Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Mother Knows Dad starring Nicole and Jemmy and Maria qk Hi.
Everyone welcome The Mother Knows Death. On today's episode, we're
going to be talking about Adam Devine's pinky tonow falling
off during masturbation.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
I mean, what, it's crazy.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
Hantavirus is back in the news. A surgeon is fined
for sharing a picture of a patient's tattooed penis. All
that and more on today's episode. Is this Adam Divine
story like the most bizarre thing you've ever heard?
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (00:50):
So, for those of you unfamiliar, he's most well known
for being a modern family workaholics, and he's in The
Righteous Gemstones, which is airing now on HBO. So he
went on a podcast was telling the story about how
he was hit by a cement truck when he was
a little kid, which left him with these serious injuries.
So you might think this story of itself is like
absolutely insane that a little boy gets hit by a
(01:11):
cement truck. So I guess one of the major issues
resulting from this accident was his doctor said his toe
was either going to heal itself or it had the
potential to fall off, but they didn't know when or
where that would take place. So he goes on to
tell the story that he's taking a bath. I guess
because he couldn't stand up at this point, so it
was the only way he could bathe, and that he
(01:32):
decides to jerk off. And after he's trying to like
figure out how to hide the evidence in the bathtub
of what he just did, he sees his pinky toe
floating around in the water. Well, I think it's important
to note that he said it was the first time
he started masturbating, and like then once he figured out
(01:53):
he could do it, he was like, oh, I could
do this all the time, but this was the first time,
like anything ever came out. So he was just kind
of like, what's happening right now, Like imagine this whole
entire scene. So that's like floating in the tub. And
then all of a sudden, like your pinky toe just
goes floating by, and then his mom came in for
whatever reason, and he's all like, don't touch the water.
(02:18):
So I don't know what happened because he didn't really
get into like how his toe just fell off. But
sometimes when you have a traumatic injury, it could crush
like it could crush it, and it could also crush
the blood supply that goes to it. So they might
have been looking at it and it might have not
not have needed an amputation like immediately, but they were
probably like, let's see how this goes.
Speaker 2 (02:39):
It might be fine, it might not.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
Let's see if it kind of heals, and it didn't,
and it probably got gangrenous and did what is called
an auto amputation. So it's when your body just kind
of plops it off itself because it's diseased.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
And it doesn't want it anymore.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
I love this quote he said where he said, I
I'm thinking I jerked off so hard.
Speaker 2 (02:59):
That my toe fell off.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
The story is so frickin weird. It's so outrageous. I'm
surprised they didn't use it as inspiration in The Righteous
Gemstones because it's exactly something you would have seen in
that show. I don't think nobody would believe this.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
No, it's so.
Speaker 1 (03:16):
Outrageous, and it seems right up Danny McBride's alley to
use a story like this in one of his shows.
So I'm just I mean, the season's still airing, so
maybe something's that I come of it. But I'm just
surprised they didn't use this in any capacity. But yeah, this,
this story is absolutely insane. Apparently his doctors were also
telling him he was gonna die for a while. They
suggested that he might have stiff person syndrome, which is
(03:37):
what Celine Dion has, but specialist is confirmed that's not
the case.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
Yeah, it's just residual from his accident.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
I mean, like, if you get hit by a cement
talk when you're a little kid, I think that you're
gonna have lifelong problems. Thinking about his mom too, just
like obviously she didn't even know what was going on
in the bathtub, but imagine having a kid that got
hit by a cement truck and survived it and is
in the bathtub and then says, oh my god, I
think my toe just felt like, oh my god, what
(04:07):
a crazy thing for his mom to go through. No,
this is an insane story. But knowing his personality, I
just picture him telling this story and just like how
you know, this is obviously not something you want to
have in your body, but how he could make it
into this humorous tale he tells all these years later.
It's insane. I don't even know who I don't know
(04:27):
who anybody is, you know that. So I don't watch
anything fun. So I don't watch anything anything like The
Righteous Gemstones is this show by Danny McBride, and it
makes fun of these like mega churches in the South,
and they're the family behind it. So Adam Devine is
one of the kids in the family and he's like
the youngest and they're all immature, but they're like super
(04:50):
rich and it just kind of makes fun of how
ridiculous that scene is down there. But this show is
so good and geniusly written.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
Is it for kids?
Speaker 1 (05:00):
Absolutely not there if if you want to just have
an example of why it's not, Danny McBride said, they
push the limits with Max this year to show as
many penises as possible.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
Okay, so absolutely.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
I'm just asking because like the only thing that I
watch is kids stuff with the kids. You know, Lilian's
got me watching this, Uh what is it? Boy meets World?
It's it enrages me wo because the kid is such
a little bitch.
Speaker 2 (05:29):
That's why I think.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
The boy, the character the boy plays, yes, oh my god,
I hate his personality and I like want that girl
to dump him all the time. He's so he's so
like you, it's all about me and whiny, like just
the ship that I can't I'm like, Lillian, I hope
you know that you never, if you ever come across
a man like this, don't ever date this guy. I'm
(05:55):
pretty sure him and Tipanga get married eventually, So.
Speaker 2 (05:59):
No, I know they do. I know, I know.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
And there's like another show called Girl Meets World or something,
but I just think that his personality is just so terrible,
not just to her though, for like his friend and everything.
We were watching this one episode.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Did you watch it?
Speaker 1 (06:16):
Yeah, like years and years ago. Let me refresh your
memory of this one episode. This kid, like the friend,
the best friend, he like doesn't have as advantage of
a life as Corey does, like his dad's I don't
know if he's not around or he's dead or something,
but you know, like he doesn't have two parents there,
and he doesn't seem like he's got a bunch of money,
(06:37):
and like he gets this better job, like a summer
job than Corey does. And the whole time Corey's like
like kicking.
Speaker 2 (06:44):
And screaming like a baby or something.
Speaker 1 (06:46):
I just was just like, oh my god, I can't
believe the show was on, honestly, Like, I mean, I
did watch probably ten episodes of it, But I kind
of like when main characters are the worst people ever. Like,
think about Carrie and Sex and the City. Who really
sits back and is like, she's awesome. She sucks, she's
a bad friend, she's a bad significant other, she's a
(07:07):
whiney bitch as well. She certainly doesn't make a dollar
twenty five a word at Vogue, especially in the early
two thousands. It's totally like, I definitely don't feel that
way about Carrie.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
So I don't know what you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
Oh, you are ridiculous. I've never heard anybody say anything
bad about her. That's all I've heard everybody talk about
is how she's annoying and she's a terrible friend. Remember
when she made Charlotte tell her engagement ring to pay
for her apartment. That's not Charlotte's problem. Yeah, but that's
what you do for your friend.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
Now, when your friend treat you like shit, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
I wouldn't say that. I don't know about that. I
don't agree with your assessment of Sex and the City.
But anyway, what are we talking about?
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Anyway? Well, wish.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
I just want to the haunts of virus because we're
going on a tangent about television shows and that's not
what the people are heard all you guys anything. It's
the same with the measles and everything. It's just like,
stop watching the news. Oh my god, they like listen,
nobody cared about hauntavirus until Gene Hackman's wife Betsy Arakawa
(08:14):
got it, And now all of a sudden, it's like
we care about hauntavirus. Like you don't think it's weird
that three people in the same town got it though
in only the first couple months of this year. I mean,
it might be a little bit more unusual, but it
tends to happen in the same area, like it's endemic
in certain areas. So like, I just I think that
the media is trying to scare the shit out of
(08:36):
people all the time. And it's just like whatever, I'm serious,
Like it's I'm seriously getting over it with like the
death counts and the this and the that.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
It's just like stop it.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Like the problem is is that it happened during COVID.
They got away with it, and they made so much money.
They will never make that much money again, like no
matter what, it just was the most ridiculous time ever
of people being tuned into their TVs at all times
that they'll just constantly try to like grab and get
it again. Remember they started it with the monkey pox
(09:10):
thing and then it's like it'll fade away.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
And this is the same thing.
Speaker 1 (09:14):
Like you don't need people to be freaking out if
they have a mouse in their house that they're gonna
get freaking haunt a virus.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
Well that's funny.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Coming from you, because I tuk City last week we
had a mouse as just as a joke, as an
amazing joke. Yeah, Mariya's like I have a house and
I was like, oh, you better watch out for that
haunts the virus. Yeah, it's total joke because of how
ridiculous it is. You're a jerk. Anyway, I was just
talking to Gabe about this yesterday because last Monday night,
I guess we the way that tornado warnings were happening
(09:44):
in this area, which, by the way, in the middle
of the country. There was like a severe problem with
tornadoes touching down and a lot of people like had property.
Dance Task Force got to point not game's task force,
but other ones from other states got to ployed out there,
and I'm talking about the Philadelphia area was getting these
tornado warnings via the news as if Wizard of ho
(10:06):
style my house was gonna like blow into the air
and like everybody was gonna be dead around here.
Speaker 2 (10:12):
Let me tell you.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
It rained for fifteen minutes and then nothing happened. And
I know this is the problem because, like, as a
tornado afraid person, I like, oh God, please, is this
gonna be the newest thing that's circulating social media?
Speaker 2 (10:28):
Now?
Speaker 1 (10:28):
Do you need to have like therapy sessions and have
an emotional support animal for this or well I don't
because I just stopped looking at the news. But then
my mother sends me a text because you know, there's
gonna be a tornado tonight, and I wouldn't have known,
and I said, make sure the bunker's ready. You are
just such a jerk, do you see most of my
(10:51):
person comes from you. Gabe always says this too, because
there's been a new word like in the past two years,
which is like be weathered aware.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
It's just like shut up, oh my god, yet this.
Speaker 1 (11:03):
Oh my god, so like nothing happened and it's like
you have a person like me has anxiety for no
reason because nothing happened. So I actually deleted like all
my news apps because I'm just like, if you're such
a crazy person, no, because I'm like sitting there and
I'm like, okay, if the tornadoes come in, it's coming,
(11:23):
like I can't do anything about it.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
Could be in your bunker, but I'll.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Know if it's coming, like I'll get the phone emergency alert.
I don't need the news telling me every thirty seconds
that one bite touchdown when it's like still sunny and
gorgeous outside. It's really true. And I said this five
years ago during COVID with the death count tickers at
the bottom and shit, I was like, this is so ridiculous.
(11:48):
Whoever thought of that? Though? Probably made them so much
advertising money?
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Oh yeah, totally. I mean that's they made.
Speaker 1 (11:55):
They made so much money, and that's why it went
on for so long because they couldn't let go of it,
like it had nothing to do with anything else. It's
just and like haunt of virus is, I'm just like okay,
and you're saying, don't worry about it. No, oh my god, no,
like it's no, it's three people three.
Speaker 2 (12:16):
Just relax.
Speaker 1 (12:17):
Well, when the news starts pushing the next pandemic on us,
they're gonna come back to this episode, yeah, and say
how Nicola and Jeby told everybody not to worry about
the haunt of virus and how it's now taken over
the entire pies. Quote me, I would love it because
if they quoted me on everything I said about COVID,
I'd look like a freaking genius right now. But whatever,
we didn't have a podcast. Then do you want to
(12:46):
talk about our one million downloads?
Speaker 2 (12:51):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (12:51):
So we hit one million downloads, which is truly unbelievable
that you guys think we're even slightly enjoyable to listen
to now three times a week was too times a week.
But now that we hit the one million downloads, we're
gonna do this awesome giveaway where you guys could win
a skull Giant microbe, as signed copy of Nicole and
Jimmy's Anatomy book, or one free year to the Gross
(13:11):
Room so or not, or it's all one package all
three of those things. So to enter the contest, you're
gonna head over to our Apple or Spotify pages, leave
us a review, or head over to our YouTube channel
and subscribe, screenshot that and email it to us at
stories at Mother nos Death. We're gonna be doing this
until the end of next week, and then we will
announce winners the following Tuesday episode. I have to say,
(13:35):
I've been reading some of the reviews and they're so nice.
They make me like wow, just makes me really happy
to read what you guys have to say about us,
So thank you.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
Everything's very nice for you.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
Guys really want to win that prize. Actually, the skull
is super cool.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
I was thinking I.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
Should have I should have had it today, but it's
not in my office. It's a really big skull. I
would say it's like about the size of a basketball.
It's like a bigger skull. But it's super cool because
you could zip around different areas and there's I think
there's like an inner ear, so you there's a zipper
near the ear and you take out a little guy
(14:14):
that's inside. That's an inner ear, and then there's a brain.
And there's one other thing is that I think the
eyeballs come out to the eyeball like yeah, like it's
it's kind of like a dissection type of toy and
it's it's cool, like kids like it.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
But like adults kind of like it too.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
So we'll show it on tomorrow's episode, and then you
could do like a van of white, like showing it off,
taking all the things out.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
Yeah, I'll do that because it is.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
It is super cool, and of course my book is
I mean, it's okay, all right. So there is a
surgeon that got fined for sharing a photo of a
patient that was in a coma that had a swastika
tattoo on his penis. So some details of this story
(15:00):
are kind of confusing me. So back in twenty nineteen,
this guy was making a pipe bomb and then it
blew up in his hand, which landed him into ICU,
and it said he was intubated and then put into
a coma. So they're saying while he's out, the orthopedic surgeon,
which I don't know if he was in the middle
of getting a procedure done. That's kind of what I'm
confused about. But at some point, this orthopedic surgeon working
(15:22):
at the hospital notices this man as a swastika tattooed
on his penis, takes a photo of it, and then
sends it to colleagues.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
Via WhatsApp.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
Yeah, so I mean if he was if he had
a pipe bomb injury, he had blunt trauma associated with
that and blast injury trauma as well. So it's possible,
depending on the amount of how intense the explosion was,
that he could have broken bones and needed orthopedic surgery
during that time. So I don't think that that's unusual
(15:53):
that there was an orthopedic surgeon there. So apparently, And
I don't know, because this is a to device app
or device article, I don't know if this was just
the author making this assumption or if this is a
real thing that people that make pipe He said something
about people that make pipe bombs are the same demographic
(16:16):
as people that have swastika tattoos on their penis. I'm
not well if that's is that like a joke or
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (16:23):
I mean, like, I think you can.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Argue a lot of white supremacist groups are constantly making
weapons ches. I just didn't, But I'm saying like I
didn't know if there was any like actual statistics on that.
The thing is is that I was trying to see
because one cool thing I took a class a really
long time ago, a forends of class about tattoos. And
(16:46):
it was really interesting because a lot of tattoos. We're
hearing that on the news right now with the gang
members and stuff like that, that there's certain tattoos that
certain gangs get that represent that they're in that gang.
So I was wondering if the swastika tattoo, like, is
that something that people just get or is it like
(17:07):
a meaning behind a group of something like I just
was trying to figure out if there was a I mean,
obviously it's a group of white supremacy people and stuff
like that, but was it a more specific group of
this group of people get this specific tattoo in this location.
And I couldn't obviously, like I couldn't find anything because
all the articles are about this. But what I did
(17:30):
find interesting was I found another page that talks about
different tattoos that had a picture of a swastika the
shape of a swastika, but all of the ends of
it were penises, so it is it's a swastika penis
tattoo as well. It's so dumb, It's like the dumbest
shit ever, Like what's going on in your brain that
(17:51):
you go to somebody and think that that's a good idea.
Speaker 2 (17:54):
Really it's it's I mean, you could.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Say that about all my tattoos, honestly, so like whatever,
But yeah, but I mean, I'm surprised the tattooer even
does it. But I guess the tattooers that do it
either really don't care or they're probably part of the
groups that get these done so And I'm not like,
I'm not a fan of the penis tattoo. I actually
know somebody that had submarine holes tattooed on his penis. No,
(18:18):
I'm not lying too, that's the true story. So yeah,
I don't get it, Like why would you?
Speaker 2 (18:26):
What does that do?
Speaker 1 (18:27):
Most people that get it are like proud to show
it off, and so I guess the weird part of
the story for me is that it's like hidden. But
I guess I don't know how this got figured out.
But this guy, yeah, like Maria was saying, this guy
sent it on a WhatsApp to his co workers and
he got fined ten thousand dollars for doing it, mainly
because they said it was just kind of a glawck
(18:49):
look at thing and there was no medical association or
medical information associated with it. Yeah, they were saying that
somebody that must have received it or became aware of it,
tipped off an office that did an investigation and then
that's where they looked into it.
Speaker 2 (19:04):
But yeah, he.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
Got fined what ten thousand dollars in a slap on
the wrist basically, but you should have So this was
this was in Australia. That we have to add because
if this was in the United States with hippa and everything,
especially because like if it was just a penis, I
don't know why you would take a picture anybody's just
plain penis, But it wouldn't it wouldn't necessarily be as
(19:30):
bad the picture. It's more that a tattoo is an
identifying feature. It's it's like taking a picture of someone's
face or you know. And if you're taking pictures, you
definitely cannot be taking a picture of something that if
you send it to people, that somebody could tell that
it's you, you know what I mean. Regardless, it's inappropriate
(19:52):
that a doctor's taking a picture of a patient. Well,
and and I know in the article they said so
they were saying basically that they find him ten thousand
dollars because there was no information associated that was medically
necessary for him to have sent this picture to his colleagues.
And the person in the article was just saying, so
(20:14):
if they said, like, look at this weird mole, would
that be okay? And I would say that in some circumstances,
not WhatsApp for sure, but in some circumstances this would
be relevant.
Speaker 2 (20:28):
Like I said, if.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
It is if this tattoo is particularly in a certain
demographic and like you wanted to write a paper on it, well, yeah,
but in that case you would need you would need
to get permission on it as well, but you you
shouldn't be sending it through that. But he was probably
just sending it to them like look at this Handbob.
(20:51):
Well that's clearly what they determined. Yeah, And it's kind
of the same in this new case. In the next
case with this nick you nurse who is taking pictures
of newborns and then post them on social media with
completely inappropriate comments.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
Yeah, this one.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
Is actually I don't know, like I know a couple
of people that work in the nick you or they
work in the mother baby area, you know, maternity floor
and stuff, and they're just like a certain kind of
like really nice sensitive people it's a certain time in
a person's life where you don't need some like psycho
working on that floor. And I know it happens because
(21:28):
remember we've talked about the one nurse that was like
hurting babies. Remember that. Yeah, so it happens, unfortunately, and
it makes me think, like, what is this person thinking.
This person went through nursing school, which is hard as hell.
It's like really hard to go through nursing school. You
get this job, you're a nick nick your nurse, and
(21:50):
you're going to post pictures of people's babies and write
like douchey comments next to it.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
It's kind of weird.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Yeah, and the comments, you know, the way this article
is presenting it is that they're that she's mocking the babies.
But I don't think she's really mocking them as as
much as like they're kind of threatening. Some of the
captions are itching to let one fall. My anger issues
are rising. And then somebody in another picture, they posted
(22:20):
a picture of the baby's face and said, what time
is it? Please just sleep already. It's just a bizarre
thing to do. It's very attention seeking too, but it
is bizarre because imagine being a mom let's pretend like
you're a mom in the hospital room and the babies
in the nicky or in the nicki rite that you
would go home sometimes because the baby has to stay
(22:42):
there sometimes for a while, like they'd send you home eventually.
And seeing that a nurse that's taking care of your
baby is saying stuff like this with your baby's face,
you know. Well, So the post started making the rounds
and some parent communities online. And then I guess one
of the dads of one of the babies recogniz his
kid in the photo and then filed a complaint against
(23:03):
the hospital and her which resulted in her firing. And
they're apologizing for it. But how do you already find
it beforehand? It seems like she was doing it for
a while. I don't know, it's weird. It's just it's
just bizarre. But you hear about this from time to time,
that there are people there that are not there for
what they should be there for. Yeah, all right, So
(23:25):
this one is another great submission from the m I
and asshole thread on Reddit. So this twenty four year
This twenty four year old girl explained that she had
a shitty childhood. She said her father left when she
was about six or seven, she only ever wore hand
me downs, et cetera. Then, after her dad leaves, her
mom finds another guy has this miracle son, and then
(23:47):
that son starts getting spoiled. He's wearing you know, brand
name clothes. He's like getting everything he wants. So recently,
the brother, who's now seventeen years old, told her that
her parents were planning on selling the apartment that they
were living in so they could complete renovations on their
new house and buy him a BMW with the money.
(24:08):
So the mom goes to sell the apartment. But I
guess her dad owned half of the apartment, but they
were estranged, and when the mother reached out to him
to inquire about selling the apartment, she found out that
he had died and he had left the daughter a
major inheritance. So all right, so this mom calls the
(24:30):
daughter and says, I'm sorry to say that your dad died.
He left you when you were six or seven years old,
but I just found that he's dead. And then but
the kid then gets half of the apartment. Yeah, so
she essentially owns half the apartment with this new inheritance.
So the mom wants her to gift her the apartment
(24:50):
so that she could sell it and make money, and
she's saying, I don't want to do that. So she's
asking the Reddit for him if she's the asshole because
she thinks it's her money and not for nothing. But
it doesn't seem like her parents treated her that great
growing up. So she's like, it's mine and I'm gonna
do what I want with it, and you're not gonna
take my inheritance. And then by the boy a brand
new BMW when you've treated me like shit the whole time.
(25:14):
You know, I think the treating like shit, I don't
know about that like and and the way that your
generation is getting treated like shit is well, take take
this story aside as somebody that raised me as a
single mother. How would you approach this? Well, I'm telling
(25:37):
you right now that my kids, little kids, now you know,
set to they're having a better life financially than you did. Yeah,
for not just because I make more money, because I
have another income in the house that we didn't have
as a single mom. So like she needs to understand
that if she if the mom was ice from my dad,
(25:59):
would you expect me to hand it all over to you.
I wouldn't. I would tell you to keep it. If
you got inheritance from your dad, I would be like, good,
put it towards your house and pay off your house.
But like, I don't think that the mom is necessarily
wrong because the guy like up and left her and
she had to pay for everything herself, and the kid's
(26:19):
kind of a dickhead for thinking.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
That she did.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
She got the shift like you're a woman and you're
married and the guy just walks out and leaves you
with a house and you're by yourself, Like you're not
gonna get everything that you want. She's got the kids
got issues, like she's she's clearly like jealous of the
new sibling and everything like that, Like that that's an
issue that doesn't even matter in this case. That's aside,
(26:43):
like she got my steps of that gets treated significantly
better than you, and you have no room.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
To be bettered about it.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
But because the mom has more money now, because the
mom married someone with money and there's money now, all right,
So does he seem like it's a treatment thing? She's like,
I got secondhand closing this, Yeah you did because your
mom was left dry. Okay, so she's a little kid.
So let's say she has the son, and then the
son's getting everything brand new when she's still a little kid,
and she still doesn't get anything brand new.
Speaker 2 (27:12):
Yeah, but that's not what happened.
Speaker 1 (27:14):
Like, I was not twenty years old when you had
your second set of kids, as you like to put it,
I was already living on my regardless even if you
were ten like you, then you would have gotten like
if me and Gabe got married earlier, if you would
have gotten a shit together earlier. We got married when
you were ten, right, and then we had a baby
(27:34):
when you were ten instead of when you were eighteen
or whatever like you.
Speaker 2 (27:38):
Okay, so then when the kids, So then when Lillian.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
In this situation's ten and I'm twenty, you're gonna keep
buying her all these d or bags and then I
don't get a d Or bag.
Speaker 2 (27:47):
She's a kid.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
You're you're literally living for an example. But this is
what's happening in your life right now. Like it's just
it's just kind of like, all right, what was your
first car?
Speaker 2 (27:59):
It was like a Chevy.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
Two thousand and three Chevy Cavaliers. Okay, I guarantee you
that your sisters are going to get a better first
car than you did. I'm telling you that right now.
Are you gonna Are you gonna be jealous about that?
I'm not gonna be just like I disagree with you.
I've just tried to find out other example. It's just
it's just like I think that mother has letting her
(28:23):
keep the money when she clearly needs it as an adult,
not to finish their renovations on a house they could
clearly afford. Listen, Like, any good mom would be like,
keep the money, because ultimately your job as a parent
is don't want your kid to have like a better
life than you do, So any good mom would say that.
But like, the mom's also kind of not wrong. The
(28:45):
mom's a moron because when the guy left, she should
have did whatever to get the house out of his name,
whatever she has to do, because if he left.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
I don't even know.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
I'm thinking that, like, I don't even know what you
do in that situation, if a person disappears and you're
in their house. She really I don't even know what
she I don't know what to do. I don't know
what you would do, but I'm sure there's something you
can do to get out of that situation, and and
like the mom acting surprised about it is kind of
like like you didn't know you owned half the house, dude,
(29:18):
I don't. That's why I'm like, I think both she
probably like listen, think you can argue on both sides,
like the daughter clearly has these jealousy issues of her
other sibling, but like the mom's clearly fucking selfish herself,
because most parents would never ask their children to hand
them over money.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
No, I agree, but I don't.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
I don't one hundred percent think that that she's wrong,
you know, like.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
Well, it's not her money, and she should have made
sure it was her money, so it kind of is
her fault because she didn't make sure it was her money,
so it is on her. But with that said, please
submit your entry for the one million download giveaway to
stories at my dot com and we will see you tomorrow. Soya,
(30:06):
thank you for listening to Mother Knows 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 assistance of
a licensed medical doctor. This show, my website, and social
(30:31):
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 opinions expressed
in this episode are based on my knowledge of those
subjects at the time of publication. If you are having
(30:53):
a medical problem, have a medical question, or having a
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