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May 24, 2023 29 mins

Have you ever felt blocked up? Like, creatively, not bowel-wise, but that's totally valid too. We wish you well on your journey. But! Curly and Maya are back this week to discuss the feeling of frustration when the muses seem to abandon you. How to deal with being creatively blocked, how to make peace with it, and how to pick yourself back up and get the juices flowing again!

Maya Murillo and Curly Velasquez are the hosts of the Super Secret Bestie Club with production support by Josie Melendez and Augusto Martinez of Sonoro Media in partnership with iHeart Radio's My Cultura Podcast network. If you want to support the podcast, please rate and review our show!

Follow Maya Murillo on Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok @mayainthemoment 

Follow Curly Velasquez on Instagram and TikTok @thecurlyvshow and on Twitter @CurlyVee

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hey, what are you doing in here?

Speaker 2 (00:02):
Don't come in here. I'm pretty blocked up.

Speaker 1 (00:04):
What do you mean, do you need like a laxative
or like a klonic or something or what do you mean?

Speaker 2 (00:07):
No, I mean creatively blocked? Silly?

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Oh so no colonic. Get in here. My name is
Curly and I'm Maya and welcome to the Super Secret
Bestie Club podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
A super secret club where we talk about super secret things.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
Yeah, like secrets that are super That's what it is.
In each episode we'll talk about love, friendship, heartbreaks, men,
and of course our favorite secrets.

Speaker 2 (00:39):
So today we're talking about being creatively blocked.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
Yes, which is a real thing for a lot of people,
for creatives, for anybody who's really just I think, a
human and alive and in the in the creative world
at all. Some people even are like, I'm not a creative,
and I'm like, every if you're a human, it is
in your DNA to be a creative. You're absolutely a
creative for sure.

Speaker 2 (01:02):
I always like here, I mean, I'm surrounded by creatives
and artists, and I constantly hear all of our friends
sometimes being taking turns saying that like I feel creatively
blocked or there's a block or I don't know, and
I'm like, uugh, not me this week, and then the
next week I'm like, chant I didn't.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Want to say this to you because a lot of
people might be listening to this and they go, Oh,
it doesn't apply to me because I'm not a creative
or I'm not this. It actually does apply to you
in so many different ways, like if you're creative with
being romantic, if you're creative with your partner, if you're
creative wanting to be a better person or wanting to
try something new, like this all really applies to you.
And creativity I think is so relative. I always tell

(01:44):
you when I worked at David la Chapelle Studio as
a young person, I remember he was paying an artist
to draw small stick figure villages like they would be
like they would be doing chores, but they were all
stick figures and they would live in like little homes
and do little things. And I'm like, oh, so you
can get paid for basically just having a style and

(02:05):
being consistent. All that to say too, is like creative
blockage is really part of the artist's experience of being alive.
Do you suffer from creative blockage? Sometimes you were saying.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
I wouldn't say suffer.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
You live, you cohabitate with it.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
Somebody I say, I manage it, okay, because we change
our words.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
Okay, Yeah, I love that words are.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
Things, So what do you spells?

Speaker 1 (02:29):
Word they are?

Speaker 2 (02:31):
I really felt like a creative block in the beginning
of the year. I mean, well last year, honestly, probably
all last year. It's just like when you don't we
feel like you don't want to make things, or you
just don't feel inspired or you have the energy. That's
when I feel like a creative block. When I'm just
like I don't know, man, everyone's doing it so many

(02:54):
different things, and it feels like so oversaturated. Like there
was a time when we would do things and like
nobody else was doing those things at all, and now
everybody is doing those things, and you're like, fuck, I know,
I don't have to like reinvent the wheel, and I
didn't invent anything back then either, But it's just like

(03:14):
I don't know, it's just the ebbs and flows of
like creating content in this like digital I don't know
what it's called. Like it's like an ocean and it's
very rocky, like there's just a bunch of waves and
if you don't have your boat secure, you're gonna flip over.
And I felt lost in the sea a lot, and

(03:36):
like I don't feel special and I don't feel like
I have my magic. Like that's when I feel like
my lowest is when I'm like because I think it's
so tied to my identities unfortunately, which is something that
I've been like trying to like move away from. But yeah,
I definitely like when I feel it, I feel it,
and I feel it hard because I feel I love

(03:57):
to be creative and I love to like make art,
and I do feel like I'm an artist, and it's
just like it sucks when you're in that place because
you're like, well, what do I do now? Am I enormy?
Is my magic gone?

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Yeah? I think you can get monotonous, like when you're
creating or you're a creator, like whatever you do, if
you're a painter or you're making songs or whatever, you're
like here we are again, and you're like somebody else
sampled another beat, like I guess, and then with us
because we basically were in digital content for so long
that we're like, oh, we've seen these jokes kind of

(04:30):
be recycled, like they're the same jokes that we were
making years ago and same frames. Yeah not, and of
course it's not to shit on any creative now, but
it's just like it's just imagined that you created a beat.
It's like that Sempau beat, like let's get it on
to the early mornever it's not good at it and
then they use it. Oh oh, and then they use it.

(04:53):
No letting go no ho them Like it's the same beat.
Is like this is the.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
Thing so good that people just have to keep doing.

Speaker 1 (05:01):
Yeah, and so it's like all right, here we are again,
twenty years later, another joke. Like but I think that
for me, it's more about sometimes what you find being
worthy to put out as a creative thing, like you're like,
oh I have this really cool idea or I have
this song. So sometimes not so much the creative blockage,

(05:21):
it's kind of like is this good enough? It's the
different thoughts that come into like oh I have this
really cool thing, like you know, I my content is
usually more about storytelling, like usually things that happen to
me in real life, So I don't my mind doesn't
usually think in terms of like oh this would be
a really funny skit, right, Like I think that would

(05:41):
you say yours is more like skits and stuff where.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
I'll do both. I'll do like storytelling skits and then
like random things or music. And that's the thing is
like there's so much that I want to do that
it's like it's devastating when you can't figure out what
you want to do and you just kind of like
sit because you can't.

Speaker 1 (06:02):
You're like having trouble kind of like honing in or
focusing on what it is you want to do. What
is it like the what is it jack of all trades?
Master of none? But being a jack of all trades
is matter than none or something like that. What's the fool?

Speaker 2 (06:19):
I never got that before.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
So the so called the jack of all trades is
a master of none, but oftentimes better than a master
of one. That can also be like harder to basically
deal with in terms of trying to focus. But what
are some things that you feel like you do to combat? Well?

Speaker 2 (06:36):
I think if you were having these thoughts also, like
I really love journaling and I've been reading like The
Artist's Way, and that's like one of the biggest things.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
You mentioned that a lot, and we joined a group
and I was supposed to be in this group too,
and then two weeks and two I had to leave.
But like, what is the artist way? Exactly?

Speaker 2 (06:53):
Artists way is like getting back with your creative source
and like coming back home to what it is makes
you the most happiest to be creative and not only
in the arts, but just in general of like being
creative and feeling good about life in general and getting
creative about life and having like the intention to be

(07:18):
like I'm going to do the best I can do
because I feel good. And it's it breaks down kind
of all the reasons why you are blocked right now.
It's like it's basically like how to recover it. It's
about the recovering artist. And I know artists is such
a big word, but like we're all artists.

Speaker 1 (07:40):
Yeah. Of my beautiful friend William Moran, who my first
crush when I was in third grade, well yeah, I
love you. I asked him, like what do you do

(08:01):
for creative stuff? And he was like I'm not really
like a like I don't really do that. I don't pay,
I don't sing, I don't dance, I don't do anything.
And he was like I do sports, and I remember
as a kid that he was a natural sports person,
like he did everything. I know this because I was
in love with him when I was eight years old
and I was like he has track practice tang or
he has flag football tag because you know they flags

(08:22):
around here. He was really good and I remember. But
you have to be creative in the way that you
move on the field and the way that you are.
There's always creativity like all over.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
That's an art there's an artistry to that also of
like how do you move your body?

Speaker 1 (08:41):
You know?

Speaker 2 (08:41):
Anyway, absolutely if I talk about sports, but basically, yeah,
I've been reading The Artist's Way and so it has
you journal every single day as much as you can.
And that really gets me to figure out, like, what
is the reason why I can't create right now?

Speaker 1 (08:59):
Exactly?

Speaker 2 (09:00):
I figured out that the reason why I wasn't creating
was because I was a little bit insecure about my
age about turning thirty, which I'm I'm actually really not
like I'm very very excited. But you know, with like
the whole focus on gen Z and I'm like a millennial,
I'm ninety three, so it's like, am I like millennial

(09:20):
gen z. I know you be you be the deciderrou
on that one, but yes, and like I just felt like,
oh my god, am I going to be look like
I'm old or like you know, And then I've I
just certain things where I'm like about age and like
weight and body image. And I would not have figured

(09:40):
that out if I wasn't journaling. It's like getting very
in touch with yourself to figure out why. And then
I'm like, these are limiting beliefs, like these are things
that are stopping me from like doing what I want
to do, Like maybe I make videos about how I'm
feeling about my age because I know there's other people
Like then it gets the creative deuces following, so like

(10:01):
definitely get the artist's way, but also like just journal
because you tap into like what is stopping me right
now because it seems like such a big issue, like
such a big problem being creatively blocked because you're just
like I don't know, I just don't know why, but
like you have to figure it out, like what is
the reason why.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
Yeah, sometimes it takes other people to to tell you.
Like sometimes I'll be talking to Gadi, one of our
other best friends, our brother. He is a stand up
like comedian. He does a lot of jokes, and sometimes
he will tell us a story or a joke and
I'll be like, hello, that's like your joke right there,
that's your that's like you're did I love? I feel

(10:47):
like I just have that anyways. He you know, I'll
tell him those things too, and I feel like creatively
with me, sometimes I will think of different things, but
I don't necessarily want to do that, you know, like
people be like you should just with fashion, and like
I don't, Like, I just it's I'm not I don't
want to do stuff with fashion.

Speaker 2 (11:06):
I say that to you.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
Yeah, I'm like, I get dressed. I like to get
dressed every day. It is part of like my everyday thing.
You know.

Speaker 2 (11:13):
I think you should document what your closet looks like.
He has a room. Another closet looks like a store. Yeah,
like a store, like a department store, like a cool
like urban outfitter store. I also think like coming back
to whatever it is you feel blocked on, Like I sing,
I also make videos like maybe I should. If I'm

(11:36):
feeling a little over stimulated by singing and blocked, then
I'm going to work on this other thing. And then
come back to it, like it's okay to come back
to it, absolutely, but then also like sometimes to get
over it is just to start making shit, like just
do it. Have it be shitty at first, and then
you'll eventually once the ball starts to roll, like yeah,
it'll get going.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Lizards was just doing an interview with gram Nort and
it was pretty cool. It's like lizos Mayak and Shania
Twain and never forget who was at the end, but
they were talking about how musicians write a lot of songs.
She said that she wrote like two hundred songs or
something before her most recent album, and she's like and
Shanaia and her started bonding over a songwriting and they
were like, it's crazy how you can write like songs

(12:17):
that you look back and you're like that was terrible,
or your look at songs would be like, oh, that
was really good, and so you're just creating a bunch
of stuff.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
There's something in that that probably propelled into this other
song that did do well.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
Absolutely for sure. I think for me creatively, I have
to do certain things that I just they're just a
part of my process. Like I definitely like exercising for
me like getting my blood flow. Like a lot of
our podcast ideas and stuff I get when I'm jumping
up and down and I'm literally like, oh, I'll be

(12:52):
talking about something like I was working at the other
day and I was like, oh, we should discuss this,
and I go to my notes and I write it down.
I think that also I heard I don't know if
this is true. This could be like la like stuff,
but they were saying that certain things that you put
in your body can affect your psychic abilities, right, I write,
it's really I don't know whatever, but I saw this

(13:14):
thing one time. I was saying that if you consume
like a lot of write and meat, it can it
brings down your like your third eye energy, Like it
kind of just levels you down. There's good, there's benefits
to eating a little bit of everything, but just this
thing was saying that it's a little bit psychic. Anyways.
Music helps me a lot. I have this I have

(13:34):
I must have something up with me because I sometimes
I don't feel anything. I will something bad might happen
to me in my day, and I need to listen
to a song to help me feel the pain more,
and then that'll inspire my art. Music inspires the way
that I write. Sometimes I want to write a piece
about my grandma, I want to write a piece about
something in general, and I can't get there. I can't

(13:55):
get the emotions or the words. So I have to
listen to the music of what I imagine being in
the background as I'm creating. Taking drives and showers help
me do that as well. The last one would be
I get a little recreational. I'm pretty sure I've talked
about it on the podcast before, but I get a
little recreational with how I do the last one. And however,

(14:16):
whatever you might do for recreation that also could help
too with some ideas. Oh also too, Sidebard, I don't
know if you ever get creative when you're falling asleep.
As you're falling.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Asleep, oh my god, it's horrible.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
Yeah, I get all the ideas.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
I'm going to do this right now. I'm like, Maya, no,
you're not doing tomorrow, but right now we're going to
do it. And it's going to be so good if
we do tomorrow, And then sometimes I'll do it the
next day and it's not good.

Speaker 1 (14:39):
Well do you do I do this thing? Where so
I call it the in between space where I'm half
asleep in half awake. I was, I'm gonna say half
a sleep with half dead, and I will hear things
and so I wake up and I'll speak them into
my voice notes and then I will create that content
or I'll write that piece, or I'll do that thing

(15:00):
when I wake up, you know. Sidebar. I am always
reading or watching or doing a lot of things. I
like information. I'm not the best at finding or verifying
these facts, by the way, so we're calling my facts
curly facts that I found on the Internet that sound
good to me because the Internet is free, and go
and verify them yourself and if they're wrong, but I

(15:21):
got them from the internet.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
Really, part time artist dot com. Don't let anxiety kill.

Speaker 1 (15:28):
Creativity I'm doing. Yeah, so there's a thing. There's a
website called solar Mental Health dot com. It could be terrible.
I don't know. It's just basically I'll look up things
to prove my point, like many people do. And this
was saying that anxiety can affect your creative mobility, like
how you move and like in terms of how you think,
and sometimes you get too anxious behind your every time

(15:50):
every episode that I talk.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
I'm not a Curly Facts fan by.

Speaker 1 (15:56):
Will literally on Anyways, anxiety goes hand in hand with it, right,
so looking at information and according to this website called
the Part Time Artist, creativity can suffer can if you
have anxiety, it can lead to paralysis, perfectionism, and scatterbrainism.
But according to Solar Mental Health, which is another website,
anxiety can actually help your creativity as well. The main

(16:19):
reasons for the connection between anxiety and creativity is imagination.
So both your anxiety will start to imagine the worst
case scenarios and they kind of go into the future
and it starts to think about all these different things,
repetitive thoughts and quote dreadful worries. But your creativity does
the same thing too, Like you'll think about the future

(16:40):
and different things. How are you going to get creative
by your outfit? How are you going to get creative
with your romance? All these different things, So they go
hand in hand, is what I'm saying. So definitely, if
you're anxious, Definitely, if you're anxious, like, just understand that
is a part of your process. Own it, lean into it,

(17:02):
but don't let it beat you as well.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
Curly becks currently.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
Singing the other thing that I wanted to mention to
one more, one more ner anything. There's this really good
ted talk by Elizabeth Gilbert who wrote Eprey Love, who
also was a movie that Julie Roberts started back in
the day, and it's really good. It's called like It's
about your creativity basically, and she was saying that back
in the day, people would they had this thing called

(17:32):
the genius, and the genius was a spirit that lived
in the walls of your studio and it was part
of like your creative process. So when you would go
into work and you would do something, your genius would
come and inspire creativity and help you create your project.
And if you release this project and it didn't do well,
you could blame your genius for being like, oh man,

(17:52):
my genius just didn't show up that day, I guess,
and my work is suffering. And somewhere along the line,
humans started to call themselves the genius. So there's to
think that they were the sole reason of how this
creativity was going to be born. So it created a
lot of anxiety and tension with the self versus the
spirits and the muses are just not with me today,

(18:13):
you know.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
Speaking of spirits and muses. I've been doing a lot
of angel and.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
Like, here we go, here we go, this shit.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
You were like, you were like you should talk about that. Anyway,
back to the interesting part portion of the podcast. I'm
just kidding. So I got this deck called Angelic light Work, Healing,
Oracle Healing, Magic and Manifestation with the arch Angels, and
I was pulling cards because I was feeling a little

(18:46):
bit like, oh, what's my next project, what's the next story?
Because I feel like I really want to tap into
like my writing more and making like shows or movies
or whatever, because I'm so digital all the time. So
I'm like, what is the story? I was watching Nacho
leve Ray and Josing the Pussycats, which is like my
two of my most favorite all time movies. Like ever, my.

Speaker 1 (19:09):
Two favorites are Last Holidays are Queen Latifa and I
think those are my talk too.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
Okay, what you got to tell your facts?

Speaker 1 (19:20):
Tell us about your angel Okay.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
Anyway, So I've been like I wanted to pull cards
to be like give me some guidance angels on, like
you know, whatever I need to do, because I'm very
like when I get creative, I'm like, I know it's
coming from source, and sources like to me connected with
like the spirit world and the universe and everything, and
like God, if you believe in God, God is a

(19:43):
woman God. It's all.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Okay, and then and then.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
These are my effects. But I pulled this card and
it was talking about technology, like use technology to support everything.
I'm like, holy shit. So basically to me, it was
just like you need to continue to make videos like
on the internet all that stuff to like get the ideas.

(20:11):
But like something that was so important that I feel
like if you have a creative block and you are
somewhat of a spiritual person, like the thing that this
card made it clear.

Speaker 1 (20:29):
She just pulled out a fucking bug, y'all when she's like,
your macs are boring age card.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
So I'm gonna mute you right now. You're muted right now,
no one can hear you. I'm gonna turned down his mic.
You can still hear him because he's loud in my mic.
But okay, So if you are feeling some type of way,
this brought me out of like a funk. It said,
I'm ready and willing to receive your healing and guidance

(20:59):
at this to fulfill my inner potential for the spiritual
benefit of all beings, as in like I want to
make sure that I fulfill my inner potential so that
I can so it can benefit all beings, like help
people heal with laughter or make people just feel better

(21:20):
or seen or heard. And I want to do that
coming from a place of like such clarity and intention.
That's not just like you know, I just want to
make something that's like whatever so I can get ahead,
Like I know my magic works when it is for
a purpose, like every single time. No, sorry, you were
go ahead.

Speaker 1 (21:40):
When you go when you create outside of yourself for others,
I think that it flows a little bit better.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
And you know, not everybody's magic works like that. You
don't have to do that in order to be successful
or to but that's just like what I I don't
know what helps me. And then the last one is
like may the energies generated here today bring spiritual benefit
to all beings. May any excess energy be sent to

(22:09):
where it can do the most good. Like that shit's
so powerful and it it brings me out of like
that creative funk to be like wait a second, like
we're spiritual beings having a human experience. Like our creativity
is like our magic, Like it's it's the thing that
I the reason why I feel like I was put

(22:29):
on this earth is to do all this shit to like,
I don't know, make people feel better in some ways.
So I have to remember and be grounded that, like,
I'm not just doing this like for shits and giggles,
but yes, for shits and giggles, but I'm doing this
for a purpose. So like, let's come back to ourselves
and let's do this. That's it all?

Speaker 1 (22:50):
Are you ready for it?

Speaker 2 (22:51):
In your copy?

Speaker 1 (22:52):
Okay? Okay? Ready for the Zodiac six shade?

Speaker 2 (22:56):
What do you have to say about that?

Speaker 1 (22:57):
I just gave you.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
I just gave you so many goodies and that's all
you got. I'm muting you again.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
All right, let's get into a zodiac section. Wait, un along,
star stars, start and glitter on today's episode of Zodiac.

(23:29):
Who is the most creative?

Speaker 2 (23:31):
Welcome to the Zodiac section?

Speaker 1 (23:34):
I like my inshow welcome to this Ooh.

Speaker 2 (23:37):
Muscle, WHOA got some muscles? Flex?

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Like?

Speaker 2 (23:43):
Actually? Flex?

Speaker 1 (23:44):
Please? No? Okay, okay, wait, which sign is the most creative?
Who do you think Virgo and Virgo burgos have a
great taste. I think maybe sages. Your mom's really creative.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
That's because my mom has an Aquarius rising a sun
said she's Sun sagittarius, and then moon Pisces.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
I was gonna say, water signs are so creative.

Speaker 2 (24:17):
Yeah, I think if you have Pisces in your chart, like,
I think you are destined to be creative. Do you
have any No.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
I don't think you did what the oh yeah you do?
What the curly I'm so sorry for you. I have
a better water sign, the scorpios. It's far superior.

Speaker 2 (24:38):
I would say, yeah, because you live in your dark
cave exactly daggers on everyone at least. I'm like, how
are you feeling? And I'm creating a whole scenario in
my head and you're.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
Like, no, but in reality, who's in their cave more?

Speaker 2 (24:54):
This is scorpios?

Speaker 1 (24:59):
Well, you dude, I guess that who else is the
most creative?

Speaker 2 (25:06):
Virgols are creative. I think areas are creative.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
I mean, look at Lady Gaga.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
She's not a Oh yeah she is m riah carey.

Speaker 1 (25:14):
Yeah, they're creative. I think fire signs take more chances
creatively for sure, and then Water signs are a little
bit more poetic with their arts, and then Earth signs
can be more like go getters, I think in the

(25:35):
way that they pursue their art, and they're a little
bit more anal about stuff. But pisces are also very
anal about stuff too, so they might be anal about
there there art work.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
Who gets frustrated easily? And I think aries, I think
vire signs do. I think aries do. And then because
we get bored, I get bored. I have so many
unfinished projects.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
So many fire signs, for sure, I'm gonna go this way.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
Well, speaking of unfinished, did you listen to the song
that I sent you? I thought so, I thought, so
we should do? Which Zodia excite is like the worst friend?
I think it might be like.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
The one that mutes Well, I concludes the zodiac section today,
may how do you plead?

Speaker 2 (26:27):
We fought the entire day? So yeah, listen. If you're blocks,
just don't do it, just don't get just don't.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
Just don't don't do it.

Speaker 2 (26:41):
Zu it for me at the end of the day,
whatever source you connect to like it doesn't have to
be any like spiritual being, but something that is of
love and light and happiness. Like connect back to yourself,
come back to yourself, what makes you the happiest. Listen
to some music, like really try to ground yourself, to

(27:03):
get back to that creative space. And sometimes it's just
okay to not be there. You can rest and chill
and that's just all you need sometimes. Yeah, so don't
put any pressure on it. Just bring in, chill out,
and listen to our podcast.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
Yeah, and.

Speaker 2 (27:23):
I'm going to mute you again. You're annoying me.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Work. If people find you on social media, you don't.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
Have anything else to say, the last type of energy
that He's.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
Like, you always have to have the final words. I
was like, let me not have the final word today.

Speaker 2 (27:41):
Okay. I love that, So I'll just mute you for
the rest of.

Speaker 1 (27:46):
The Okay, I work. If people find you on social media, well,
what do you have.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
To say about what I said? I need some validation.

Speaker 1 (27:54):
It was great, it was wonderful, it fantastic.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
You're a hater, dude, Dude, he's a hater.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
Okay. I think about it as a creative as a
facet like old where your pipes are kind of dirty
and you turn on the faucet and the water comes
out kind of drinky and like dirty. Yeah. Like I
think of your creativity as like a creative k n
out your faucet. Let that water run, get all the
the weird ideas out, and eventually the water will run
clear and you'll have something for you. Wor Can we

(28:26):
find you on social media?

Speaker 2 (28:26):
You can find me at may in the Moment, m
a ya in the Moment on all social media platforms.
What about you?

Speaker 1 (28:32):
And you can find me at the Curly v Show,
vias In Victor on Instagram at TikTok and don't.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
Forget to hit us up on our social media to
let us know what you want to listen to, what
I want us to talk about.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
Let us know if kolonics are actually worth it too,
is it something that we should consider. I think we're
going to need one after this, You're.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
Going to need one true, Okay.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
Bye.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
Make sure to hit that subscribe button to hear more
episodes every single week. The Super Secret Festie Club podcast
is a production of Sonodo in partnership with iHeartRadio's Mico
Thura podcast network.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
For more podcasts from iHeart, visit the iHeartRadio app Apple
Podcasts or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
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