Dancing, swimming in the pool doing aqua, robots, playing games.
No girls.
Going to local cultural events and watching the dancers.
We just had a good time.
Shots on the beach and in the bus.
On the beach.
Lots of dancing.
And so Brandy was fun.
She was.
In fact, she was funnier than I ever thought because after I lost her and I really got to
spend some time with some of her friends and some of the people that worked with her that
knew her really well.
I knew she liked to carry oaky, but to be honest with you, I've never been to an event where
she was doing karaoke.
But they would talk about how she would jump up and do karaoke and how she would sing, sing, sing.
And I always knew she could sing.
In fact, when she was young, she had this beautiful voice in her dad and his people.
Well, my mother could sing, but I could not sing at all.
And my dad couldn't sing at all.
And none of us could sing.
But well, my one cousin, Brenda Kudden, couple others.
But on my husband's side, they used to call his mother, Rene Lala Lala.
Her name was, was Lorraine.
And they called her Rene.
Yes.
But they said she was always singing.
And she sang in the church.
And his sister and brother sang in the church.
And he sang in the church.
And so Brandy just picked up that, that ability to sing.
And she was singing with them and they would sing a cappella.
And so I knew she could sing.
And I would tease her and say, Brandy, come on and sing a song for mom and she said, no, no, no, no.
She was very shy about it.
And I would say, well, maybe you're singing my funeral.
And she thought that was just awful.
She'd say, well, mom, maybe you just shouldn't die then because I'm not going to sing here.
So, yes, she could be funny sometimes too.
Yes.
We had a lot of fun.
So, I don't want to bring the conversation down.
But I do want you to tell our viewers because many of them also are struggling with deep loss.
Talk to us a little bit about her illness.
Yeah.
Well, you know, pancreatic cancer is that horrible, horrible disease that can take you out really quick, depending on what your initial diagnosis is.
And when they find it, unfortunately, it's not something that they usually find quickly.
And in her case, she even had had a physical the year before six months, well, six months before she was diagnosed, they didn't find anything.
But I don't think they looked forward either.
And when I talked to the doctors about that later, they said, well, she was young for having, even though she was 44, but usually it's a disease that people get, I guess, in the late 50s or in the early 60s.
They began to struggle with and she had no signs.
I think we were when we were in Costa Rica on the girls trip.
She was complaining a little bit about her tummy and then we were in Italy and in November.
She kept saying, mom, I feel like I can't eat.
And I saw her three weeks later and she had lost all this weight.
And she said, I just can't eat.
And she actually went to the emergency room and they said, we, something's wrong with you, but your pancreas, but you look so good.
And she kept saying, why are they saying I look so good?
I'm here in the emergency room.
And finally, the nurse explained to her the doctor suspects pancreatitis.
And she says, what is that?
But it was a disease that affects your pancreas that is associated with alcoholism.
And Brandy said, but I don't even drink like that.
I don't drink.
And she said, no, we know you don't because it would be in your blood if you were, if you truly had pancreas.
But we do know there's something wrong and we want to keep you.
But she was leaving to go home the next day to buy it tomorrow.
And we were having such a good time with those silly hats that we did.
We're taking pictures and I hope that.
Yes.
But she, yeah, but so I didn't really understand the full extent of how sick she was feeling because I guess going back, she went right into, she made a doctor's appointment.
It was going to be in the middle of June, but she wound up right back at the emergency room.
And it's over the Christmas holiday.
And so it was birthday was December 29th that she spent her birthday and emergency room is 72 hours later.
They diagnosed her with pancreatic cancer.
And you flew up.
Of course.
I was looking, I got this little thing yesterday from, um,
United Airlines telling me how many miles I had flown last year, 150,000 miles.
So I was there as often as I could all the time.
She lived in Baltimore and I would just be up there and, you know, two or three times a month, whatever staying.
I had, you know, I always maintained a goal, goal status with a hotel stays, became platinum and all of this because there was just no way.
I was not going to be there and we were very, very hopeful originally because.
They kept saying that there was this study or that study that she could be part of.
And each time her body just did something totally different.
Like two days before they gave her her final diagnosis, they were trying to put her into study that they were convinced would.
Give her the longevity of anywhere from 12 to 18 more months.
And everything was functioning in a day before she was to be put in a study day decided to run some more tests and her liver had.
At, uh, kind of slowed down and her liver had, uh, had stopped working and some other things that happened.
And so we weren't able to, uh, she wasn't able to get into the study, but it was amazing to me though.
Is that she was continuing to work.
Yes.
And so her colleagues were there and I have pictures of her.
A week before she died and she was sitting up and she was working and doing everything and just continuing to push through all the pain right there in hospital.
Yes.
And what I thought was just wonderful is your immediate family.
Even from Europe, people came to right away and do a surround her with love and, uh, and comfort.
And she wanted to take out, I'd never forget she wanted David to see you and the Scott her school that, uh, that she loved so much and she was able to do some of those things that she really, really worked for her.
Exactly.
We took trips.
I kept asking her was there anything that she wanted to do.
And one of the things that she wanted to do was this is mama want to visit your friends in Atlanta because we have some very good friends in Atlanta.
They have horses. They have this. They have that anyway. I always go down and visit them once or twice a year.
And sometimes I stay with them and sometimes I run a house down there.
It's in Greensboro, Georgia, not Greensboro, North Carolina.
I think the Greensboro, Georgia.
And so we went down.
We went in a house and then and she was able to go to Agnes Scott, which is the undergrad school she had gone to university.
She had gone to she took David there and she also went to Swan House, which was her first place that she worked as a docent at the museum there.
And she had written some literature at the time she had rewritten a story of the longest living slave that it worked for them who still had freedom.
After she after she was out of slavery, she decided to stay with the family. I don't imagine she had anywhere else to go.
But the family was fond of her too. And she had quite a story of her own and Brandy wrote her story and did the research on her.
And they still were using the pamphlet that she had put together like 15 years, almost 15 years before.
And so we were really impressed because she was really impressed with that. We were real happy for her.
So, Eddie, tell us, tell the listeners what has grief look like for you?
I know that's kind of a strange question and looks different every day.
You know, I can say that each and every day, as you said, has been somewhat different.
There was so much pain and so much disbelief. And you know, honestly, I was just mad at God.
I've been mad at God a lot. I was mad at God when I lost my husband. I was mad at God.
And the reason why is because I didn't feel the necessity of losing these people.
And it's like, why do you take the most wonderful thing, you know, away from me? How do you take a child?
But since that time, you know, I've realized that a lot of people, in fact, even in my own family, my grandmother lost two children,
one at two, one at four and then her son at 23.
And so people lose children all the time. And I knew that intellectually, but it didn't stop the suffering from me losing my child.
I feel exceptionally lucky from two standpoints, though. One is that Brandy, because she was a prolific writer and was able to publish a book.
And also she was good enough that they asked her to do the audio tape for the book that I have her voice.
And her husband put together for me, I guess, and one of her friends, about 10 or 12 speaking engagements that she was involved in,
where she was the speaker. And so I get to hear her voice. And some days that makes me really sad.
And other days it makes me really feel good. And then sometimes I just want to be by myself on her birthday this year,
which was my first birthday without her. I just wanted to be with her in my home.
So that's what we look like, looks like for me. And it's an ongoing thing today.
I knew that I was going to do this interview. So I listened to the prologue on her book.
And I was just amazed because every time I hear it, I hear something different or I learn something different.
And I just don't, you know, we all have these brilliant children, but not all of our children unleash your un...
They don't unleash their natural talent or it's stifled at some point in their growth.
We're lucky when they do, when they have the ability to have their talents unleashed. That girl was unleashed.
Yes, she was. Yes, she absolutely.
I'm very proud of that. Absolutely. And that girl was super loved.
Yeah, that girl was super loved.
So, honey, how important do you think it is to stay connected through this grieving process?
It's very important. In fact, I have one of the reasons I was running a little late this morning.
I dropped off a check over at the city hall in Plasmaire.
I bought a plaque to be placed on a bench in the park, supporting children and creativity, but also will have her name on it.
And I think that is that you need to stay connected to grief because it allows you to feel.
And it also allows you to realize that that person was here.
And I always say that a person that leaves here and there are no tears for them, what could be sadder?
So, I think you should cry. I think you should laugh. I think you should do a lot of things.
And as a kid, I always had this curiosity and my question has always been, you know, how long does a person live after we've lost them?
And they only live as long as you continue to say their name.
And I think that if I had any advice for my listeners and our listeners who have lost people, especially loved ones, children, brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers, continue to pay homage, continue to say their names.
Thank you, honey. Thank you for your courage, your bravery, and girlfriend. You are an outstanding mom.
And I think Jenny would agree, outstanding wife. And I just wish you the best. And we will always stay connected.
So you think I could put on my dancing shoes now and lay some on?
Oh, yes. She picked me up today and she had the music boomy.
So even on one leg, I was in the driveway dancing.
You know, she would.
We're waiting on spring and summer. Look out world. The wild girls are coming back.
Yes, we are.
And thank you, listeners. Thank you. We see you. We hear you too. And thank you so much for following us.
Thank you.
And I think that's a life in place.
Oh, finding rhythm after all.
So in time and space.
Time and space.
With every step a new story unfold.
In a journey the beauty of life is told.