Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
What would you talk about on your on your podcast
Firms Present Minute Morning Show. Okay, let's go back to
the COVID conversation, the COVID convote. I actually some texture
(00:28):
pointed this out, and I'm thinking maybe that's where it
came from. I have siasis now from probably COVID. Oh really, yeah,
cod he did COVID, Yes, he did. Did you have
a stroke? Scary? Am I the only person here that's
never had a scary? Scary? You had six times? You
didn't test that time, remember a couple of weeks ago.
(00:50):
That's not even a right. Let's move past that. Who's
everybody voting for you? My favorite was scary testing like
a week after the fact that He's like, it was
like negative negative. I'm like, I just had I had
it twice, SOD twice, Yeah, twice within three months, So
(01:14):
don't say you can't. And I asked the doctor that
I said, I don't understand. I thought I couldn't get again.
He goes, Danielle, there's so many different kinds out there
that just because you got one doesn't mean you can't
get the other ones. In That's what my doctor said.
So he's like, you know, we're discovering new things about this.
Every day, literally every day of paper is being published
about this with new findings, new long term effects. I mean,
(01:39):
it's probably the most studied disease ever period. It's also
really fascinating how people react to it, and when they
don't get all of the answers to everything immediately, they
just disregard any information. I'm not saying that's scary, but
I'm just saying that some people they think that, you know,
we can google everything, now we have every answer to everything.
But this is new to most mean everybody really, so
(02:01):
of course information is going to change, and of course
we're going to get different guidance than we originally started with.
So it's really showing how inflexible people have become, just
expecting to have every answer to everything at the first.
And it's crazy how it's different every time to Like
the first time I got it, I thought I was
dying my head. This time, I'm more exhausted than I've
(02:23):
ever been since having it. But the it was more
of a really really terrible head cold. So it just
depends on how it hits you and you know whatever.
But like you know, who knows, Both times for me
were like a cold, like a tough cold. And weren't
you saying something about your period? Yes, Also before we
go down this path, does this make you guys uncomfortable? Listen,
(02:48):
I don't have them. I would like to know if
I have a problem with mine. So I'm I'm glad
that you noticed the problem with yours. Yeah. So, right
after I got COVID the first time, my period was
three and a half weeks late, and it freaked me
out because I am like a clock and I couldn't
figure out what's going on. Of course, I took pregnancy tests.
It's coming back negative. I talked to my doctor, and
(03:08):
my doctor said a lot of people were having this
same response right after, and when we brought it up
on the air, the amount of text messages we got
that were saying, oh my god, me too. And I
never put those things together. But my doctor said that
when your body is under a lot of stress, whether
you actually felt it or not, because like I said,
for me, it was pretty much like a cold, but
it's because my body was fighting that whole time, and
that stress can do all kinds of things to your cycle.
(03:29):
And Diana was talking about how hers is off a
little bit now too. Really, I don't know if she's
there on your shelf over here. Hi. Yeah, so I'm
a three time COVID champion. Yeah, and like Danielle too.
It was different each time. The first time I thought
I was gonna die, like I was sick for like
(03:50):
thirty days, had a feet for twenty five days. Was horrible.
Second time was nothing, just a headache. Third time pretty sick,
but didn't last as long. And yeah, my period has
been off and like losing all my hair, like I
don't ever lose hair like that, and like I literally
can go this and get chunks out like it's bad.
Four right now? Remember when we couldn't joke about that.
(04:14):
It was only about six months ago. Yeah, now a
guy question though, like when you say your is your
period delayed or is it just like do you set
a new like track or I don't know. So, I
mean I think everybody is different, everyone has like different cycles.
I'm totally back to normal where I can tell you
the date that it's going to happen and it happens
on that date. But that first time after I was
(04:36):
just three weeks late, so then it just started, like
the cycle started all over again. But three and a
half weeks later, which is a really long time for
women to not get your period pregnant. I mean, listen,
there's always a chance the periods late. Scary, all right.
(05:00):
I know Scott has a lot of questions about this
subject of Scotty. Let's let's go to you for for
all your don't. I don't really have questions. It's just
that you know, I have two girls and it's going
to be coming up, that's right, and uh, you know
I'm going to have to stay strong. What do you
mean you're going to have a man strong? No. Look,
(05:21):
I'm happy to go buy all the necessary items. I
love shopping, so I'm gonna you'll get the cheapest tampons. Yes,
please don't, Yes that I got it. I know you
got coupons for tampons. Absolutely, there are still deals. But
(05:42):
does it make you guys all uncomfortable, like because the
girls on the show we have no problem talking about
to each other and would be uncomfortable. No, I'm not.
It's you know, it's just me and blood. But I
don't like going to see I'm going to see it,
so it doesn't matter, you know it kind of life, right, Okay, Yeah,
(06:03):
it happens. I'm convinced I get like a man period occasionally,
because I get you say that you guys do, yeah,
because I know I'll get irritable, and I guess bloated
a little bit every once in a while. Do you
get that scary? No? But sometimes my left booze bigger
than my right boots. I think that's too many cookies,
(06:30):
I guess. I guess I have a little Sometimes I
have some mood swings. I feel I always tie that
to the weather and the glue, like the blue drewery
day like this, not to the doughnuts. I don't I
don't yes, period weather or the spikes in sugar. I
(06:51):
don't know. I don't know syndrome. I'm not saying it's
not tied to that. Who knows, you know, I haven't
done enough research on it. Obviously, about any uh manstruation,
I think everybody does to some extent. You know, everybody's
got a crappy day, and that could be you know,
(07:12):
I think it's a hormone level thing if I'm not mistaken, right,
because that's a big part of the period, right, because
I know my wife is more irritable right before it
happens and more emotional does it? Does that still happen
for you, Daniel? Yeah, I mean it depends. I mean
I I also had thyroid cancer, so that really messed
(07:32):
things up with my period, so I was never regular.
The I could go two months and not have it
and then have it, you know, in two two weeks
and then two weeks later. It was crazy, but I
was just my way of life because I had thyroid
cancer and it kind of imbalanced everything experiences I ever
(07:53):
really it's okay. Um that I ever experienced was actually
when I was taking birth control. I hated it. I mean,
you guys know me. You've been around me every day
now for four years. I'm not really I don't have
mood swings. But when I was taking those damn hormones
from my birth control, I could tell you the week
before it was coming because I would watch a commercial
and either get devastatingly sad or devastated, or I would
(08:14):
become outraged, but absolutely nothing like my boyfriend would breathe
wrong and I'd be like, shut the funk up shop,
They're not terrible. I hated it, so I got off
all that stuff and now I feel so much more
stable question. So when you go through menopause, um, does
just the tampon stuff stop or does everything associated with
your period? Actually a good question. Wait, what do you
(08:38):
mean you don't when you go through well, once you're
through menopause, you don't get your period anymore. Okay, but
you're technically wait they say you're technically not through menopause
unless you haven't had your period for one full year.
I got it. But you're saying there's you know, mood
swings and all this, that and the other. No, you
can still have that. No, no, they're going to have
that till the end of time, Scotty, and this stuff.
(09:02):
Stuff can start like hot flashes and all kinds of
other hormonal but your girls never haven't. Easy. But you're
rid of the blood or non period, you're rid of
the blood. That's it, the blood. Okay, cool, Well do
you know what the blood is, Scotty, Yes, I do. Okay,
let's what I'm saying. Her line, The government was trying
(09:27):
to cut you off being censored. No, you're being flushed out.
I get. I know what it is. Okay, yeah, flushing
I'm not I'm not skithed. It is what it is.
It's life. It really is life. A little nervous take
of Scotty said ivous. He starts playing with it. He
does nervous, all right, you know what when he's nervous,
(09:53):
he does a little bit of this. He did. He
doesn't like he doesn't like period talk alright, actually blood
blood talk. When it right before menopause, it's called perimenopause,
and like you can you could be going through that
for years where it's like I feel like it's a trick.
It's like I think you're going through it, but you're
really not. But you're having all the things in the
hot flat end of it. And then it comes back
(10:14):
and then it's so ridiculous. And some women go through
menopause very early and some people go through it later.
And my body. Remember when I had my breast reduction
that forced me into early paramenopause, No kidding, really, I
was at a doctor and I was like, I don't
understand what's going on. And she tested a lot of
things and she's like, it's so crazy that it happened
(10:35):
right after your surgery. I'm like, I know, no word. Yeah,
it's crazy. What what things can do to your body?
Wowinator honestly, it's fat because I don't have those parts
that you know, so I don't know, and you know,
it's probably much worse, well I know, much worse for
(10:55):
some people, right like Sam has debilitating cramps, yes, you know,
and I've never had a cramp in my life, so
it's a it's a vanish over here, like shocked. I know.
Diamond told me when we were talking about this, she
told me she wanted to punch me in the stomach
a few times just so that I could be say
that it feels like it's horrible. It's literally the worst
thing ever. Like it feels like someone's taking what is
(11:17):
like getting hit in the balls, because how would you
know that. I feel like someone's taking your organs and
like ringing them out like a towel. Also like throbbing
down there. It's just a lot. Does it just come
on all of a sudden or like do you know
it's coming like well, like usually my period regular, but
it's not since covid um. Yeah, you just like like
the week before I usually start getting cramps and then
(11:38):
it's bad for the first two days and then stops.
And does it last all day for two days? Or
is it like on and off on a n it's
off like the first days like usually all day. But
can you take anything? Friends wouldn't get out of bed
for a week? Mind all doesn't work? Yeah, I took
a mid all for a headache. Get vanished. Thankful you're
(11:59):
a guy. You don't have to deal with this stuff.
I mean, there are multiple reasons women say that. I
don't think that's the only reason more than us to
an imagine that around here. Don't you repeat that GANDH
because we missed it the period police censored. You said
men get paid a lot more than I think that crazing.
(12:25):
You keep freezing. Women get paid seventy six cents to
the dollar for men. Okay, government, we try to shut
up here, isn't that doesn't work here most places? Always
big brother, it's never a big sister watching think you're
(12:49):
getting paid more? That's right. We'll just miss up with
that connection. All right. Are we done for the day?
I think we're finished. Are we going to put a
period at the end of up? Okay? Everybody, see what
you did there? The fifteen Minute Morning Show