Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:12):
I heard podcasts year more kiss podcasts, playlists and listen
live on the Freeheart app.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Robini Kiff now with Choreos the podcast Good Day.
Speaker 3 (00:35):
It's Robin Kiff now Choreo. It's the podcast that's halfway
through the podcast that I want to talk about the
story you found for me this morning. Problem and I
always like a bit of space news elon musk news.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
I know he's done something that actually is altering the whole,
like it's so big.
Speaker 4 (00:55):
It's the universe.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
He's changing the universe and no one knows what the
consequences of what he's done it is going to be.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
Is it the moon or something?
Speaker 4 (01:05):
Well, well, he probably could afford any So.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
We'll get to it half time.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
Robin Kim now with the podcast.
Speaker 3 (01:15):
Things are really moving along with Corey's little League hit.
Speaker 4 (01:20):
This game is handled.
Speaker 5 (01:22):
It's Corey's little Cory's little League made possible by construction Pathways.
There's never been a better time for a career in
construction search construction pathways.
Speaker 6 (01:32):
Right, I'll bring the fun back, yes, the fun and
passion back for the young kids playing footy. So we're
having a match north Side versus south Side eleven or
twelve year old on the fifteenth of June, and we're
lucky enough to have it at Davies Park.
Speaker 3 (01:47):
Yes, so that's just at West End, but it's the
South Logan Club. And fifteenth of June you mentioned as
a date, which of as of five point thirty this morning,
I've realized post is a problem.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
Yeah, it poses a massive problem within your personal life.
So we've got your lovely partner Naomi on the phone
because you've got to confess.
Speaker 3 (02:09):
Morning bub Hey, how you going good?
Speaker 2 (02:13):
Hell?
Speaker 7 (02:13):
Are you good?
Speaker 3 (02:13):
How's everything going? Because Ciena's got a second day of
daycare today, So how are you going where? Okay? Yeah,
you're feeling better about it?
Speaker 2 (02:22):
I am.
Speaker 3 (02:23):
Yeah, Now you know how we've got Now we've got
her first birthday coming up born born on the eleventh
of June, and I just was going to give Rob
and Corey the invite to the party, which is the
fifteenth of June, isn't it it is?
Speaker 4 (02:42):
Yeah? Do you know what else is happening on the
fifteenth of June? Naomi?
Speaker 8 (02:47):
I did start to listen once you said you have.
Speaker 9 (02:53):
I do.
Speaker 3 (02:54):
Yeah, Corey's little league, We've got the big games on
it at South slogan where so I think which is
which I've got to be there by mid day?
Speaker 8 (03:08):
But isn't it Cory's Yeah, no, it's not.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
And the thing that's really interesting, Naomi is this has
been in our diaries for over two weeks, and every
single time we've spoken to someone like some of the
great people that are helping with Cory's little league, like Breatho,
who is helping us actually put on the big day,
he's been really clear about what dated is.
Speaker 4 (03:39):
Have a listen.
Speaker 10 (03:41):
On the fifth date of June, the fifth dth of June,
the fifth st of June.
Speaker 3 (03:49):
So, now, in my defense, I normally don't have work
things on a Sunday, so I just didn't put it
together that we had Sianna's birthday book for the same day.
Now we did. I know you did a great job
with those invites that I saw went out yesterday. Can
we change the day?
Speaker 4 (04:09):
I guess yes, Oh you deal.
Speaker 3 (04:13):
I know it's not ideal, but and I know we've
got a conflicting birthday on the Saturday, which is why
we had to make it the Sunday.
Speaker 6 (04:20):
Yeah, so is the weekend before possible?
Speaker 3 (04:23):
Could we do the weekend before like the seventh on Saturday,
the seventh of June.
Speaker 1 (04:28):
No, No, it's too weird about celebrating before. And we
do have another first birthday.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
Oh I have another birthday? What about could we started earlier?
The party started at nine, so I can be out.
Speaker 4 (04:38):
By twelve, see, and it will be asleep.
Speaker 3 (04:44):
At nine.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
Okay, the twenty first.
Speaker 4 (04:48):
It's a long way from ten days.
Speaker 3 (04:51):
But she won't know.
Speaker 4 (04:53):
Yeah, we would just do it without ye are you
really happy to do that?
Speaker 5 (05:01):
No?
Speaker 3 (05:02):
Well, like if I left at twelve or I can
everyone be out the door around then, wouldn't they?
Speaker 8 (05:06):
Yeah, that's fine, you can go at twelve.
Speaker 1 (05:08):
Okay, but hang on as well. Mind you, you're not
surprised at this at all. He won't be helping with
any of the cleanup.
Speaker 8 (05:15):
Or that's okay, we'll have our family around.
Speaker 3 (05:19):
Yeah, I told you all hands on deck.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
Yeah, how come you're so nice about this?
Speaker 8 (05:28):
Because I know, Kip White.
Speaker 3 (05:32):
When you said you when you said your expectations at
a certain level, you could ever be disappointed.
Speaker 4 (05:37):
They have to be low, low, low low lows when
you has more capacity than your partner.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
Yeah, sorry, I.
Speaker 8 (05:50):
Mean it's kind of annoying, but we don't have to
change the date.
Speaker 3 (05:56):
Okay, we still do it.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
We can work around it.
Speaker 5 (05:59):
Yes, it would have been I think more irritating if
we had to then the next day after I sent
out the invites.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
Yeah, another text.
Speaker 4 (06:07):
But it's okay because everyone knows kid.
Speaker 3 (06:10):
Yeah, well it's all worked out great.
Speaker 8 (06:14):
Yeah, And like you say, you're going to leave it twelve,
but you'll probably just leave at twelve thirty.
Speaker 9 (06:18):
Anyway, is that he's always like here five seconds before
the start?
Speaker 5 (06:25):
You know?
Speaker 4 (06:25):
I look, it stuns me and frustrates me.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
You have the patience of a saint, because I else
am I to do? Oh?
Speaker 4 (06:36):
Mate, I would have lost it time ago?
Speaker 3 (06:40):
All right, thanks babe, that's okaybe rog now podcast if
you've just joined us on a bit of trouble because Siena,
my little girl, is about to have her first birthday.
Turns out I did not inform Naomi of the date
(07:01):
of Corey's Little League Big game, which is on the
very same day fifteen.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
Yeah. I mean this is the same man who actually
didn't know the date of his daughter's booth or less
than three months ago.
Speaker 3 (07:12):
One type.
Speaker 4 (07:12):
Yeah, you couldn't do it, And now you've got that
to memory.
Speaker 3 (07:17):
Do you remember what Seinfeld had to say about first
birthdays you.
Speaker 11 (07:21):
Think about birthday parties?
Speaker 12 (07:22):
Is that the first birthday party you have and the
last birthday party you have are actually quite similar.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
You know, you just kind of sit there.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
You're the least excited person at the party.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
Do you even really realize that there is a party?
And this is what I'm saying, you don't even know
there's a party. She won't know if we move it
to another day or don't do it at all.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
Okay, And a lot of people will agree with you.
I know that to be the case. Melissa of Burpengary.
I think you are one of them.
Speaker 11 (07:47):
Yeah, well, as a mom of four, doesn't really matter
until a fourth birthday and they have memories, right, yes, one, two, three,
do your own schedule, don't even if you don't want it.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
Even if you don't want to. Yeah, I mean, she's
a lot of fun around the house now. She's great,
But her favorite food is sunglasses, you know what I mean.
She don't know what's going on.
Speaker 1 (08:03):
How would Rathie feel about you not being there for
Sienna's first birthday?
Speaker 3 (08:07):
Heah, yeah, he wouldn't like it.
Speaker 4 (08:09):
Don't tell him than you.
Speaker 8 (08:12):
Would notice.
Speaker 4 (08:13):
Thank you, Amanda of Baronia Heights. What do you think
about first birthdays?
Speaker 13 (08:17):
Yeah?
Speaker 14 (08:18):
Hi, Look, both birthdays I think are really important. And
it's not for the child because they won't know or
remember or even understand what's going on. It's for the family.
It's for the mum and the dad and the extended family.
To get through that first year is very important and
how stressful it is for that first twelve months. True,
and that's what you're celebrating, is getting through that first year.
They're making their first birthday. I think it's important for
(08:40):
the family, not for the kids. They won't know.
Speaker 3 (08:42):
That's what people are getting on it. But like it's
a ten am part. Yet you've got to have alcohol.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
We made it and you haven't had the easiest of times.
And the one person who's possibly done it the toughest
is the one person you've just let down.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
And I'm not talking about your daughter.
Speaker 3 (08:59):
And it sounds worse when you say like that, thank you,
What do you reckon?
Speaker 8 (09:06):
It's not important to the child.
Speaker 9 (09:08):
At all, thank you.
Speaker 7 (09:09):
Important to Naomi.
Speaker 3 (09:12):
Is full stop?
Speaker 9 (09:15):
Drop.
Speaker 4 (09:16):
Okay, that's what happened to a happy life?
Speaker 3 (09:20):
Happy?
Speaker 4 (09:20):
Oh that's right, you're not married.
Speaker 3 (09:22):
Not married.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
It's right, it doesn't matter.
Speaker 3 (09:25):
She's important. Yes, you're on my side.
Speaker 8 (09:29):
Wait no, no, I'm not on your side.
Speaker 14 (09:31):
Naomi's got to have the lower.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
Expectation, low expectations that has been made, lower expectations of
what men do.
Speaker 14 (09:43):
Just lower.
Speaker 8 (09:45):
Just takes ninth and tenth birthday. I'm more important to
the father.
Speaker 2 (09:49):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 6 (09:50):
I'm looking the eighteenth and the twenty first.
Speaker 3 (09:52):
I've got a while yet. Give your liver a chance,
but you're going to hang.
Speaker 2 (09:57):
In there now.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
With the podcast, I got into trouble and I thought
I should share this with you. But it does give you,
guys an opportunity to top us. So next weekend down
on the Gold Coast, it went and did the Corumban
Wildlife Sanctuaries rope course a right, which is the funnest thing,
(10:19):
like if you want to do a family bonding session.
We did it with Olivia, my boyfriend and his two
adult kids and girlfriends and so on. But it really
physically pushes you. You're up doing rope challenges. It's a
bit like Ninja Warrior, but not nearly as hard because
eight years and over can do it right. But then
the next day so that was on the Sunday. The Monday,
(10:42):
I was a little bit sore the Tuesday. Oh my gosh,
I was winging so much, like it was taking me,
you know, ten minutes to get out of the cash.
Speaker 13 (10:51):
Well.
Speaker 3 (10:51):
I guess it's muscles that you've probably never.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
Used, oh, because you know, you get stretched, you're trying
to leap across, and then it pulls your.
Speaker 4 (10:58):
Groin, and I was like, but it's so fun, It's
so fun.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
It's so fun.
Speaker 4 (11:02):
Anyway, so I'm sitting in bed whinging.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
About having to get up and come to work, and
then my boyfriend Olivia is going, I don't know what
you talking about it, and I went, okay, mate, will you
tell us how sore you've ever been?
Speaker 15 (11:14):
In the military. So we sort of were parachuted in
a south of Corsica, in a place called Porto Vecio,
and then we had to come all the way across.
It's about one hundred and twenty k in three days,
and we're obviously carrying about forty kilogram of backpack.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
So how come you were so physically Was it just
that you were running the whole time or that you
were sleeping on the ground.
Speaker 15 (11:39):
Like yeah, going up and down all the time. I
mean the Corsica is like a massive rock and you're
constantly going up and downhill. You have to climb, you
have to go through a bush which are very tense
and you get scrashed all over the place. You have
to carry all your equipment with you.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
Right right, Yeah, goodness. I got to carry a lot
one hundred and twenty k's with a forty k pack
over three days a marathon a day for three days
into the pack through a bush climbate.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Okay, you can win, But they did want to know
from you, guys, when was the sorest you've ever been
in your life?
Speaker 2 (12:14):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (12:16):
Well, one army camp.
Speaker 3 (12:17):
I remember.
Speaker 6 (12:18):
We had like those groups of ten and each group
had to carry like a six meter gum tree stump,
so like you know, pretty like a decent sized gum tree,
and it was up a whole mountain that was like
very it was very inclined, and it took us about
five hours, like dragon carrying while you're also carrying like
(12:39):
Jerry Kir's extra gear like as an army camp.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
And as a footballer.
Speaker 3 (12:44):
Yeah, that was.
Speaker 6 (12:45):
That was as a training session, like a three day camp.
So after that, pretty sore but I played a game
before he really crooked once. I didn't realize what it
was until two days later. I ended up in hoschool
get my appendix out, and I played with pendicitis. I
felt like I was hit by a truck. Before the game.
I kept saying, I'm like, I don't feel good. I said,
I feel like I'm like something's broken inside me, like yeah,
(13:08):
And it turns out I was playing with the appendicidis,
So oh yeah, that was probably the saurus i'd been
just with, like take an injury, sort of out of
the out of the equation, like just that sort of stuff.
Speaker 4 (13:20):
Yeah, okay, thirteen one six five if you want to
beat that one.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
Sure, I don't want to tell my story.
Speaker 4 (13:27):
Why did you stub your toe?
Speaker 3 (13:31):
When I did a house build, I put in all
the speakers and stuff, like, I did all the audio
all myself, and so I had to drill through all
the walls, many many walls to run cables and stuff
like over two days and just using that same drilling action.
Speaker 2 (13:48):
Like RSI my forum. It was really painful.
Speaker 4 (13:54):
I had to go and get like, okay, one of
us has done a one hundred cakes with the Kilogrim backpack.
One of us is played a game.
Speaker 3 (14:09):
Of football with it.
Speaker 4 (14:10):
Bust bed.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
I used a cordless drill for two days.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
He really took me down here.
Speaker 3 (14:19):
Now, when did the high Ropes course at Corumba Sanctuary
and was the sorest you've ever been.
Speaker 4 (14:28):
Ever been in my life?
Speaker 1 (14:29):
And I've run a marathon like you think those kind
of things would make it almost impossible, but I highly
recommend it to anyone.
Speaker 4 (14:36):
We should do it. Actually, that's it's not I know,
like but it's hard.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
And they do have two black diamond runs that Olivier's
son said actually got through the whole thing and made
it onto the Wall of Fame like that.
Speaker 3 (14:51):
That is ninja worry like a challenge.
Speaker 4 (14:55):
So much upper body straight. It's just fun okay, And
I couldn't walk afterwards.
Speaker 3 (15:02):
Brittany out of gym, boomber. What's the sorest you've ever been? Brittany.
Speaker 7 (15:06):
So I ended up coming up a horse and ended
up having to have final surgery last year.
Speaker 8 (15:12):
What did you have to get?
Speaker 3 (15:14):
You've got disc used something.
Speaker 7 (15:17):
So I had to have a microdissectomy and a replacement.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
Oh man, that big has that dumb and you're back
on the horse like as you.
Speaker 7 (15:26):
Yeah, so I started walking without a wirly walker at
about May last year and then started exercise physiology. And yeah,
the past month or so, I've just gently started riding
again and now I'm at the gym like five to
six days a week.
Speaker 4 (15:42):
Really, yeah, tell me the pain, Tell me the pain.
Speaker 7 (15:45):
It was excruciating. So I was until the surgery. I
was pretty much bed ridden. And then we tried nerve blocks,
we tried cortisone injections. None of that worked, and the
surgery was kind of the last resort. And then yeah,
it was about a fourteen week recovery period after that
and then slowly having to build the strengths up to
(16:05):
walk further and further each time. And yeah, it was
very debilitating, Brittany.
Speaker 1 (16:10):
They say you're supposed to get back on the horse,
but yeah, after doing that.
Speaker 3 (16:15):
I'm stunned that. I must love horse Ridinghh.
Speaker 7 (16:19):
Yeah, I trust my own horse. I'm not riding anyone
else's at the moment.
Speaker 3 (16:23):
Okay, well you're extraordinary. Yeah, thanks Brittany.
Speaker 4 (16:28):
Molly, if you switch, HI goes, how we going good?
Speaker 1 (16:32):
The most in pain you've ever been? When's your body
hurts so much?
Speaker 9 (16:36):
So?
Speaker 3 (16:37):
My dad.
Speaker 8 (16:38):
This is actually about my dad back in two thousand
and three. You guys may have heard of it, but
in iss which he was slapping gas bottles and his
car exploded around him. So he sustained the third degree
burns to seventy percent of his.
Speaker 4 (16:56):
Body, no way, and he lived.
Speaker 14 (16:59):
He lived. He's sixty two this year in August.
Speaker 8 (17:02):
And he's amazing. You can barely tell because he ended
up keeping. They said that he was going to lose
all of his like say, cartilage, like his nose, his ears,
but he kept absolutely everything. But yes, he was a
very sore man. My mum was doing dressings every day
and the poor thing, oh my goodness, because obviously they
(17:23):
didn't make dressings how they are today and.
Speaker 14 (17:26):
It would rip and oh oh my god, it was.
Speaker 8 (17:29):
Yeah, so every single morning and afternoon she'd have to
have to change change the dressings.
Speaker 4 (17:35):
Then, yes, very.
Speaker 8 (17:38):
Very sore man.
Speaker 4 (17:39):
He was growing an organ.
Speaker 9 (17:41):
Yeah, yeah, he had skin graft that he was doing
as well, Like he got a skin graff from his
leg because obviously the most sustained damage was his left
side because it came they were in the boots, so
the flames went through the console side.
Speaker 8 (17:57):
So went through the middle.
Speaker 4 (17:59):
Of the car.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
Terrifying.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
It's extraordinary, and Neil, I've reached our south. The most
pain you've ever been in.
Speaker 13 (18:07):
Oh, back in ninety two, I had a slight ding
girl with a car on a motorbike and come off
and got sort of dragged down the road and the
leather let go. Thumb came off, kneecaps, kneecaps were torn
off and sodd and yeah, broken wrists, shoulders and all
of that.
Speaker 6 (18:25):
And that's really a slight angle.
Speaker 4 (18:27):
No, yeah, yeah, I love you.
Speaker 3 (18:30):
Just casually thumb came off off, knee cap came off.
Speaker 4 (18:34):
How many injuries did you have?
Speaker 13 (18:36):
Like quarter, a few, quite a few. I was lucky
I was wearing a full face helmet. Otherwise it wouldn't
have a jaw because it was the helmet was ground down,
right down.
Speaker 3 (18:46):
So it was quite painful and you're okay, You're okay.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 13 (18:51):
Twelve forty months of rehab and it actually actually made
me changed my career path and it gave me of
the music is when you're young and a bit silly,
you're out silly things. It did, Yes, everything's.
Speaker 15 (19:05):
There, everything's work fine.
Speaker 4 (19:07):
So they sewed back on your thumb.
Speaker 13 (19:09):
They did three years of microsurgery. That attendon stretch reattached
the tendons on the on the knee caps to the
to to your leg bones there and all of that.
And yeah, it couldn't walk for quite a while.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
Have you ever have you ever used like a cordless
drill for two days straight, because at the end of
that you get, like RSI, the pain in your forearm,
Neil is incredible. It's like you can only just sleep
with pan off.
Speaker 13 (19:39):
Maybe it just like one or yeah, yeah, it's pretty
much the same.
Speaker 3 (19:43):
Yeah, you guy now.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
Roding again now with Gio podcast.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
Halfway through the podcast, So this story with earline mask
dates back to November twenty twenty three when you sent
there what are the rockets up to space? It was
the second one and it exploded in the I think
it was the stratosphere. And they're suggesting that the explosion
(20:17):
was so mash massive that it created a hole. Hey, yeah,
because it's never really happened before.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
So yeah, we've got a hole in this atmospheric layer.
Yeah that they don't know whether it's going to repair itself,
what it could do, Like, that's scary.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
The ionosphere it ripped through the iono sphere, the electrically
charged layer of the atmosphere that plays key role in
radio communication and satellite signals, got in the researchers. It's
the first time a hole in the iono sphere has
been caused by a catastrophic event like a rocket explosion.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
So is that communication then, So things like their satellites
s beaming down information.
Speaker 4 (20:54):
Is so bad at the moment.
Speaker 3 (20:57):
Anyone. And remember, you know he's got all those satellites
up there now for his insect whatever that one what's
someone called star starlink starlink, so it would affect his
own starlink. One would think, you know what, I find
fascinating though. That rocket, the one that exploded the atmosphere,
how high up do you reckon? It was just out
of guess.
Speaker 4 (21:16):
One hundred kilometers?
Speaker 3 (21:19):
Corey, what's your guess? Five hundred You were closest rob
ninety three miles. Ninety three miles. That's it. And that's
that's when you hit the ionosphere. And then all of
a sudden you're up in space.
Speaker 4 (21:30):
Like you think how far it is.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
To travel, like that's that's a fair way, but it's
only yeah, it's only really Brisbane in the Gold Coast
or a bit fair and maybe one point six Sunshine
Coast to Gold Coast. You'd say I was.
Speaker 6 (21:42):
One point six, So it's about one hundred and one
hundred and sixty, Yeah, one hundred here to the Sunny Coast.
Speaker 3 (21:48):
Yeah, Sunny Coast to Gold Coast. Basically that's the distance. Yeah,
that's that's but it's not that far. What do you
think about it?
Speaker 6 (21:55):
Like you think meters on the ground in far Then
when you jump off a ten meter platform, I think
you've fallen from.
Speaker 3 (22:00):
I know that it's on the clouds. I know that
it's up, but it just feels like space is so
far away. But then yet we'll fly to America from Australia.
That's a thirteen hour flight, right, that's thousands of kilometers.
You're only going to go one hundred and fifty k's
up bom you're in space.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
But don't you remember when they were trying to talk
about actually doing travels like space travel or for airline passengers,
so that you go up and then you come down.
So you go up for twenty minutes in Australia and
then come down in England and saves rather than a
twenty four hour trip.
Speaker 4 (22:31):
You do it in three hours.
Speaker 3 (22:33):
So you just go out the earth spins, you come
down that.
Speaker 6 (22:37):
Then there's spent a little bit and it's eve. Now
we go.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
But that will be surely that's the future. If they
find a way to get us up there. The flat
earths won't like it doing that.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
Some what about flat earth stuff recently, and they said, now, seriously,
the only thing you have to say to a flat
earther is that if it was flat and there was
a point, wouldn't that become a tourist attraction?
Speaker 9 (23:04):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (23:05):
Yeah, I mean, you know, you've got to Niagara Falls.
Speaker 2 (23:08):
You maybe they go to their Grand can.
Speaker 4 (23:10):
Honey, I'm going to the corner.
Speaker 3 (23:12):
I'm going to see the edge. I'm going to see
the edge because there's seven like, there's thousands of cruise
ships at all times in our seas. Surely one of
them would be falling off if there's an edge, you
would think.
Speaker 6 (23:23):
So yeah, like you know, when you're in a big
storm you lose your radar, you saying, yeah, the edge
of the somewhere around here, we're pausing bingo tonight, we're
to go off the edge.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
Of the Maybe the argument would be from a flat earther,
they went off.
Speaker 4 (23:41):
And we're never seen again. The fact that no one
knows where.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
That's right, Yeah, surely you get people waiting at the dock.
Shouldn't Nan be home?
Speaker 2 (23:49):
Yea from the and c now with Coy the podcast.
Speaker 3 (23:59):
But Corey, yeah, you've asked to bring people into the
circle of trust.
Speaker 16 (24:05):
It's a sacle of trust and it moves side.
Speaker 3 (24:16):
So this is where you're about to tell a story.
Yes it's on air, but you're expecting that the people
that hear the story don't pass it on to family
members or anyone that might be interested, or the career mouth,
all the authorities, yes, all the courier mouth.
Speaker 6 (24:30):
That's that's okay.
Speaker 3 (24:32):
So tell you every everyone listening, you're in the circle
of trusty, okay.
Speaker 6 (24:36):
Well, so you know how Huxy does that little footy
little tops thing, you know for three to five it's great.
I love it.
Speaker 3 (24:43):
Are they barefoot when they play?
Speaker 6 (24:45):
I know that they got to a shoe we'll not
have to, but some kids wear shoes and I bought
Hucksy some little boots. They're play too big, but at
least the last him a couple of years and at
the moment he's just gone through the stage where everything's
hurts and he's winging about anything. But from when he
was young, I started doing this thing where I just
rub stuff. It'll fix it.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
You be right next.
Speaker 6 (25:08):
Oh yeah, he walks out for everything.
Speaker 3 (25:10):
My arm, you just give it a round.
Speaker 6 (25:11):
Like someone bumps in it. Oh my shoulder, saw, So
just rub it and offigure Ye all good. Now he
walks over and watch. I said, you just rub me, yeah,
on my head. I'm like, yep, no worries, and it works.
Speaker 3 (25:24):
Yeah, he does.
Speaker 6 (25:25):
He did it a couple of times in the little
session they do like before this, and small things like
they said he tripped his own feet and fell on
the ground and he said if his hand was sore.
And then I was taking to my mate at the time,
so I wasn't watching what he was doing. And they're
like tackling that stuff, and he's walked over and goes,
(25:46):
oh damn, my head, my head saw Like.
Speaker 3 (25:48):
I was like, what happened?
Speaker 2 (25:49):
He said, the ball?
Speaker 6 (25:51):
I was like, because I was just lobbing the ball
so straight, the ball just would have like he would
have hit his own hands and hit himself in the head.
And I like, mate, you're right rubbed it and I said,
off you go, and no, no, I.
Speaker 3 (26:01):
Was really sure it hurts.
Speaker 6 (26:03):
I'm like, it's all good, mate, you'd be fine. It's
not going to eat you that much. And then the
lady that's like helping out, she goes, no, no, no,
straight ball smack him in the head. What do you
mean She said, no, it's like from.
Speaker 3 (26:14):
Way over there, like from a different And then my
mate goes, you're an asshole.
Speaker 6 (26:21):
It's actually really hurting and you're just trying to tell
the move on.
Speaker 3 (26:25):
It'll be right, I'll rub off your gap.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
I actually felt bad.
Speaker 6 (26:27):
Because you could see the mark on his head. I'm like, okay,
that would have probably.
Speaker 2 (26:33):
I didn't tell tis.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
No, I don't need to.
Speaker 6 (26:37):
It was fine when he got thirteen.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
Thirty one six five is our number. If you would
like to join us at the Circle of Trust. Tell
us the story. We won't judge, we won't tell anyone.
You just got to tell us. Thirty one A six five.
Speaker 2 (26:51):
Rod now with Correos the podcast.
Speaker 16 (26:55):
Free It's a sacle of trust.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
And it moves and side.
Speaker 3 (27:08):
So you're joining us at the Circle of Trust. Team
one O six five is our number. We promised not
to share your story with the Kuria Mala or anyone else.
Speaker 4 (27:15):
No, they'll possibly pick it up on their own. But
we want to know about bad.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
Bad parenting moments. Amy of GIMPI, what happened.
Speaker 11 (27:24):
My son, you know, who was around the seven to
eight year mark and exaggerating about things. And one morning
he said, oh, mommy, my my legs hurt. I can't
go to school, which is you know you like to
do that. I said, it's okay, it's okay, come on.
Speaker 7 (27:39):
Let's go to school.
Speaker 8 (27:40):
Go to school.
Speaker 14 (27:41):
This went on for a couple of weeks.
Speaker 11 (27:42):
Every now and again, you know, he'd say this, and
then his grandmother she called an ambulance.
Speaker 3 (27:49):
Oh yeah, over reacting.
Speaker 11 (27:51):
Yeah yeah, and both came and oh yeah, I don't
think you know, is it okay? Now, yeah, it's okay.
Another time I really thought something was wrong, so I
rang the ambulance and he said, oh, there is a
virus going around that's affecting the joints. So I took
him to hospital and yeah.
Speaker 8 (28:11):
He had this virus.
Speaker 11 (28:13):
So that that was about three or four.
Speaker 3 (28:16):
Three or four weeks later, I finally got the ember.
Speaker 4 (28:20):
It's okay, circle, that's fine.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
Rebecca of logan, Oh no, babe, what happened in the
year twelve exams?
Speaker 7 (28:29):
My parents sent me to school being raised by a
theater nurs you know, topping up but a cup You're
not dead or pick my appendix ruptured.
Speaker 3 (28:37):
During the exam were I just thought.
Speaker 14 (28:40):
I was nervous because I wasn't eating, bobbiting that type
of thing, you know, pressure of year twelve And yeah, yes,
it's to say, I gotta I got a B plus.
Speaker 11 (28:50):
You know, for sympathy even.
Speaker 7 (28:53):
I recommend doing that.
Speaker 1 (28:56):
That must have been excruciating. You could have died, mate.
Speaker 11 (29:00):
Oh exactly.
Speaker 7 (29:01):
But I wasn't dead, so I still.
Speaker 3 (29:03):
Had to go to it. When your mum's the theaters.
I saw an accident today was dangling off stope. Fine,
you can go to school. Oh man, that's rough.
Speaker 8 (29:22):
That's rough.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
Now, podcast, Well, we've all got one.
Speaker 1 (29:30):
It's a brain, and there's lots of myths and facts
around the brain. Scientists are still it's one of the
least studied things in the human body and least understood
thing in the human body. So there is a myth
that we only use ten percent of our brain.
Speaker 3 (29:44):
That's not true.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
We can actually use one hundred percent of our brain,
but we have to actively work on the things that
we don't do as well.
Speaker 3 (29:53):
I always thought that was that was a phase because
I remember they used to say Einstein only used ten
percent of his brain. Well that because he was so, but.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
Then probably emotionally he wasn't. I don't know, I never
knew Einstein. But if to be a kind of fully
functioning human, you use all parts of your brain, and
different parts of your brain have different uses. Right, right,
So we were talking about the left and right brain, right,
and you kind of had a crack, yes, and you
were kind of right, Okay. So I got this information
(30:22):
from this extraordinary book called The Body Keeps the Score
and it's this author by the name of Vessel van
der Kolk, who is a psychiatrist and psychologist, and this
is all science based.
Speaker 4 (30:35):
So this is his definition of the left and right brain.
Speaker 12 (30:39):
We now know that the two halves of the brain
do speak different languages. The right is intuitive, emotional, visual, spatial,
and tactual, and the left is linguistic, sequential, and analytical. Well,
the left half of the brain does all the talking.
The right half of the brain carries the music of experience.
The left brain remembers, facts, statistics, and the vocabulary of events.
(31:06):
We called on it to explain our experiences and put
them in order. The right brain stories memories of sound, touch, smell,
and the emotions there.
Speaker 3 (31:15):
So I got it backwards.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
But yeah, but you were right.
Speaker 6 (31:18):
I think mine works together. You're left and you're right
everything and never you know, yeah, I don't think mine
works probably.
Speaker 3 (31:27):
So the left side is like your your accountant and
your english, and your right side is your arts and music.
Speaker 4 (31:33):
Yeah stuff.
Speaker 1 (31:34):
Yeah, and so it's really interesting as you and what
this book explains is as a child and you grow
up based on your experiences in the world that we
live in, one side is developed more astutely than the other.
So I am clearly a right brain person. The motive,
you know, essentially senses sensors.
Speaker 4 (31:58):
Because they can't find the worst.
Speaker 3 (32:00):
The left side is of the language and.
Speaker 4 (32:02):
The logistics and that sort of stuff.
Speaker 3 (32:04):
What's interesting. Example, Hey, what do you I think I would?
I think I'm a bit of both because I definitely
have like a musical side to me, but then I
am definitely yeah, I'm probably more left because I like
to have things organized.
Speaker 4 (32:18):
But you're very sensitive too, and that's right brain.
Speaker 3 (32:22):
Got a fair bit of both.
Speaker 6 (32:25):
Is there a middle part?
Speaker 3 (32:27):
You just can't get the best of.
Speaker 8 (32:30):
The middle bit?
Speaker 3 (32:31):
You're all you're all spine.
Speaker 4 (32:35):
Really good Years.
Speaker 1 (32:39):
Explains is that you can actually train your brain to
be better. And certainly things like trauma and stuff and
grief and things that happen to people that alters the
brain's movement and capacity to deal with things. But that's
why you go and see psychologists and psychiatrists. You go
and deal with those memories and you shift them around
in your brain. When you actually start to learn about it,
(33:01):
it's fascinating.
Speaker 4 (33:02):
So you really have no excuse for being so.
Speaker 3 (33:06):
Useful because I could train it. Yeah, okay, you.
Speaker 4 (33:13):
Think I'm being harsh. After eight o'clock, Oh yes, something has.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
Happening problem and Kip is going to be it's a
good day. So much, I've got so much stress. What's
happening on the show today, But we'll get to it.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
After eight you are Robin and Kid Now with the
podcast hit This scham is handled.
Speaker 5 (33:40):
It's Correy's Little, Corey's Little made possible by construction Pathways.
There's never been a better time for a career in construction, search,
construction pathways.
Speaker 3 (33:51):
Around this time last week, Corey had this idea of
putting together a little league.
Speaker 1 (33:55):
Yeah and yeah, it was.
Speaker 6 (33:57):
Just about bringing the fun and the passion back in
the game for kids under twelve. We're actually going to
have an under twelve feature match north Side versus Outside
on Sunday on June fifteen at Davis Park And if
the kids want to join, they can register now kiss No.
Seven three dot com dot au. But I'm actually super
lucky that I've had some people help, you know, come
together to help me put all this together. Yes, and
(34:20):
you know, why wouldn't it start with one of my
good mates, Matt Dillett from the Fog, the former Origin Greats,
And yeah, he caught in the other day to help
us out.
Speaker 15 (34:28):
Yeah, Fogs.
Speaker 17 (34:29):
We sort of work on four four pillars here at Fogs.
The last pillar that we work on is we support
grassroots rugby League. So the way we can sort of
help as well as supporting through a glassrooms rugby league.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
Good great. So he can help us out with some
of the stuff because there's a lot just to put
on a game.
Speaker 4 (34:45):
So what do you want Matt to do?
Speaker 6 (34:46):
The rest of it would be good? You know what
I thought of the main the main one. I thought
of the idea. Without my brain doing all that work,
I'll tell you what, it wouldn't be happening.
Speaker 3 (35:00):
It's very cool.
Speaker 6 (35:02):
But I also thought, you know, for for me, people
have ups and downs in life and this guy really
helped me. And I always say he's my career. The
CEO of South Magpie, Steve Bretherdon, you know, he's come
to come to my help again and obviously offered up
Davies Park.
Speaker 10 (35:20):
We go win the Davies on the fifteenth of June,
which is a Sunday, so it'll be a very big
day for us here at the club, and I thought,
no better chance. And to give those kids that that
do sign up and experience of playing before our first
grade and then playing again at halftime of our first.
Speaker 3 (35:37):
Grade game in a massive day, that is extraordinary.
Speaker 4 (35:40):
But the Bronco is going to be there, like there's
a Broncos activation. That's how huge.
Speaker 6 (35:44):
And it's the old Boys day for Souse, so's it's
going to be huge. And yeah, the whole game itself
and this one surprised me even We've even got a
sponsor and that's thanks to Seawan Kamiski from Construction Pathways,
and Yeah, I couldn't believe it's.
Speaker 13 (36:01):
Really aligned to what we're doing and trying to get
the message out about how fun and how interactive the
construction industry is.
Speaker 2 (36:08):
So yeah, we're keen.
Speaker 14 (36:09):
We're keen to come on board if you'll have us
as a sponsor.
Speaker 6 (36:13):
Okay, believe that's going to be a great day running
kid Now Choreos, the podcast