Episode title: Wake Up Classy 97 with Josh and Chantel - Tuesday, January 20th, 2026 Episode summary introduction: Kidney stones under a microscope, why dogs are terrified of absolutely nothing, DJ Day, soup ratings, sweet and chaotic parenting moments, deodorant emergencies, basement makeover drama, and so much more! Timestamps: (0:00) - Bonus: Kidney stones (3:59) - DJ Curtainz (9:58) - Animals are weird (13:26) - Good News (15:21) - Travel deodorant (20:19) - Rate that soup (26:36) - Home decor (34:04) - Picture frames (40:52) - Delivery drivers (47:32) - Just the two of us (52:28) - Old fashioned cars & outstanding outfits (58:59) - Cayenne socks (1:07:02) - Faking adulthood (1:14:39) - Would You Rather (1:17:13) - Post-it notes & planners Visit our website: https://riverbendmediagroup.com/info-page/wakeupclassy97/ Email the show - wakeupclassy97@gmail.com Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@Classy97KLCE?sub_confirmation=1 Follow us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@classy97klce Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Classy97klce Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/classy97klce/ Follow us on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/classy97klce.bsky.social Follow us on Threads: https://www.threads.net/@classy97klce Follow us on X/Twitter: https://x.com/Classy97klce Full show transcript: Hey, if you want to get hold of us anytime, you can. We're on socials at classy97KLCE everywhere. Subscribe to our YouTube channel if you would. That'd be awesome. And hey, you know what else? What's up? You can email the show. Wake up classy97 at gmail.com. I was just scrolling and I saw something that's, it's under an electron microscope and I go, what is this? Okay. There, it looks like to be really sharp like pieces, almost like shale. You know when you're on a hike and you're, it's not. They're kidney stones. No way. Yeah. I've heard they're very jagged. They are jagged. Almost like a goat head that gets stuck in your bike tire. And they kind of look like that. Jagged and spiky. Yeah. I mean, it almost looks like tiny shards of glass. Really? Yeah. Have you seen gallstones? No. Look that up. Okay. Gallstones under a microscope is wild. They look, they're all smooth. Really? Yeah. They're weird looking. Gall. Golly. Oh, golly. Yeah. The things your body can make are super weird. No. But now I'm looking at the kidney stones and I'm like, no wonder this hurts. The gallstones are interesting aren't they? I told you. They look pretty smooth. It looks like glass. It's fascinating. Yeah. I don't know. I mean, the body makes some strange things. They kind of look like a nut. The gallstones? Gall. I mean, they're like rocks. Yeah, I'm wondering. Like little pebbles. Like your body makes pebbles. Fascinating. Isn't it fascinating? I know. I followed this. It's an Instagram account. And it, I don't know what it actually does, but it takes like body parts and then it's like, here's what this body part does. I see. And it's fascinating to me. Okay. So what, what did, what else have you learned from this thing? From what? This Instagram page. This, the kidney stones didn't come from the page that I follow. That was just as I was scrolling along at Popdop. I see. But it'll take like a stomach. Uh-huh. And it'll say, here's what the stomach does. And it has like the stomach. They're holding the stomach in their hands. Weird. It is very weird. I've seen more recently, I saw a video that I haven't seen people do this in a long time. They were inflating lungs of a, of a non-smoker and a smoker. Yeah. It was, it's really fascinating because the way that the recoil, I would say, like you inflate them and the amount of time it takes to deflate in a healthy lung is much longer. You can tell that they're retaining oxygen. The blacked out smokers lung, it was like, you know, when you, when you have a balloon that you inflate and deflate a whole bunch and it gets all weird and saggy. And then it's like, got that weird, but it like, like texture to it. Like stretched out. That's what it, yeah. That's what the smoker lung looked like. And when it inflated, it inflated quickly, just like the healthy one. But it deflated so fast. Oh my God. It went back to wrinkle state. It was like, you're not getting oxygen. Like you're, you're not saturating enough. Passing. Yeah. Really interesting to watch. Uh, human bodies. What a machine, huh? And hey, if you're working on passing a kidney stone, good luck. Oh boy. Out. Yeah. If you're working on passing a gallstone. Yeah. Golly. Golly. You might as well try passing a barbed wire fence. No kidding. Bad stuff. Yikes. Good luck to you. All right. Drink some water. Yeah. Maybe try that a little bit. Let's, let's hydrate. Okay. Happy DJ day. Is it DJ day? That's why I said happy DJ day. That's right. Because today is a day to celebrate the DJ, the disc jockey. That's you, Josh. That's you. I mean, look, I would certainly say that the radio DJ. The DJ has evolved from what was, uh, you know, vinyl records and cart machines to CDs to playing every single song had to be hand started and stopped and, and touched and everything in between the music had to be manually done. Okay. I come from a time when I grew up in radio school in the late nineties, early 2000s, that I had to do things the hard way. And what was the hard way? Manually push the button. Magnetic tape, manually firing every event, pulling a paper log and filling in every hour. So I have a great deep appreciation for where radio existed. Okay. And I am so glad that it's, there's automation into it now. I don't have to like work as hard. Mostly all I do is talk. Right. Right. And push a few buttons here and there. Yeah. I mean, I have to start and stop things and I have to be involved, but I'm not like the way that the way it used to be was something else. And I'm, I'm grateful that it is the way that it is now. Uh, because it is definitely a lot less heavy lifting. Well, happy DJ day to you. Well, you too though, for real. Cause even though we're hosting the show and co-hosts on this show, uh, what we do is still considered radio DJ. Okay. I don't consider myself a radio DJ. Because you don't push the buttons. Cause I don't push any buttons. I've had zero training in pushing the buttons. Okay. Nor do I want to have the training. Uh, I am a voice. Uh-huh. So that's what I am. Okay. I don't consider myself a DJ. And that's fine. But you are. Would you ever want to do like the club DJ thing? No. No, you've never had a desire to like build a playlist and make people dance and, and run the music and do the thing. Nope. Never ever. Never ever ever. For a long time we were in an improv troupe and you did the music for the improv troupe. Different. I pushed, I pushed one button to play a music song. Yeah. I mean, look how involved you are as a DJ is entirely up to you. A lot of the guys who are making music that are DJs or making remixes or whatever, they're sitting behind a computer doing a lot of that. And then when they get out on stage, they're hitting a button. Yeah. And then firing off a fog machine and hitting another button and throwing their arms up a little bit. I mean, you know, how involved do you get in being a DJ is up to you. I would be too afraid that people would be like, boo, we hate this song. Play this song. And it'd be like, I don't have that song. You know why? Cause that song stinks. Oh. Listen to my playlist cause these songs are all good. You can put up a big no request sign and just go, you get what I feed you. That doesn't stop people from making requests. No, but you don't have to hear it. You can just point at the sign. And then just turn the music up louder. Be like, I can't hear you. Right. I'm too busy jamming out. Woo, woo. Little of those. Fog. Laser. Laser. Not a bad thing. Right. Laser. Laser. Yeah. I would have a lot of lasers in there. I bet you would. I would. And some fog. Fog. Fog. Laser. Laser. Fog. Fog. Yeah. You get it. Exactly. That's your new hit. Laser Fog. You can be a sweet DJ. I think I probably would be actually. Would you have a cool name? Yeah. What is it? Think about it. I gotta think about it. Like DJ Band-Aids. What? This cool? I'm just top of my head. You know? What up? It's DJ Band-Aids. DJ Bruiser. Okay. DJ. Bruised. Yeah. Yeah. Bruised. DJ. But you'd spell it weird. Yeah. You'd have to have a Z in there. Right. Like B-R-O-O-Z-Z-Z-Z. I-D. Bruised. And then you'd have to wear, I'd have to wear like a marshmallow head on my. Yeah. You'd need a character. Like a daft punk or a dead mouse or a marshmallow or something. You'd need that. Because then you'd get your mascot anonymity in there as well. And that might free you up to be like, I don't take requests. No requests. Right. Just listen to what I made. DJ Bruiser. I'm DJ Band-Aid. Oh. Bruiser. No. Bruised. I think I'm Band-Aid. I don't like Band-Aid. All right. It makes me think of that. The band that got together in the late. Oh, for sure. For sure. Was it the late 80s? Yeah. Healed the world and all that. We're about like DJ Curtains. Another one with a Z. Why Curtains? Because it's Curtains for you. It's not that. Our dog, Luna, the Wonderjack Russell, she is afraid of reflections of herself. Yes. In every shiny surface. Yep. The fridge, stove, the crock pot that sits on a shelf near her food bowl. She is for some reason very afraid of her own reflection. Yes. I was looking at this list of other harmless things that some pets are afraid of. Our dogs are afraid of everything. Well, she's not afraid of plastic bags unless they're new in the kitchen. If it's something new in the room, she's very leery of it. Yeah. And she's got to really cautiously side eye it and then walk up slowly to it and smell it and make sure it's not a threat. She's got to stretch herself out before she. Yeah. What's that about? I don't know. She's afraid to get too close. So she's like, I'm going to keep my back feet clear back here. But they are in no position to help her run. No, they are not. And if she determines that that thing is too scary, like if something moves. Right. She's skidaddles. She's out. Yeah. Runs in place trying to get traction to leave the room as quickly as possible. She's afraid of the vents. Yeah. The heat vents. Yeah. Whether they are on or not, they are scary. Yeah. This person said, one of our cats is terrified of sponges and will run away if you show her one. This particular person has a dog that runs for his life if somebody has the hiccups. The crinkle of a water bottle. Now that gets our dog curious. She, because she had a toy that had one in it. And so she hears that and is like, oh, is that toy out? This one apparently could send their animal flying. This dog is named Toast and is afraid of cats and he is a 95 pound dog. So that happens. Hardwood floors. This little dog will walk across them backwards. Our dog gets silly when you put a coat on. She gets in like low four wheel drive mode. Yeah, her back feet. Yeah, her whole butt goes down. She can't straighten them out. She's just got a bender back feet and then she's like walking all the way. Real weird. Gowampus. Yeah. Wet grass made the list. The vacuum cord. The vacuum cord, not the vacuum. That's right. The Netflix intro. Freaks out somebody's dog. The wind. Our dog, yeah, go ahead. Is afraid of the wind. The wind or thunder. She gets really like, that was scary. I'm going to bark at it. She's afraid of a lot of things. She's a 15 pound dog who is very afraid of a lot of things. But from her window in the living room, she sounds real tough. She is very tough. She will gnaw your hand off. I think if it was a serious threat, I think she would, she would mean some business. I think you're right. I think you're right. Anyway, animals, be weird. That's what I learned today. They sure do. Here's some good news. This is from Holland, Michigan. There is a roofer there who has spent the last three decades using his unique view from the top to save pieces of local history from the landfill. This guy's name is Art Tolzma and he co-founded TNT Roofing in 1991. And every time that he saw a historic building being torn down or an old sign headed for the dump, he would step in and rescue it. So he's got now a huge collection of over 5,000 different artifacts from industrial memorabilia to vintage neon signs that he has had restored so that they glow and everything. And now he's opened up kind of a museum where people can go and check out all these artifacts that he has rescued from being thrown away. Yeah, it's really neat. And so his whole thing is like, look, I'm up here. I'm working on stuff. People are throwing this stuff away, but it has some value to the community. So he's really saving it, which is really kind of cool. It's a time capsule. So now he's got a permanent exhibit at the local armory there in Holland, Michigan, where you can go and you can check it out. He's giving out tours and watching people's faces light up as they see the rescued signs and relive some memories they thought they had forgotten. He said that by documenting and cataloging every piece, he's giving his community an incredible peek into the past that they would otherwise have been lost. Yeah, otherwise have been lost. That's nice. Yeah, is that cool? What a nice idea, buddy. Yeah, way to keep your community's history instead of just watching it get buried under a pile of dirt, which is pretty cool. So anyway, some good news. Yesterday, I forgot to put on Deodorant. Okay. And all day you were worried about it because I know by the time you got home from work, you were still talking about it. I was worried all day about it. Luckily the weather was cold. Yeah. And it's cold in the office where I work. So I was like, okay, I think I'll be okay. I think I'll be good. Did you make it? And then maybe about three o'clock I went, hmm, that's an interesting smell. All right. So I could definitely tell that I hadn't been wearing anything, but I don't think it was exuding to other people, which is great. If somebody got real close, then they might have noticed. Did you notice? No. You were the person who got the closest to me yesterday. And no. And I hugged Emery. She didn't say anything. Right. You were good. You're in the clear. And she's honest about, you know, have a teenage daughter. They'll tell you everything you need to know about what you look like, what you smell like. Right. She didn't say anything. So that was great. I think I survived. I think you did too. But then later I had to go to the grocery store. Right. I bought, I picked up some deodorant just to keep in a travel bag. Okay. With you? It's in my car. Okay. So you have car deodorant. Yes. Yep. Great. I know. It's my emergency deodorant. Uh-huh. Just in case that ever happens again. I've never worried about this like you're worried about this. There have been days where I've been like no deodorant. When I go backpacking, it's a week without it. It's terrible. It's terrible and horrible and you stink. But you just embrace it. I can't stand myself when I smell like that. Yeah. But when you're out there in the woods, the bears like it too much. So you can't have that. Yeah. And you're, when you're in the woods, everyone's expecting you to be smelly. When you're day to day dealing with people. Yeah. I can't. Here's what I learned about myself backpacking because I try to be in, not necessarily ultralight, but I try to keep my weight way down. And so I get really specific about necessity. And so what I carry, I have to use. Okay. So I decided the last time I did a 50 mile backpacking trip where you're out for a week, I decided I was only going to take two shirts and I was just going to cycle through these two shirts. Okay. Yeah. It's not enough shirts because bro, like people didn't want to hike near me. Really? Oh yeah. It's bad. And you wash them out in the river and stuff, but it's just not enough. It's not enough. Yeah. So I learned that about myself. Okay. I need to carry more than two shirts for a five day trip. How many shirts do you think would be appropriate? I think probably four. Okay. Because they were bad. They were bad. So I'll be working better in the next one. Okay. In August. Good. I will be more prepared. Okay. Good thing you learned about yourself. Yeah. What I learned about myself is I would like to have a emergency deodorant in my car just in case. And now you do. And now I do. That's right. Because there have been times when I've worked a really long day and I've like really needed some extra like protection. Like I got to have a refresh. Gotcha. Haven't had anything available. Now I do. Emergency deodorant. I'm happy for you. I think that's good. Because I never want to be the stinky person. I know that. You're very concerned about that. I'm more concerned about it because of how it affects other people when they're in my presence when I'm not my freshest. You never worry about me when I'm in your presence and you're not your freshest. I've been around you when you're not your freshest. You chose this. Yeah. Like when I worked construction. That was a bad time. Yeah. Yeah. In a hot summer. Those were bad times. And I was pregnant and very, very sick. And then I stink. And you purposely would be like, here smell this armpit. Yeah. Yeah. Because I love you. And I want you to have that experience. Thanks, dear. That was nice of you. You stuck with it. Everything's cool now. Look at you. I didn't have a choice. Did I stink? Very much. Yeah. Did I really care? Did you rub it in my face? Uh-huh. See? You got close to me. It was a gift, a treat, a prize. You're welcome. You are a prize. Thank you. Over the weekend, Emery and I got to participate in a soup rating. Yeah. This is something you've done like this year and last year. And you're pretty excited about it. Took a break last year. I don't think they had it last year, but I have done this before. Okay. So this is the second time. Yes. That you've rated soups. And this place gives you like what, four soups and four different kinds of bread. Yep. And a card for you to like a scorecard. Correct. Okay. And then you try the different things and then you fill out the card. Do you pass along the information back to the company? I don't know where the information goes, actually. Well, like when you fill out the survey thing, is it online? Yeah. They just give you a QR code. Then they collect that data. They are having you try their product to let them know what people actually like. Got it. Okay. Good. So you're paying to do their research. That's cute. Okay. Yeah. I don't even care. I'm just saying that they should probably like host an event and pay the people that are providing the input. But anyway, go on. I got four soups, chicken noodle, broccoli cheese, fully loaded potato and a, let's see, a chicken, sweet potato and kale. Aria was the least excited about that one because it has kale in it. I see. That was my number one choice. That you liked the kale one the most? Yeah, it was so good. It would have been my last choice as well. You didn't even try it. It would have been my last choice as well. You couldn't even taste the kale. It had kale in it. You didn't even try it. I don't even know. What would have been your favorite? Read them off again. Chicken noodle, broccoli cheese, loaded potato. It would have been potato, broccoli cheese, chicken noodle and then the kale one I wouldn't have eaten. Bro, it was so good. Like you made it. My, so soup, I love soup so much, but I also love to rate things. Yes, you do. And one of my favorite games that I've just made up in our house. If there's a multitude of things, I go rate stuff and then everybody has to put it in order of their favorite. Yes, this is a true thing that happens in the house. So I was very happy when I got to eat soup and judge it. And rate soup. And bread, excuse me. What kind of breads did you get? Let me tell you. Okay. I got a rosemary, facacha. Nice. Hazelnut 12 grade. No, thank you. That was so good. I love that one. I knew you would because of the hazelnut. Yep. French country sourdough. That's fine. And Asiago cheese. Great. See, why did they have to put a gross soup and a gross bread? Why are you saying my top two favorite things are the gross food? I don't. I like the good food. You like the gross food and so every time they come out with it and then they go, well, no one bought this, they take it away and you get all mad because the food you like goes away because you like gross food. No, because nobody tries it because they look at it and they go, no, it's gonna be gross. Yeah, that's gross food. And then they don't even eat it. Right. And then it goes away and then you can't have your favorite things. Yeah. It happens at restaurants all the time. I know it does. Like better food. I was afraid to try it. Like more mass appeal food. Get in line with everybody else. That kale soup was so good. I'm so happy for you. Guess what's not on the menu after they run this survey you paid to be a part of. Kale soup. I don't care. I'll do it again. Kale soup and hazelnut bread out of here. No, they'll keep that hazelnut soup. Or the hazelnut bread. It's gonna be fourth on the list out of four. No. I guarantee it. Those two items are the bottom of everyone's list. I'll tell you what's at the bottom of mine, the sourdough. And I'll tell you why because it was boring. Okay, that's fine. Guess who loves sourdough? Everyone. People, expand your, expand your palates. People. It's a restaurant chain. It's going to be mass appeal. They're going to bring in the product that everybody eats all the time. That sourdough and chicken noodle soup. They have that. I know. Hazelnut bread always. For now, until they get their research back and they find out it's the bottom rung and they're gonna go, well, maybe we shouldn't. We're wasting our resources making this. They didn't let us rate them. We actually just picked our favorite. And that was it. I thought that we would have, we would get to rate them in order, but it just said pick your favorite. Oh, well, if it was just one pick out of four, it's even worse for you. Why? Because even fewer people are going to put kale and hazelnut on top. Oh, and everyone's going to put broccoli cheese. How original. Yeah. Because they love it. It's a comfort food. Yeah. Have your basic soup and your basic bread. Ozzy Aga is real good. That was good. That was probably my third choice. Third. Well, yeah, the hazelnut was first. And then the rosemary focaccia. Yeah, so you like weird food. I don't. You do. And that's okay. It's unique. It's you. But it's not the mass appeal food. The restaurant's got to make money. They've got to make mass appeal food. For the basics. Okay, fine. The basics pay the bills. I pay the bills too. And I eat all that stuff. Just try it, everyone. Just give it a try. You might like it. You've convinced no one. We repainted our basement. And now we're trying to figure out how to decorate the stairwell. I think that's probably the biggest part. Yeah. I was trying to figure out. Because we had a whole bunch of stuff hung up on the wall there. That's been there since we like moved into the house 14 years ago. Right. And so we were talking about doing something different in the stairwell there. And then I've always like, when you go to the basement, you look at the stairwell. There's a big vertical wall that I've always wanted to have something on. And I can never figure out what exactly to put up there. And I thought about doing, you know, like a photograph I've taken of some nature or something in like a multi-panel print. Yeah, I like that idea. Vertical thing, which could be kind of fun. I just haven't figured out exactly what to do. I did some research yesterday. I was online, Googling like different decor ideas. And I hated everything. And here's the problem that we're having. I want something unique and original. And so we were at thrift stores looking for something cool, looking for something different. But I also wanted to mean something. I don't just want to put something there because, oh, we bought this. I wanted to actually mean something. Yeah, or representation of us and our life and our family or whatever. Yeah. Yeah. That's why I think like a picture that you've taken of like somewhere that's important to us would be great. So you got to figure it out. Okay. Got it. And get on it. Yeah. Do it quickly. Well, that's just the big vertical wall. What do you want to do on the main wall on the left as you go downstairs? I don't know what to do in that space. I don't either. And then there's a whole other wall when you get to the basement. I know that you got to figure out what to do with. The family room is awesome. The family room slash library slash fly tying corner. That's done and looks cool. It does look cool. I really like what how that space has turned out with the fireplace and the whole thing that finally feels like that room is done, which is nice after 14 years of living. Yeah. Well, and we've entertained in that space and we've hung stuff on the wall and we've we've had that space in 100 different ways. But I feel like this is how it's going to be for a while probably forever. Like I don't know. I kind of want to do redecorated. I want to do Christmas down there again because I'm like, it's so cool. Yeah. And whenever I'm home, I'm like, I just want to go hang out there. Right. And I never really went down there before. I mean, I did, but. Yeah, but now it's real nice cozy space. Except. Last night I went down there and I noticed that you still had your blanket out. You didn't put your blanket away after you used it. Was it still on my man chair? Yeah, it's fine. No, it isn't. Why? Clean it up. It was very cozy. It's ready for me to go sit down again and put my blanket on. Keep it looking nice, bro. It's one unfolded blanket. You're going to be okay. No, fold it. No, I didn't. Good. It's ready for me to go sit down with my blanket. Good to go. I like it. Good job. I can't stop talking about it actually because it looks so cool. Yeah. But now we've got other little areas that we've got to put something on or we don't or we just leave it and keep it simple. I mean, yeah, but no. Why? Because it's just blank. I know, but it looks kind of nice blank too. It doesn't need to be a whole gallery of things. It could be like one light up neon sign. That says something cool. No, I just was, because when we were antique shopping and going through some of the stores, there were several of those and I thought you would be like, no, I didn't expect you to be like, oh, one, which one? I didn't see any neon signs. In the whole stairwell of all the neon signs. You didn't see any. No. We walked up there and there were like a ton of them. Okay. Well, yeah, there were a ton of them. No, I know what you're talking about. That's not what I'm thinking of. You know how like you can get words. No, I know. I was talking about the ones that were like car parts and stuff. No, I know it's not that. I know it's not. That's why I wanted you to have that reaction where you were like, no. But then you were like, yeah, what would we have it say? And I went, I thought you were thinking of like, maybe it'd be the front of a car. No. Like a garage. So the first thing you see when you walk in the house is the front of a car. Maybe we should take a picture and then we'll ask the people. Maybe. Take a picture of the bare wall and say, what would you put here? Hmm. And how would you decorate that utility box? Cause it is right there in all of its tan beige glory. No, it really sticks out like a sore thumb. We could make it look like a sore thumb. We could. Ouch. I don't know what to do with that space. We're going to have to figure it out though, cause it's just empty. I think I could definitely do the big vertical print thing. I like that. Three different big frames, like the size of the one that's a, they got the big family photo. What is that? 16 by 20. So I would split that into like, I would take a big portrait view with my, with my nice camera. So I have high resolution and I would split it into three frames and print three posters and then hang those. Okay. That might work. How are you going to hang them up there? You got rid of the ladder. You shouldn't have done that. I didn't get rid of the ladder. The ladder is still accessible for one for two. I don't need it to get up there. How are you going to hang that picture? I can reach that area through the hole, through the, whatever you call that, you call it the banister, but it, it's a hole in the wall. It's a big hole that looks into the stairwell. I can reach the back wall. It's how I painted that back wall. Why don't you use the ladder? I use the ladder to get all the way up in the top corner. Where I couldn't reach. Got it. Yeah. I forgot you weren't home for the whole ladder thing. Yeah. I did all that when you weren't there, which is probably better because you probably would have been sketched out by some of the ways I had to read. I understand that, but you should also not have done that when nobody was home. What now? That's how accidents happen, Josh. Nice, nice one. Yeah. Yeah. With all the modern inventions in the world and all the different things people can make and do and, and invent, why hasn't anybody updated and fixed the back of picture frames? Do you mean the little tabs that you love? Those are awful. Yeah. It's a terrible way. I do like the ones they have. Sometimes they have slides. I don't know what that means. There's like a little slide and you can slide the little thing over and take out the back of the picture frame and then you can slide it back in. They'll have like a groove inside the frame with a little bracket that spins that slides in there. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Instead of the little fold down tabs. The fold down tabs are awful. The fold down tabs are fine if you use a pocket knife instead of your finger. The fold down tabs are awful. Unless you use a knife instead of your finger. It's terrible. Get rid of them. You didn't try it with a knife. You just fought forever with your finger. I shouldn't have to use it with a knife. I should just be able to do it. I shouldn't have to get a tool to get the picture frame tab open is what I'm trying to say. I'm going to go ahead and say it probably depends on how much you're spending on the frame as to what devices used to hold it all together. I would agree with that, but I'm also, I don't think that just because I don't want to spend a lot on a frame, I should have to be punished. Use a knife. I don't want to use my finger. Then spend more on frames. Those are your options. No, those are my options. Yes. How bad everyone just makes frames universal, no matter the cost. Okay, everyone go to tabs and we'll all make Chantel use a knife. It'll be okay. Listen, it's all good. This is a small thing. No, it isn't a small thing. You're very upset about it because your fingertips hurt. Yeah, they do hurt. You should have used a knife. I didn't want to have to get a tool out to use a tool. No, I understand. But that's sort of how it works. You got to have some sort of pry device. Use a small screwdriver. Use a butter knife. What I'm saying is invent something better. They did. You just have to pay more money for it. This is ridiculous. They have the groove thing. I put in some pictures and some frames that just had a little tab that spins around. That was made of leather or fabric or whatever it was, felt cardboard. It's riveted on there with a brad or something. It's held in place and that just spins. It just rotates on that spot. Those are great. Make those on all frames. What would we do with all the tabs we made that you hate? What do you mean? What would we do with them? What would we do with them? They've manufactured all these little tabs and all these frames have these tabs. Burn them. That's your solution? You're so angry about it. You want to burn them. Melt them into a puddle. Throw them away. You can melt them and use them for something else. What are you going to do with all the frames? Here's the other thing that I'm going to point out. Say. How often do you have to deal with this? Enough to know that I hate them. Okay, I understand. How many times a year do you have to change pictures in a frame? Do you have to fight with those things? This year's been quite a bit. Your whole life, how many times have you had to change picture frames and have to deal with these tabs? Per year. Your whole life. Because I bet it's like ten times or less. Why can't you just be on my side for once? Listen, I'm on your team. You're not ever on my team. I just don't think it's that big of a deal. And the whole time you were fighting with it, I said, use a knife. Use this knife. Here's a knife. Use this. Use this. And you were stubborn is what you were. And your stubbornness caused your little fingies to hurt. And now you're upset about it. I'm upset at you mostly. Now you're upset at me? Oh, yeah. I didn't make the tabs. You're not mad at me. You're mad at the frames. Yes, I am mad at you. Just be on my side. I tried to help you with by giving you the pocket knife. Use the knife, I said. And you had to just prove something instead of just using the tool. I had nothing to prove. I didn't prove anything. I'm going to show these frame companies that I can do it. No, I just wanted it to be done quick. And it'll be done quick if I just use my fingers. You don't think the knife is going to help you out to make the job quicker? I think it would help, but I also think it'd be a hindrance. How so? One, I have to go find a knife. I had it there. Two. I have to put the knife away. I will handle that. Your argument is invalid. You're invalid. No, all right. It's a real nice, mature way of handling that. That's how I do my life. Mature. Yeah. Always. All right. Well, I think we're done doing frames in the basement. I think so. For a while. And so now I can stop complaining about it. Now I need to redo the four frames that are in the living room because we're going to do some new family photos. There are five frames in the living room. Since when? There always has been. There's the big frame of the whole family. There are three. That's four. Frames of the kids. That's right. So there's one of Emory, one of Beck and then the two of them together. That's the four. And there's one of you and me. Where? Oh, the little one? It's the same size. No, it's like the metal frame with the little square in the middle. It's not metal. We got rid of that a long time ago. Oh, okay. Well, that's the one I was thinking of. But yes, it's that one. So four frames. Five. Four by my count. I don't know what you're talking about. It's going to be four because there's never going to be a picture of you and me together again. Wow. There's a lot of jobs I can look at and go, yeah, I'm not suited for that type of job. Such as? A police officer. Okay. Because I don't like confrontation. So I've never, if I was a police officer, if someone was like, no, this is the only job you have to do. Okay. I would cry every day. And every day I would see something that I'd be like, man, I gotta talk to them about that. They're disobeying the law. And then I would run away. And I'd be like, somebody else can handle that. That's another thing I would not be good at is a delivery driver. And I'll tell you why. Because I was waiting somewhere. Oh, I was at the tire place yesterday and I was waiting there to have my tires looked at. And a delivery driver runs in and he goes, can I use your bathroom? And the tire lady was like, yeah, go ahead. No way, man. You'd always have to be in search of the next bathroom. Well, I guess. I mean, that's sort of a thing, I would suppose. What about the timeline of the whole thing and carrying the heavy packages? You think you could handle that? And then also, I don't know how the directions work. Like, how are you with street names and finding houses? Yeah, no, exactly. All of those. I'd be terrible at all of those things. Okay. Getting the heavy packages. I had a delivery driver the other day that came to my work and she had a couple of heavy packages and she wasn't carrying them. She was just scooting them along the floor and I went, maybe this is... Don't they have like a hand cart? She said they were all occupied. All the hand carts were busy? Yeah, I said, we have a dolly. Would you like to use one of our dollies? And she goes, that would be great. All of ours are being used. And I went, does your truck just come stocked with one? I would assume that's true. Apparently not. Maybe they were working in teams and the other person in the truck had taken the cart to another business. Possible. I don't know. I don't know either. What about these jobs? Hold on. The time thing of a delivery driver? Yeah. No way, I'd be I'm 10 minutes late. What about guys like me that are like waiting on the doorstep? How would you like that? I'd be like, bro, get a life. Rude. My life is waiting for packages and you're bringing one to my house. What about being a pet food tester? This is a real job. No, thank you. What about it? I just told you. You got to taste the food for quality and flavor. I said, no, thank you. There's real chicken in it. No, thank you. What about an odor judge? What? This is the person who smells things to determine if the products that are used to remove odor are effective or not. I actually don't think I would mind that. That's gross. I am not a smeller. Ew. So you'd have to smell breath to see if toothpaste worked or you'd smell armpits to see if deodorant works. Yeah, I kind of wouldn't mind that. Gross. No way. I am not going to smell stuff. No. It might make me gross out, but no. There are worse things. I would take that over the dog food tester. What about being a flavorist? What's that? This is someone who develops flavor profiles for foods and drinks. So you could say, oh, we're coming out with a new flavor and you're the guy who develops it. No. Not even for somebody like Joan Soda? I love Joan Soda. I know you do, but they make some weird flavors and they have a flavorist who's coming up with that stuff. I don't want to be the one coming up with it, but I would taste it. Because you don't want another people to be like, this thing is gross. Yes. Yeah, all right. Makes sense. What would you do? Would you do the dog food tester? No, but I might be a professional sleeper. This is somebody who tests hotel beds for comfort. That's a job. That's not a bad job. Right? Water slide tester? No. Scary. What about this is an actual job in Japan, a train pusher. You're the person who shoves people on the crowded train so the doors can close. That's a real job. It'll be a train pusher. No, I don't want that job here. Head lice technician. Nope. You don't want to comb through people's hair looking for bugs? Nope. I have done that with my kids before when they were little. I would never ever ever want to do that again. That is awful. Do you want to know the ultimate best job? It's not head lice. This is the best job I've ever read. Teddy bear surgeon. Oh. You repair beloved stuffed animals. Oh. That's amazing. That is amazing. What a job. A teddy bear surgeon would be unreal. That's a good one. Somebody pays you for that job? Apparently. I want to get paid for that job. Yeah. Like what kind of medical teddy bear school do you have to go to? Probably intense ones. That is so cool. Would you be a delivery driver? I would. I'd probably be fine. I'm good with directions. How are you about the bathroom? The bathroom is my big hang up because I have to go to the restroom 80 times a day. I'd be fine. I don't use the restroom 80 times. An older mother. Older mother. Middle aged mother. Yeah. You can't hold it anymore. I understand. You got a race. It's fine. I got to get to getting. All right. Well, the getting's good, I guess. Get to getting. Would you do the dog test? No. I would not test dog food. Over the smell tester. Those are both horrifying. Which one would you do? Neither. Which would you have? I'll be a delivery person. Dog food or sniffer? No. Absolutely not. No. What's up? I don't know. You tell me. What's up over there? His squeaky microphones going off. I don't know. What's up? We were eating dinner last night. Well, you and Beck were eating dinner because you had a meeting and you got home a little bit later. So I was just sitting at the table with you guys. We were all kind of on our phones and I was watching a video that was very, very sad. And I started crying. Right. And I looked at you and I said, what did you watch? What happened? What's going on? Do you remember what the video was? Yeah. You said it was a mom and their firstborn child and they were kind of having some reminiscent moments and you were kind of crying because our 21-year-old, well, let me rewind. There are five years between our two kids. Our son is 21, our daughter is 16. And so for the first five years of our son's life, it was literally he was an only child and you two spent a lot of time together. You weren't necessarily working and then you were working, but you were taking them with you. So you guys were buds. Yeah. We were like two peas in a pod. Right. For a lot of the first five years of his life and our daughter was born and then things just happened as your family grows. And so it was kind of a nice moment where you were sort of remembering and thinking about those first five years of being a mom and our son being zero to five and growing up with them. Right. Yeah. And then you started crying about it. I did start crying. Right. And then when you told him about it and showed him the video, what was his reaction? He said, yeah. And then you went and had a demon baby. That's what he said. That's exactly what he said. And I went, whoa. I know. To his credit, yeah, I bet it's shocking for a little kid because yeah, it was just me and him. Right. We were making cookies. We were taking walks. We were playing games. I mean, you know, when it's just you and a little kid and it's easy. Right. And then I had this little sister, our lovely daughter, Emery, who I love dearly, but she was a hard baby. He was a very difficult baby. She was a crying machine. I'm sure for my poor, sweet, quiet son, he was like, my world has turned upside down. What has happened here? Yes, I will go to kindergarten. Thank you very much for the break. I don't get to play games with my mom anymore because all of her attention is on that baby. Right. That's just crying all the time. She can't ever put her down. I bet it was quite a shock for him. And that makes me a little bit sad. So now you're going to cry about that part too? No, I'm not. Maybe later when I'm alone. All right. All right. But for a brief moment in time, I was like, yeah, it was pretty nice when it was just me and Beck. Right. Just the two of you hanging out, being pals. Yeah. He had a little drum set. Right. And sometimes I would play the tambourine in his drum band. Fire ghost? Fire ghost. That was the name of his band. It was a great name. It was a great name. Sometimes that would be a guest tambourineist. Right. And we made him backstage passes. So he had a lanyard for his band. He was very official. So that made me sad. Well, and some days I wish I could go back and read those five years. Those days. Yeah. Yeah. It was the poorest of our entire life. But yeah, no, but also the joys, the richest, wasn't it? It was. Yeah. In a lot of ways, for sure. Yeah. No, you got to go through those things, I think, in order to appreciate where you are for sure. But yeah, no, it was fun to watch his reaction to that because it was completely out of left field and I was not prepared for him to say, oh yeah, and then you had to go have a demon baby. Like, whoa. And he was just joking. No, I know. For the most part, because they actually have a very great relationship and they've been very good friends from very early on. Very true. But I'm sure his world was shook when all of a sudden there was this new kid in town and he was like, oh man. I used to sleep at night. Now I can't. Yeah. Funny. No, they've been good pals though. Like they don't fight a ton. Like it's been, it's been great. They're good buds. They are good buds. Even though it probably didn't start that way. Internally. He was like, oh, this is a mess. My life is a disaster. I saw something on the internet and it said that kids are referring to cars as being old-fashioned if you have to put a key in it to drive it. To start the engine. Yes. Oh, I much prefer a turnkey ignition over a push button. Why? I don't know. It's not like a nostalgic thing. It's more of the mechanics of a turnkey ignition that make me feel like I'm part of the machine working. You know? I get the same satisfaction out of driving a manual transmission. Feel like I'm in charge of the vehicle. Okay. I get what you're saying. I feel like a lot of driving these days has become so inconvenient or too convenient maybe. It has become a hindrance to people doing other things. For a long time, I worked with a lady and she said driving was a distraction from all the things she had to get done. She was constantly either on the phone talking to people or doing stuff and driving was like a subconscious backseat thing that she had to do to get from point A to point B, but she was distracted the whole time by all of the things that she had going on aside from driving. I love driving. Right. I enjoy it when it has a purpose. When you get to do it and getting from point A to point B for work, I understand that you're like, dude, driving. Right. But if you're actually intentionally going for a drive or if I'm headed to a destination and I get to take in some scenery and enjoy some windshield time, I'm good with that. Yeah. But if it's just the every day, Monday through Friday, driving to and from work, driving to Run Air and driving to pick up people, driving to drop people off, going to meetings, whatever it is, it's like, come on, the same route, the same time every day. I get what you're saying. There has to be a better way. Right. It used to be an old-fashioned car was you had the roll down windows. Sure. Turn crank windows. Yeah. Now it's a key. A turn key ignition. Are they put in push to start in every vehicle at this point? Unsure. Yeah. I don't know either. I'm not fancy enough to have one of those. But hey, guess what? At least my car is paid for. Yeah, there's that. I also think there's something about it's just that physical turning of a key to make the engine go, you know, to kick over. And if you, I don't know how it works. Like if you have like, you know, old-timey cars, you turn the key and if it wasn't going to start, you had to like pump the gas like movies have a whole plot where a car won't start. Like that's a whole thing. Now they're going to have somebody sitting there pushing a button. Like that just loses some of the some of the fancy mystique of car ownership. Where you're like pushing a button and it's just doing nothing. Oh, button won't push. Oh, no. Like it doesn't feel the same, you know? Maybe that's just because I'm an antique myself. But that is something that probably I disagree with young people on. I like the mechanical ignition. I don't know if that's, like I said, I just saw one thing on the internet and I don't know if that's like a common thing that people are doing or if it's entirely made up, you know, because a lot of the internet is made up. Sure. Don't believe everything you see on the internet, they've said. But that's an interesting thing that young people would say a car is old fashioned if it has a turn key ignition to start. Yeah. You really want to freak some people out. Take them back into the day where you had one key for the doors and then a separate key for the ignition. Yeah, I remember that. Right. That wasn't that long ago. That was the 80s and 90s. And they go, what? Yeah, there's two keys. One to open the doors in the trunk and the other one, oh, and the glove box also locked with that key. And then the other one is for the ignition. I call it a jockey box. Do you? Yep. What do you store in there? Jockeys? What's that mean? I don't know. That's just what my parents called it. I also, my uncle used to say outfit when talking about his vehicles. Yeah, it's on the outfit. Yeah. He was the only one that I ever heard talk about that and then I heard it somewhere else when I was a nice outfit you got there. You say that too. It's pretty nice outfit. I'm gonna bring that back. You are? Like your outfit. Yeah. You could open up a pre-owned vehicle, a used car lot and call it something outfits. I've been working with the, oh, I'm working with the alliteration. Okay. I'm trying to find like a real positive O word. But the idea would be... Outstanding. Oh, look at you, outstanding outfits. Look at that. Come on down, C Chantel, at Outstanding Outfits. We got an outfit for everybody. An outfit for every occasion. Right. Look at it. A formal outfit, a casual outfit. This one here is a convertible. That's an outfit. Look at that. Now someone's gonna steal our idea. Yeah, I know. They're gonna run ads. You're gonna hear about outstanding outfits of Idaho Falls. That's fine. I don't want to own a cartilure ship. Someone can have that idea. You're welcome. Bring it on down to Outstanding Outfits. We'll give you top dollar for your trade-ins. Got a nice outfit. Bring it on down. Bring it on down. Outstanding Outfits. Yeah. Good. You're working on that jingle. I'll work on it. All right. Please do. We have this online document that we write in the notes about what we want to talk about on the show. I've been very curious about this one for a minute. Please enlighten me and I will ask many questions, I hope. Okay. In the Rams Bears game that was on Sunday, it was cold in Chicago, and the Rams are from Fairweather to LA. Sure. So they were trying to figure out how to stay warm, and some of the Rams players were putting cayenne pepper in their socks. Yep. All it says on the page is cayenne in your socks, and I really didn't know where we were going with this. They put cayenne pepper in their socks as a home remedy to warm cold feet by stimulating nerve endings, creating a burning sensation that tricks your brain into feeling heat and increasing blood flow. Yep. For real. It widens your blood vessels, which ups your blood flow and makes your feet feel warm. Okay. So apparently they say it probably is a placebo that irritates skin rather than truly warming the body. That's what I think too. It can also stain and cause itching if the cayenne gets in your eyes. Well, it's on your feet. No, I know, but you got to put it in there, and at some point cayenne dust can get in your eyes. Okay. So you're just supposed to sprinkle cayenne pepper powder on the cloth or paper towel, put it on the sole of your foot, wrap it up, put a sock over it, and bada bing, you got warm feet. This says a half a teaspoon of cayenne mixed with one ounce of foot powder. So you kind of mix it together and then sprinkle it in. It will stain your socks red. Yeah. Oh yeah. It's going to stain. They did have a player, Puna Ford. Okay. He showed off his stained socks after the game. So a bunch of the Rams players were doing this because they were worried about being cold. Did it work? They said it worked. And hey, guess what? They won. So I don't know if it also helped in their football playing skills or what? On a kick, no less. They won on a kick. So maybe it was also making their feet spicy. It's pretty gross. What's gross? The whole thing. The stain socks, the spicy feet. I don't like it. I kind of just want to try it to see if it works. Obviously it works. They said it was, they said it worked. The socks, the dirty stained socks are pretty gross. And I'm not a fan of looking at that. And I wish I hadn't. Yeah, I know. That's what I'm saying. It's gross. It is gross. Somebody said, I wonder if cayenne pepper will be added to the band substance list. Hmm? Oh, yeah. I see where. Band. I was thinking B-A-N-D. No. B-A-N-D. Yeah, B-A-N-D. Yeah, the band substance list. Why? Why would it be band? I don't know. Because of an advantage or something. I don't know. How would that be an advantage? Listen, they got rules for everything. What else is on the band list? I mean, I'm sure all of the performing performance enhancing stuff. I know that. But like, do they have other things that? I could type right. That would help. Interesting. Band substance list in their drug policies. Not drugs. Like all this. I want to know about the weird stuff. It's a lot. They've got a ton of anabolic steroid stuff, a ton of it. They have a bunch of protein and peptide stuff. They have, there's like beta stuff. There's anti-estrogenic agents that are banned. Different receptor modulators. Like they've got a ton of stuff. A bunch of different stimulants. I mean, a lot. Interesting. They have a long list of banned substances. And what happens if you get caught? You get out? Fines. Yeah, termination probably. I mean, they do testing for all this stuff. So they, all players receive one annual test. And they have to do that like before preseason. They have to do it. Random testing also exists. And then the, I mean, they're testing for everything. Hey, you're going camping this weekend. Yeah. You should try this cayenne pepper trick. No, thanks. Why? I don't, my feet don't get cold like that. Mine do. Yeah, I'm good. I don't, and I don't want pepper socks. So. Just get a pair of red socks and you won't ever even know. No, it's not even about that. I don't want pepper feet. I don't, I don't want to do this. I'm so good. I would wear toe warmers, which I don't like before I put cayenne pepper in my socks. Why don't you like toe warmers? I don't care. My feet get too hot. I sometimes have to double stack the toe warmers because my feet get so cold. Yeah. No. Sometimes because I think the hand warmers work better than the feet warmers. I put a toe warmer, one on the top, one on the bottom, and then I throw a hand warmer in my sock too. I've done that. That's too much. No, it isn't. You're doing too much. It's perfect. No way. I've created the best. That's so much heat in there. It's not enough sometimes. My feet are still like freezing to death. No. I've done that before when we've been camping in the snow. I've done it. No, I heard. I believe you. It's just you're doing too much. No. Yeah. It's perfect. I'll put like some hand warmers in my pockets and I wear gloves and I'm good to go. And then if my hands get cold, I'll take my hands out of my gloves and put them in my hand warm pockets and then put my gloves back on. Your hand warm pockets? Yep. That's it. I'm not sweating my feet out. No way. My feet are never sweating. Never. Even with the three foot situation. That's insane. It's not. And the foot warmer ones are sticky. Yeah. So you can tear off the sticky part. Right. Stick it to the bottom of your toes. Stick it to the top of your toes. Throw in a hand warmer. That's too much. There's no room for your foot in a boot anymore. You have too much going on. Oh, it worked. I usually stuck it to the sock, not my foot. Also, let me just make that clear. I didn't stick it to my feet. I stuck it to the sock. Bottom of the sock, top of the sock. What kind of sock? A wool. Wool. I wanted you to know I had the right sock. Because you would have been like, that's your whole problem. You had a cotton sock. That's right. You're not supposed to have a cotton sock. Because why? You're supposed to have a wool sock. Why? Because cotton is absorbing. That's right. It holds all the moisture next to your skin and then you get cold. I know, Josh. I know. All right. I'm not doing the pepper thing. Maybe you should try it. I might. They're cold feet. I might. Give it a go. I will. And report back. Okay. Do you ever feel like you're faking adulthood? I mean, like only every day, right? Like, we're just trying to figure it out. But I saw something the other day that said, you got to remember and give yourself a little bit of grace because this is your first time doing everything as well. Like it's your first time figuring out all of these things. And sometimes, you know, when we're talking about parenting, you go, oh man, I don't know. We see all of our kids first times doing those things. We have advice to offer up. But then it's like, I've never done this big adult stuff before. Do you ever sometimes get problems from your kids? Like your kids are talking to you, our kids, and they say something and you go, like, I have to take a minute and go, I don't even know how to answer this. And then I kind of, I do like a look around like, is there anybody else that's going to answer this? No, I'm the only adult here. Yeah. I, okay. Here's my advice. But that's okay. Sometimes you just got to work through and go like, Hey, you know what? I don't know, but let's sit down and figure something out. Like that's okay. I've actually apologized to the kids before and been like, sorry, this is the best advice I have because I don't know how to adult. This is what I got. Take it or leave it. But that's okay. You don't have to stress out about that. That's just a part of like going through the emotions of life. You got to, you got to learn stuff the first time. And sometimes that's the hard way. Yeah. And then you go, Oh, well, I made that mistake. And then you learn from it. You try something different. That's okay. Nothing wrong there. So, you know, as far as adulthood, we're all just trying to figure it out. Some people figured out things that they're good at or that they've found ways to make work for them better than other people. That's good for them. Good for you. Today I put on, like I look in the mirror and I go, yeah, I'm an adult. Like my crow's feet and my gray hair certainly signify that I am an adult woman. So much gray hair. It's ridiculous. And then I put on my clothes and I go, yeah, these are adult clothes. Like this is an adult outfit. Right. And then I have to balance it out with my dirty old chucks because I go, I can't be that adult. I'm going to put on sneakers. I don't want anyone to think that I'm capable of making responsible decisions. So look at my shoes and know that I'm a kid. Right. I see. I see. They'll get it. Yeah. Well, look, you can't feel bad about it. That's the big deal. You just got to, we're all trying to find our way through it. You just take yourself with one day at a time and breathe through it. You're going to be fine. Yeah. No, I know. We were, I was talking to a co-worker because she has to send out those old tax forms. She was getting ready to send them all out. And I went, no, nothing makes you feel more like an adult than when you get your W twos in the mail. W twos. And you're like, no. Yeah. Now I have to do taxes because I'm an adult. Now I have to pretend like I remember how to do taxes. I only have to do it every year. Think I remember? Nope. I mean, it's not super difficult. We don't have like a million different forms and like 16 businesses and 400 investment accounts. So it's not like we're dealing with hard stuff here. Like when it comes to taxes, we are what they call a 1040 EZ. Because there's not a lot happening that's difficult. So you know, it's not super tough. I also feel the most incapable when I have to do adult decisions that I don't know how to make the answer to. So I had to go check my tires yesterday. Right. And the technicians are like, well, what do you think about this or this and this? And I go, I have no idea what the words that you just said were. Did they check out your brakes while you were in there? No. You should have had them check out your brakes while they were checking some other things. He comes in with this paper and he's like, here, let's go over this form. And I go, I am the wrong person to do this way. Yeah. And he goes, well, see this, this number here. And I go, and I pretended like anybody was talking about. And then I texted you because you said, how's it going? And I said, here's what he said. And you go, well, did they look at this? And I go, I don't know what you guys are talking about. Well, ask the guy if that's a thing. And you're like, I'm already leaving. I'm done here. I'll be back a different day because this place is awful. Yeah. Yeah. No, I get it. He read me the form and I nodded like a new and then I went on my merry way. Thank you very much, sir. Have a good day. Did you wave like that? Like that little hand wave? Like, have a great day. Have a good day. Thank you very much for checking my tires. Yeah. Adios. He even asked me if I had an account there and I said, oh yeah, we get stuff done here all the time. Right. And I gave him my phone number and he goes, no. And then he gave him my number. Man, I don't even have an adult amount to have my own account at the tire place. I've had my account at the tire place since I was in high school. Like I've had that thing forever. Yeah. And I said, it's under my husband. Yeah. The adult. Yes. Because I'm just the baby. Call him. If you have any questions, call him because he's the one making the decisions, not me. Especially when it comes to my car. Right. No way. No way? No way. I don't know what he's talking about. Don't even bother wasting your breath. Hey, man, five 30 seconds. And then you texted me that and you were like, oh yeah, five 30 seconds. And I went, what? Exactly. That's exactly what I said. And then he said, you got some outer wear play. And I went, what are you? What? What? Hey, but the steering is in the green. That's a good one. You don't have any steering issues. Cool. Yeah. And my just my tire pressure light came on. Is it gone? Thank you. That's all I needed. Right. It's all I needed you to do. Right. Because when we put air in the tires, the tire pressure light does not turn off. There's probably something wrong with the sensor. That's why you go into the store and you go, Hey, I think I might have something wrong with the sensor. That's what I did. And then you said, they told me none of my tires have sensors. And I went, no, that's not right. Because clearly you do. And so then you said he reset the sensors and then bought a bang the lights off. So you see how I get confused. And I go, and then something about five 30 seconds. And I went, okay. And I had some inner shoulder wear. Right. Whatever that means. Yeah. Cool. Thanks, buddy. Yeah. I'll put this important form in my important inbox. There you go. Adults and car stuff. Block the lock. Would you rather this or that is the question? Would you rather relive one day over and over or skip one year of your life? So you get stuck on one day like Groundhogs Day style? Yes. Over and over for how long? For let's say, for a year, probably. Because that would be comparable. No, that would be the same. Because you're skipping one year. No. If you relive the same year, no, you're stuck the same day. You're not missing. It isn't like you then jump a year. For a year's time, you relive the same day and then you pick up on the next day after a year of reliving that day. Okay. Or you skip that whole process and you jump ahead a whole year. I think I'm going to relive the same day over and over and over. Do you get to pick the day? I don't know. Oh, probably not. Bill Murray didn't get to pick. So I don't think you get to. Oh no. What if it's not a good day? Then you work on it until you make it a good day. That's true. That's true. That's true. Because I feel like if you relive the day, then when you wake up the next day after a year, then every, your people are going to be the same. Like, but if you skip a year, you're not going to know what happens to your people. Totally agree. Yeah. I'm going to relive. Same. I don't want to miss out on that whole year of time. Okay. So let's say you got to relive it and you got to pick. What day would you pick? Oh, I don't even know. Probably a Tuesday. I don't know. Today. I don't even know how today's going to go. I don't know. I'd have to think about the day. I'd pick a Christmas day. You would? Oh, because then you wouldn't have to go to work. Yeah. I get it. A little kid Christmas day for you as a little kid or a little day, a little kid day for our kids as little kids. Where do you go? I don't know. Yeah. I mean, I liked this Christmas day when our kids are older because guess what? What? You could nap when you wanted to. This is true. This is true. Yeah. I don't know what day I'd pick or it's just the day. Like all of a sudden you wake up and it's the beginning of that same day again and you go, Oh no. Oh no. What has happened? Not this day again. Would you rather this or that? Walk me through. You said the other day you wanted a planner. I changed my mind. Okay. What happened? They're expensive. Okay. No, did you want like a day planner? Well, I just, I need like, this is going to sound so stupid. I can't believe you're saying this on air. I didn't know this wasn't something that you wanted to not talk about. It just feels a little embarrassing. You like to make lists and so you were looked, you told me you were looking for somewhere to sort of compile your lists and notes from meetings and stuff like that into a planner. I just mostly want a calendar so that I can like every day like, okay, here's what I need to get done today. Here's my to-do list for today. And then like to be able to look at it all in one place and be like, here's what's coming up. Right. That's what a planner is for. Here's my to-do list of this. I don't know why that feels embarrassing. I don't know. Okay. Because I, it feels embarrassing because I have in my hand, on my phone, a calendar and a to-do list. Listen, if, if day planners didn't have a market, yeah, but if day planners didn't have a market, they would quit making them. No, I get that. They still make them every year. I get that. There's nothing wrong with wanting a day planner. Currently, I'm just printing out calendar pages and writing on the calendar. It's mostly for work. And I get it. And I'm writing down on the calendar. And then I like check it off when it's completed. I mean, they've, they've punched us in the brain with this concept since we were in middle school. Right down an agenda. Make a list of to-dos. Figure out how you're going to get your homework done. Right. They gave us a planner. You had to buy it at the beginning of the school year. It had a cool higher, what do they call that? Where you can tip it. What's it called? Holographic cover. You know what I'm talking about? They had that, we had to have that in high school. Yes. And middle school. Yes. You told me then after, after you explained the day planner thing, you explained your actual system you use, which is sticky notes. Yeah. You write everything on a note. You stick it somewhere. Is it on your monitor? Where do you put them? All over the place? Yeah. And then you said once you finish something, you get to crumple that up and throw it away and you like that feeling of satisfaction of completing something. I do a little of both. So I have like a calendar that I write down my to-do list or things that need to be accomplished and I'll cross it off when it's completed. Yeah. That's very satisfactory. Yeah. Or I write it down on a post-it note and I crumple that up and throw that away. That's also very satisfactory. When you say satisfactory, do you mean satisfying? Yes. Okay. I'm just trying to understand. I just making sure that I understand what you're saying because here's some new data about sticky notes. They're the thing to do if you want to accomplish things, follow through on daily affirmations, to-do lists, goals, reminders, all of it. They're like use sticky notes. But it also feels very wasteful. Again, I'm going to say if they exist, they're already there. Like I know you may be contributing to a waste issue, but they've made the packs of sticky notes. If you don't buy them, they're getting thrown away anyway. The waste exists. They've already made it. Like I understand your concept of like I don't want to contribute to the waste and I'm throwing away papers. I guess you could cut the little sticky part off and throw that away and then you could turn the rest of them into pulp and reuse them and recycle your own paper. That's never going to happen. So just be okay with it, I guess. But sticky notes are the thing. That's the physical reminder that people are saying it's better. It boosts your motivation. You get to have that satisfying throw it away once it's completed moment. You can put them places so you can have your reminders in front of you throughout the day. I have to. Otherwise, I will forget. That's what I'm saying. If it is not in my periphery, it's forgotten. So don't feel bad about the planner. Get a planner and put sticky notes in it. Combine the two. What? Yeah. Here's the problem though because I'm a little bit of a cheapskate and so I look at the planners and I go, $8, $6, $6. But again, it feels wasteful because I go, I'm going to write in this and then I'm going to throw it away at the end of the year. And for some reason that feels wasteful to me. Yeah, I don't know. I think you're probably maybe overthinking that a little bit. I'm sure I am because I overthink everything. I am an overthinker. I understand. But yeah, I mean, I'm looking at like a daily planner here for $5. You can get a little bit more expensive if you want to get something like leather bound that holds your pens and stuff like that. Don't need that. But just a simple planner, like a little A5 daily organizer paper planner for like $13, $2 for just a daily planner notepad. There's several different things. Like the At a Glance company has been making this stuff for 100 years. No, I know. And you can still get that stuff today because people need it and people are buying it. So don't feel like you're being old school because you don't want to put it in your phone. If writing it down works better, write it down. That's what I'm trying to say. Okay, thanks. It's no big deal. You know, let's wrap up the show. Let's do it. All right. We'll be back tomorrow. Have a great rest of your day. Write it down in your planner. Wake up with us every weekday, six to 10. We're in the studio and on demand everywhere. You get podcasts, you can get Wake Up Classy 97, the podcast. And other than that, we'll talk to you tomorrow. We'll see you. What? You want to try again? One more time. Just end it. We'll see. Yeah. Thanks for listening to Wake Up Classy 97, the podcast. If you enjoy the show, please share, subscribe and rate the podcast. Wake Up Classy 97 is hosted by Josh and Chantel Tielor and is a production of Riverbend Media Group. For more information or to contact the show, visit riverbendmediagroup.com.