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May 12, 2025 9 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:12):
I heard podcasts year more kiss podcasts, playlists and listen
live on the free heart app Robin and Kids Now
with Correos 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 last

(00:33):
weekend down on the Gold Coast, it went and did
the Corumban Wildlife Sanctuaries rope course a right, which is
the funnest thing, 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.

(00:55):
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, I was a little bit sore. The Tuesday,
Oh my gosh, I was whinging so much, like it
was taking me, you know, ten minutes to get out
of there.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
Well, I guess it's muscles that you've probably never used.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
Oh, because you know, you get stretched, you're trying to
leap across and then it pulls your groin, and I
was like, but it's so fun.

Speaker 2 (01:24):
It's so fun.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
It's so fun. Anyway, so I'm sitting in bed winging
about having to get up and come to work, and
then my boyfriend Olivia is going, I don't know what
you're talking about, and I went, okay, mate, will you
tell us how sore you've.

Speaker 3 (01:36):
Ever been in the military. So we sort of were
parachuted in a south of Corsica, in a place called
Porto Vecuo, 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 or backpack.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
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 3 (02:02):
Like, yeah, going up and down all the time. I mean,
the Corsic is like a massive rock and you're constantly
going up and downhill. You have to claim, 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, right right, Yeah, goodness.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
I got to carry at one hundred.

Speaker 4 (02:24):
And twenty k's with a forty k pack over three
days a marathon a day for three days.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Isn't the pack through a bush climate?

Speaker 1 (02:32):
Okay, you can read, but they did want to know
from you, guys, when was the sorest you've ever been
in your life?

Speaker 5 (02:37):
Oh? Well, one army camp. I remember. 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

(02:59):
dragon carrying while you're also carrying like Jerry Kn's extra gear,
like as an army.

Speaker 1 (03:05):
Camp, and you did that as a footballer.

Speaker 5 (03:07):
Yeah, that was 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 we'll get my appendix out and I
played with the 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

(03:28):
like something's broken inside me. Like yeah, and it turns out, yeah,
I was playing with the appendicitis so oh yeah, that
was probably the saurus i'd been just with. I take
an injury sort of out of the out of the equation,
like just that sort of stuff.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
Yeah, okay, thirteen six five. If you want to beat
that one, saw, I don't want.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
To tell my story.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Did you stub your toe?

Speaker 2 (03:54):
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 wars to run cables and stuff
like over two days and just using that same drilling action.

Speaker 4 (04:11):
Like RSI my forearm.

Speaker 6 (04:15):
It was really.

Speaker 4 (04:17):
I had to go and get like okay.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
One of us has done a hundreds with the kilogram backpack.
One of us is played a game of football within
a bustard panda.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
I used a cordless drill for two days.

Speaker 7 (04:38):
He really took me down.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
Brittany out of Jim Boomber.

Speaker 4 (04:43):
What's the sores you've ever been, Brittany?

Speaker 8 (04:46):
Uh?

Speaker 9 (04:46):
So I ended up coming up a horse and ended
up having to have spinal surgery last year.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Oh what you.

Speaker 5 (04:55):
Disc fused or something?

Speaker 9 (04:57):
So I had to have a microdissectomy and a replacement.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Oh man, that sounds.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
Big, has that dumb? And you're back on the horse
like assual?

Speaker 9 (05:06):
Yes, So I started walking without a wily walker at
a 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 1 (05:23):
Really tell me the pain, Tell me the pain.

Speaker 9 (05:25):
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

(05:46):
walk further and further each time. And yeah, it was
very debilitating.

Speaker 1 (05:50):
Britney, they say you're supposed to get back on the horse,
but yeah, after doing that.

Speaker 4 (05:56):
I'm stunned that.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
I must love horse riding.

Speaker 9 (05:58):
Huh. Yeah, I trust my own horse. I'm not riding
anyone else's at the moment.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
Okay, well you're extraordinary. Yeah, thanks Brittany, molly if you switched.

Speaker 7 (06:10):
Hi, guys, how are we going good?

Speaker 1 (06:12):
The most in pain you've ever been? When's your body
hurts so much? So my dad.

Speaker 8 (06:18):
This is actually about my dad back in two thousand
and three. You guys may have heard of it, but
in its which he was slapping gas bottles and his
car exploded around him. So he sustained that third.

Speaker 7 (06:34):
Degree burns to seventy percent of.

Speaker 1 (06:36):
His body, no way, and he lived.

Speaker 7 (06:39):
He lived. He's sixty two this year in August, and
he's amazing. You can barely tell because he ended up keeping.
They said that he was going to lose all of
his facial 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,

(07:01):
oh my goodness, because obviously they didn't make dressings how
they are today, and it would rip them.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
Oh oh my.

Speaker 7 (07:09):
Good it was. Yeah, so every single morning and afternoon
she'd have to have to change change the dressings. Then, yes,
very very sore man.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
He was growing an organ.

Speaker 7 (07:23):
Yeah, he had skin graft that he was doing as well,
Like he got a skin graft 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, they went through the middle of
the car, terrifying.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
It's extraordinary, Thanks Molly and Neil. I've reached our south.
The most pain you've ever been in.

Speaker 6 (07:47):
Oh, back in ninety two, I had a slight dingle
with a car on a motorbike and come off and
got sort of dragged down the road and the let
her let go. Some came off, kneecaps, kneecaps were torn
off and solid and yeah, broken wrists, shoulders and all
of that.

Speaker 5 (08:06):
And that's not really a slight angle, No, you just
casually thumb came off, cap came off.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
How many injuries did you have, like.

Speaker 6 (08:19):
Quar a few, quite a few. I was lucky I
was wearing a full face helmet. Otherwise I wouldn't have
a jaw because it was the helmet was ground down,
right down. So it was quite painful and you're okay,
you're okay, Yeah, yeah, twelve forteen months of rehab and
it actually actually made me changed my career path and
it gave me the muscause when you're young and a

(08:40):
bit silly, you're out silly things. It did. Yes, everything's there.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
Everything's worked.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
So they sew back on your thumb.

Speaker 6 (08:49):
They did three hours of microsurgery. That attendant 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 4 (09:01):
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 it's you can only just
sleep with panadof maybe just like one or two.

Speaker 6 (09:22):
Yeah, it's pretty much the same.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
I just stay away from God. Now can help my
dreadna
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