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November 11, 2025 31 mins

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On today’s MKD, we start the week off discussing the cause behind Michael Jackson's daughter's perforated septum, a trans person accused of exposing themself in a woman's locker room, a couple who had sex on a flight in front of children, a woman born without a brain, and a new study linking nose size to penis length. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Mother Knows Death, starring Nicole and Jemmy and Maria qk.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (00:21):
Everyone. Welcome to Mother Knows Death. There's so much going
on in the news right now, so don't forget that.
We cover some of the stories that aren't on the
podcast in the grossroom, and we link these stories and
talk about them on our YouTube live every week. Today
we're going to talk about Michael Jackson's daughter claiming she
has a hole in her nose from using too much cocaine.

(00:42):
More details on a gym video that went viral last week,
a couple who had sex on an airplane in front
of children, a woman who has been alive for years
without a brain, and an unsurprising body part that is
a predictor of penis size. All that and more, plus
your comment and emails and questions at the end of

(01:02):
the episode. So let's get started with Paris Jackson.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
Well, before we get started, I just want to say
Happy Veterans Day to all of you people out there
that have served this country or have family members.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
Yes, of course, did you see the cute picture Joseph
Scott Morgan posted, Yeah, I did. I loved it. I
was like, I want this framed in my house.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
Yeah, oh my god, it was really cute and I'm
seeing awesome pictures. Everybody contributes, everybody's posting to their family members,
So again, thank you to everybody that's served. But let's
get into the weird stories. So first, Michael Jackson's daughter
Paris went on TikTok and explained that she whistles when
she breathes due to a peforated septum from drug use.
So one of our friends was over last month and

(01:46):
she told me we were just casually talking. You were there,
I think, and we were casually talking and she was like, yeah,
I have a huge hole in my nose from doing
too much coke. And I was like, wait, do you really?
And I still let me see. So I got my
flashlight and looking up her nostril, and sure enough, she
has a huge perforated septum.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
It's it's it's a it's a known complication of cocaine use.
A lot of people that use coke a lot get it.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
I mean, could you get this from something other than
drug use or is it exclusively due to drugs?

Speaker 1 (02:17):
Now, you can get it from other conditions to like
autoimmune conditions or tumors or any kind of inflammatory process,
like a chronic inflammatory process can cause it too. But
Paris Jackson said she had it, and it's not people
assuming that's what it's from, like she said she did
too much cocaine. It's actually crazy because from she said

(02:41):
that she had it from the time she was twenty yeah,
which which is just like wow, like she was doing
a lot of cocaine pretty early in her life. Because
it's not just something that happens one time. So how
it happens is that the septal cartilage. You have this
line of septal cartilage in the middle of your nose

(03:02):
that separates your two nostrils, and it's very thin and
it's made of delicate blood vessels that help feed it oxygen.
And when you do cocaine, it's a vasoconstrictor, which means
that it clamps down on the blood vessels and it
causes the oxygenated blood not to be able to get there,
and over time that could cause death to that tissue
right there, and cartilage doesn't grow back, so it forms

(03:25):
a hole that will never ever grow back unless you
go get it surgically repaired. And also cocaine causes a
chronic inflammation in that area too, which just further aggravates it.
So you can get it from, like I said, other
inflammatory conditions as well, But cocaine is a common thing.

(03:45):
Didn't we have a story last year or something that
somebody was picking their nose so much that they like
dug a hole through their nostrill or something. Yeah, I
mean you could get it from trauma for sure. And
she was saying that she could put a piece of
spaghetti through it, which is I'm just like, why did
you try that? I don't know, I mean it's kind
of funny or whatever. But so we have a case

(04:05):
in the gross room. Actually that's called cocaine as a
hell of a drug. I posted a couple if you'll
understand the reference, right. It's a person that has something
that is this really rare side effect of all of
that inflammation and vasoconstrict and that's going on after cocaine use.
It only happens in five percent of cocaine users, called

(04:28):
cocaine induced midline destructive lesion. And you should see that
this lady just has this giant area of dead tissue
coming out of her nose that almost looks like a
tumor and you should see how it collapsed her actual
nose from doing too much cocaine. Wow.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
All right, let's move on to this next one. Tish Hyman,
who is a Grammy nominated musician, is claiming that while
working out at various locations of a chain gym, a
transgender person had been lurking around her in the locker room,
calling her a bitch, and then eventually exposed their genitals
to her.

Speaker 1 (05:04):
So you saw this video right going viral online last week.
So that's one part of the story that she was
just it's kind of funny how she posed it, because
she said that she didn't want to get changed in
front of a man because she was a lesbian and
she hasn't been naked in front of a man in

(05:24):
thirty years or something like that, and so that was
really why the video was going viral. And of course,
when anything like that happens, all of the web sloths
are figuring out who is this person, what is their background,
what's going on here? And sure enough, this trans person
that was in the video, that was in this fight

(05:45):
with this woman ended up having a criminal record.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
Well I don't even think she necessarily meant it, as
she just didn't want to get changed in front of
a man. I think the problem was this person was
lurking near her and clearly looking at her, which is
just kind of something you don't do in a gym
locker room. You're aware of everybody getting changed in there,
but you don't stare at another person while they're doing it.
So I think their first confrontation started because this person

(06:12):
was watching her get changed, and she freaked out and
was like, get out of here, stop looking at me, change,
and then it kind of spiraled. And it's weird because
she said after this altercation, she changed gym locations and
decided to go to another one, and she's in the
sauna of this second location telling another woman about what happened,
and the person busted into the sauna and said, you're

(06:33):
talking about me, bitch, and kept following her around, and
they got a screaming match to the point they both
got removed from the gym, and then the altercations just
kept happening. But yeah, basically, when they looked into the
background of this person, I mean, it's terrible. There's domestic violence,
drug trafficking, resisting arrest. This person had allegedly beat their
wife in the past before. So it's just very disturbing

(06:53):
to think about somebody just lurking around that has this
really violent history.

Speaker 1 (06:58):
No. I think though, the most disturbing part of this
whole case is that that this transperson was a man
a couple of years ago and was, like Maria said,
was married to a woman who he beat so bad
that she was in jail. He was in jail for
one year, broke her jaw, she needed surgical reconstruction, hospitalization.

(07:19):
That's That's not like a mild little flight. That was.
That was he beat the shit out of her, right
and then he decided to transition after that, and then
changed his new name to the one that he beat up.
So her name was Alexis, and he changed his name
to Alexis. And I like, listen, I don't know whatever

(07:41):
anybody's thoughts are on this. I just think that I
particularly don't think that the woman in this video should
have even gotten kicked out of the gym. And you know,
anybody could have this argument about what's appropriate or not,
but like, I just don't see in any world how
how that's okay.

Speaker 2 (07:58):
Yeah, because after all these altercations, they both ended up
getting their memberships revoked from the gym, and Tish, I guess,
is trying to say I didn't do anything. This person
was following me around and making me uncomfortable, and that's
when she started taking videos of the altercations between them.
So both of their memberships got revoked at first, and
now they're saying tshes is under review, so she might

(08:19):
be able to come back to the gym. I would
just say fuck off to them. So let's move on
to the next one. A couple of cues of performing
oral sex in front of children on a Jet Blue
flight this summer are no longer facing charges after Florida
officials decided to drop them last week.

Speaker 1 (08:36):
Yeah, so this mom is on an airplane and sees
a woman on the airplane giving a man a blowjob.
That's what she witnessed next to her children. Okay, so
she tells the flight attendant, which you know, we talk
about this all the time, that there's only so much

(08:59):
you can do if you're on a full flight. What
can you do? Possibly, they tell the flight attendant, and
to which this couple was met by police when they
got off of the airplane. But the whole thing is
is that they saw the children sitting there, the woman
continue to do it in front of the children. Like,

(09:21):
I don't understand. I feel like there needs to be
a point where there's like a whole thing sell on
each airplane for people like this that you could just
shove them into until the flight's over. But you also
can't start a huge fight. I mean, what if the
flight attendant went up to them and said you need
to get up and go into this bathroom and say
they're the remainder of the flight or something like. A

(09:42):
person could argue and say no, I'm not doing that,
and it could just cause a huge commotion and fight.
But at the same time, I'm sorry, but I don't
want I have two little kids. I don't want them
watching someone get a blowjob next to them. I mean,
I'm an adult and I don't want to watch that,
let alone a child watching that. It's completely inappropriate. I
don't understand why these charges were dropped. They did not

(10:03):
give a reason why they were dropped. I don't know
why the mom didn't film them with their faces and
posted online at least embarrassed the shit out of them,
or make them lose their job or something. I don't know.
I unders.

Speaker 2 (10:16):
I guess it's a tough situation what you're saying, because
part of me would be like, if I saw that
and my kids saw it, I'd immediately be like, what
the fuck are you doing, and like call them out
and embarrass them. But if it goes the wrong way,
you're risking the whole plan, making a plane, making un
emergency landing, and disrupting hundreds of people's travel schedules.

Speaker 1 (10:34):
I get that, but but honestly, if if it's a
long flight and my kids are next to this, like
I don't care if the plane has to land, it's
there's certain things like we're gonna talk about in another
episode this week that as an adult, sometimes things happen
on the plane and it's very uncomfortable. But sometimes you're

(10:56):
just like, okay, whatever, I'll deal with it for the
next couple hours until we get off. But that to
me is it is like sexual abuse of a child,
almost like they should get in trouble for exploitation in
front of children like that.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
I don't understand that two people in their forties are
so horny that he has they had a blowjob right then,
and they're like, you can't even go in the bathroom. Well,
interesting fact that they bring up is that people. I mean,
obviously I told you about my experience on the plane
with Andrea. We had this experience of a guye jerkin
Off on the plane next to us that there was
nothing that could be done. And they deal with this sometimes.

(11:35):
And I'm sure any flight attendants that are listening right
now would agree that all of the flights that they
go on every single day, they just deal with a
lot of shit. So they actually can put people into
or if people are in the bathroom and they're having sex,
because people do that all it's not it's not uncommon
for that to happen, which I guess I don't think

(11:57):
it's like you're so horny you can't wait. It's just
more of like Peana join the mile High Cloak.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
No, it's just people. There's there's certain fetishes for public
exhibition like that. That's that's all it is. It's a
shock factor. It's this that so I mean in front
of kids, to me is like a weird thing. And
I think if you talk about to normal adults who
who are just like, yeah, I want to have sex
in public or whatever, they wouldn't want to do it.

(12:24):
In front of children like that, to me is just
kind of crossing some kind of weird line. But anyway,
if adults go into the bathroom to have sex, they
say they locked the door, and they'll gently knock on
the door, but they said that they could take off
the entire door even if it's locked. So you're not
necessarily safe and protected in a laboratory bathroom because they

(12:44):
can get in if they want to and take the
whole entire door off.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
The hinges, I just see it as so unnecessary. I
have to assume they we're drunk or something, because who
would just be sober and do something like that. But
it could play to your point that they're exhibitionists and
they get off on doing things like that public. But
when a child is present, I think you need to
put your fetish aside and wait until you're alone, or
like you can just go in the bathroom at the

(13:08):
very least, it's so inappropriate.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
So they get off the plane and they get they
get arrested in charge with all this stuff. But then
they drop the charges apparently yeah, and they didn't give
a reason why they dropped the charges, but they were
facing two felonycounts of lud and I can't even see it.
Is that like insiduous or whatever?

Speaker 2 (13:29):
Well, I don't know what you guys get the point.
It's L A S C I v io us exhibitions.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
I don't know. I don't need to add to everybody
thinking of an idiot, all right, they need to go
back to school to learn how to pronounce things. It's
getting pretty bad.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
No, I'm worse, trust me. But you know what it's like,
my dad has it too, so it just must be.
It just must be a gen thing. And really, like
what's the difference, you know, you know what we mean?

Speaker 2 (14:04):
Is it really is a genetic thing? Because sometimes in
them editing episodes, I say the wrong words or the
wrong phrases all the time, and I don't really realize
it unless I'm listening back to myself. So I actually
wonder how much it happens with that helbe realizing it.
But it's pretty bad, and pop up, does it really bad?
You do it? I mean, we all do it in

(14:25):
our family. It has to just be something genetically.

Speaker 1 (14:29):
But it's outrageous or just a bunch of morons raising
each other whatever.

Speaker 2 (14:43):
This episode is brought to you by the Gross Room.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
So this week's high profile that this section is on
Parker Schultz. Do you remember we talked about this over
the past year on our podcast and in the Gross
Room we talk about it a lot as well. And
this is the case of this total loser, scumbag guy
named Christopher Sultz, who just killed himself actually after a

(15:07):
year of investigation and facing possible jail time for leaving
his child in a hot car and she died. The
story that you obviously that we've been hearing in the
news is terrible, but when we really dove into the
details of this case, it's even more disturbing. And also
we had access to her autopsy report, so we talk

(15:29):
about what you would see in a child of a
hot car death, which is even more upsetting. I said
in the post that it's actually so upsetting to read
an autopsy report on a child that's absolutely perfectly healthy
and should not be dead, except for the fact that
this loser was just totally neglectful and not taking care

(15:51):
of her. So make sure you check that out. Also,
we had a Sunday Night special this week where we
talk about our love in the Grosser Room for watching
a serial killer documentaries and stuff, and and just saying
that it relaxes us. It's just like it's like a

(16:11):
weird thing. It's a meme that's been going around and
it's true. So in this particular case that I presented,
it's it's not talking about a serial killer. It's just
a triple homicide. So it wasn't that relaxing, but you know,
you get the vibes. So all that and more in
the gross Room. Check it out.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
Head over to the Grosserroom dot com now to sign up.

Speaker 1 (16:34):
All right, let's talk about this woman who was born
without a brain.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
So the family of a child born without a brain
was told their daughter wouldn't live past four years old.
But now she's turned twenty. How is it possible to
live without a brain?

Speaker 1 (16:48):
So she it's it's a little sensationalized the title because
she has some brain tissue, so it's called hydrancephale. It's
so Anne and Cephale would be without a brain, but
she has hydrantcephale, so she doesn't have like when you
think about a picture of a brain that has the

(17:09):
that's kind of split in half and has those two
wrinkly sides. The biggest part of the brain. That's the
cerebral hemispheres, so there's a right side and a left side.
She doesn't have that, but she does have a brain stem,
which is how she's still able to be alive after
all this time. Most people born with this condition they

(17:31):
either die before they're even born or they die within
a year. And I believe at the time when she
was born, so she's twenty, so I would say two
thousand and five. She was born around that time. They
told her parents that she wouldn't live past four years,
and she ended up living to twenty years. Now. She

(17:53):
doesn't have any ability to see or hear. Her parents
still believe that she is a little bit more in
tune to the world of what's going on then people
would like to think she is. But what happens is
when the brain doesn't develop, there's something that happens. They're
not one hundred percent sure how it happens, but it's

(18:14):
something that happens during development in utero that there's almost
this disconnect with the growing of the brain and it
just stops growing. So oftentimes you could see it by
the second trimester in ultrasound, but I guess in rare
cases they're saying, don't you don't see it. There is

(18:37):
a picture of this baby when the baby was little,
and I'm looking at this baby and thinking, I don't
understand how the pediatrician thought that the baby was normal
at first and then all of a sudden developed this condition.
It just looks like there's something wrong with her head.
But regardless, it's not like there would be anything that
they could do about it anyway.

Speaker 2 (18:57):
Okay, so it wasn't detected on scam. So you're saying
she was born and at first they didn't realize she
had a problem, and then two months later.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
That's what the parent. The parents said that she the
first couple months of her life, they told her, they
told them that she was normal, and then all of
a sudden they were like, no, she's got this problem.
That's interesting, So, which I thought was kind of weird.
But according to all of the most up to date
literature I've read on this, they do say that there

(19:25):
are times that the child can present as normal and
it would be detected later because they weren't meeting certain
growth patterns at their checkups. But I just I don't know,
just by looking, I just think that there's obviously something
going on there. So when the brain doesn't develop, the

(19:47):
head fills up with spinal fluids. So that's why it's
called hydra encephalely the hydra meeting the water. So so
she's I mean, she's alive by all purposes, and of
course online there's like all this crazy debate about getting
an abortion versus not, and I just feel like terrible
for the family that and almost wondering why they would

(20:07):
even put themselves out there like that, because that's what's
going to happen in this day and age anymore, because
you know, there's a debate on just because she's she's
essentially alive, but not really alive, you know, as we
think of it, that does she deserve not to live?

(20:28):
That's that's her parents' decision, not ours, you know what
I mean.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
But well I told you too, Like I even follow
that girl on TikTok that's pregnant right now via IVF
and this she posted a she's like updating every day
really early before most people would tell everybody, right, and
she had posted that in one of her scans, they
saw her baby didn't have a hand, like didn't grow
a hand, and a bunch of people in the comments

(20:52):
were like are you going to get an abortion? And
it's like, why would you get that over a baby
missing a hand? It's like so insane.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
Yeah, And I mean and listen, like if you're told
that you're pregnant and you're told that the baby has hydrantcephally,
like there is a posit. Obviously this is a documented case,
and there's other documented cases, but the kid's twenty. I mean,
the kid's been living twenty years old. And that's just
a debate amongst different people's personal beliefs, and it's turned

(21:23):
instead of just being like, wow, this is kind of
cool that this that this woman's able to just survive
a condition like this, it just turned into something else.
But it is just like a they don't really know,
like I said, what causes it. So even and I
know the parents are older and stuff, so it's not

(21:45):
like they're going to try. They can't. They probably can't
even have a child anymore, but to see if it
would happen again. But she had a younger brother, yeah,
who's totally fine. Yeah, so yeah, like it's just it's
funny how the news labels it. But I mean, I
guess in all respects, if you think about what a

(22:07):
brain looks like. She certainly doesn't have that, just has
the bottom of it. So it's just interesting. Okay, last story. Previously,
we've thought that hand and feet size could be the
best indicator of penis size. However, Japanese researchers are actually
saying the nose is a better indicator. So yeah, these
researchers that this study was published in Journal of Basic

(22:28):
and Clinical Andrology, and they took autopsy data from one
hundred and twenty four men who and they measured various
body parts and compared it to the man's stretched penile length.
So that's the length of the penis when it's gently
pulled while it's flaccid, And there were no other changes

(22:50):
as drastic as we're seen in the nose length versus
the penis length. So it's said that the average penis
length in men with big noses was five point three inches,
as opposed to those with smaller noses that was four
point one inches. It's super interesting because they're basically saying

(23:12):
like that the penis length isn't determined by what happens
in puberty, but they think that it's determined by what's
happening in utero, and they think that it has something
to do with the testosterone levels that a baby has
while in utero, and it affects how the nose grows
and how the penis grows.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
It's certainly interesting, and I think all our listeners are
going to be looking at people's faces a little differently now.

Speaker 1 (23:36):
Well, another interesting study, and I believe that we talked
about this last year, was that there's been another study
that says that there's a statistical correlation of men who
has a ring finger that's longer than their index finger
also has a longer penis. So, ladies and men, all
you penis loving people, when next time you're looking for

(23:59):
someone to date or get a little intimate with, make
sure you're looking at how big their nose is and
how big their ring finger is. If it's really long,
that means it's really long.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
Appropriate conversations with your mother as always. So let's move
onto questions.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
It's science, science baby.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
First question, I was recently diagnosed with lupus. Can you
see effects of lupus on the body at autopsy.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
So you can for sure, especially if a person dies
as a result of their lupus. But it's not. It's
not the most exciting thing to see always, at least grossly.
A lot of it is the microscopic findings. A lot
of times people die from lupus nephritis, which is that's
probably what Selena Gomez had. Remember she was diagnosed with

(24:48):
lupus and had to get a kidney transplant.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
Oh, I know, because it's been all over the internet
about why her kidney donor didn't go to her wedding, why,
lots of pop culture drama. Well, I just think they're
not really friends like that anymore. But people are really
saying to Selena, it's fucked up because that person gave
you their organ. But I don't know, there's a.

Speaker 1 (25:08):
Lot of strain. I think that her friend, her friend
wins this argument. Right. You could be like, all right,
don't talk to me, but the only reason you're alive
is because of me.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
Yeah, there's a lot of drama in the pop culture
worlds about this, but continue so so.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
Yeah, So at autopsy, sometimes the kidneys will be kind
of granular, and they might be a little enlarged or
have like a pale color. That's possible. A very common
thing is lupus rash. You could see on someone's face.
It's a very distinct looking rash that presents in different ways.

(25:45):
But a lot of it is just microscopic findings that
you're going to see that are really stick out. That
you could see in the spleen, and you could see
in the lungs, changes in the kidneys, and multiple different
organs in the skin. So hopefully you just get it
under control and then we don't have to worry about
you at all.

Speaker 2 (26:05):
Topsy, all right, this one's from summer. I wanted to
offer insight into the October fifteenth episode where the man
quote sprayed HIV plus blood onto those nurses. When I
was around twelve, I was getting my blood drawn at
a psychiatrist's office for reasons I don't remember. Everything was normal.
They put the tourniquet on and drew my blood. However,

(26:26):
they never took off the tourniquet and removed the needle.
My blood sprayed everywhere, the walls, my clothes, literally everywhere.
My mother was horrified. Well it wasn't much, it definitely
still happened. All of this to say, if the tourniquet
was still on him, blood one hundred percent could have sprayed,
especially if he took the needle out with force. Love
the show and everything you guys do.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (26:46):
This sounds like my worst thing. No, it could, I
mean it could.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
And that's I guess when I started learning how to
take blood, which was my worst job ever. I hated
that job. But that was one of the things that
they warned you of is when you know as soon
as you get into the vein, you definitely should take
the tourniquet off right away because if you forget, that
is a possibility that you're going to be constricting on

(27:11):
it and it could squirt out.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
This is making my pumps funny. Boss. The last one,
all right, this one's from Prianna. Hey, ladies, I wanted
to say I love your show. I wanted to talk
about birth tissue donation and tissue donation. I know in
East and Middle Tennessee we have a birth tissue donation
program where you could donate cord blood, your placenta, and
much more. They use this for things like burns and

(27:35):
corneal patches. I worked very closely with them when I
was a tissue recovery technician. I also wanted to clarify
that there is a lot of different criteria when donating tissue.
Autoimmune diseases are commonly a rule out for the processors
that I recover for. Also, if you have hepatitis or
HIV AIDS, you can donate organs but not tissue.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
Thank you for that. I still have questions though, if
you're donating placenta chord and all that. I understand that
they're centers that take that, but where does that take place? Like,
let's say that I'm pregnant right now and I want
to do that. Is that something that after delivery they
take and they send it right away? Because I've never
seen it go through pathology and us sending it out.

(28:18):
So who sends it out and who collects it? And
how do how do people know about it? Because I'm
sure we have plenty of people who are listening right
now that are pregnant that might want to donate that
and I don't remember. I mean, I had my kids
eleven and twelve years ago now, but no one ever
had asked me if I would be interested in doing that.

(28:38):
So is that happening at hospitals across the country? Are
they asking people if they want to donate? And how
how does that process go from the patient's perspective and
also from the hospital getting it to those centers.

Speaker 2 (28:53):
I feel like there's these trending things in pregnancy every year.
Like last year the big thing everybody talked about was
pelvic floor therapy, right, and this year it's like colosstrum
and cord blood. Oh god, I just notice it listening
to these shows.

Speaker 1 (29:06):
It's just like that with everything though, like the health trends,
the flavor trends. Like all right, well, if you.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
Guys have comments or questions for us, you can email
those two stories at mothernosdeath dot com. We also put
a prompt on Friday mornings on YouTube and on our
Instagram so you could ask there as well. Don't forget
we're having our two year anniversary giveaway, so as a reminder,
the grand prize is dinner with us, a free year
of the grossroom, and a signed book. And then there

(29:34):
are two smaller prizes we'll hand out that's a book
and a little something extra. So to enter for that giveaway,
all you have to do is head over to Apple,
leave us a written review, head over to Spotify, leave
us a review, or head over to YouTube and subscribe.
Screenshot that and email it to Stories at Mothernosdeath dot com.
Please only one entry per person, just to make things
fair for everybody, and if you've left us review or

(29:56):
anything in the past, you can resubmit that as well
as your entry choice. So all right, guys, we will
see you for tomorrow's episode.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
Sayah, thank you for listening to Mother Nos Death. As
a reminder, my training is as a pathologist's assistant. I
have a master's level education and specialize in anatomy and
pathology education. I am not a doctor and I have
not diagnosed or treated anyone dead or alive without the

(30:25):
assistance of a licensed medical doctor. This show, my website,
and social media accounts are designed to educate and inform
people based on my experience working in pathology, so they
can make healthier decisions regarding their life and well being.
Always remember that science is changing every day and the

(30:46):
opinions expressed in this episode are based on my knowledge
of those subjects at the time of publication. If you
are having a medical problem, have a medical question, or
having a medical emergency, please contact physician or visit an
urgent care center, emergency room or hospital. Please rate, review,

(31:06):
and subscribe to Mother Knows Death on Apple, Spotify, YouTube,
or anywhere you get podcasts. Thanks

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