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October 2, 2023 26 mins

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Are you ready to unearth some hidden keys to achieving your goals?

This soul-stirring conversation promises to guide you through the importance of having a life goal that goes beyond the  allure of materialistic pursuits, emphasizing how self-assessment and personal accountability play a pivotal role in this journey. We share from our personal experiences, discussing how our objectives evolve with time, and how easy it can be to be derailed by fleeting desires.

In a deep dive into the world of work relationships, we highlight the significance of self-discipline and setting the right priorities. We also explore the power of understanding your values, strengths, and weaknesses, and using them to your advantage rather than emulating others. Lastly, we ponder over the fleeting nature of life and how it should inspire us to continually evaluate our direction and purpose, making necessary changes, and seizing every moment

Tune in, and take a step towards living a more purposeful life!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The more digging that I did within myself, I realized
that it's not this title thatI'm achieving, for it's like the
inner character of who Godcreated me to be, and that takes
some work, because it alsotakes a lot of self-assessment
too and holding yourselfaccountable.
It's who you are as a personand who you want to be.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Our time here on earth is rented, it's borrowed.
It's not forever.
You've got a limited time to dothe thing that you want to do.
So unless you're waking upevery day, moving than Mark just
an inch forward.
It doesn't have to be every dayYou're doing some crazy, but
just move it an inch at a time.
Every day, you should be doingsomething towards your purpose

(00:44):
making yourself better, makingpeople smile, being a good human
, because we're not giventomorrow.
This is the Dream Chaser Show.
What's going on everybody?
Welcome back to the DreamChaser Show, and I'm your host,

(01:04):
eric, and I've got my lovelyassistant wife here with me.

Speaker 1 (01:08):
Thank, you, that's me .
I'm Kate Brandy.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Point yeah.
So if you guys are new to theshow and never seen us or have
no clue who we are, we're Ericand Kate Hydrick, husband and
wife duo.
We've done a lot of cool thingsand right now we're on kind of
the adventure of our life really.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
Which is life.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
Which is life.
And now we're on an RV and we'retraveling around and it's
awesome, but the whole purposeof our show is to help give back
to people, help people chasetheir dreams, because that's
ultimately what we're doing, andI know it sounds cliche, but
it's one of those things that Ithink needs to be dissected a

(01:46):
little bit more, instead of, hey, just chase your dream and do
whatever it is that you lovedoing, because there's actual
keys and strategies and there'salso a lot of hurdles and
downfalls to doing that too.
So that's what this whole showis about, and I'm excited to
bring it to you guys today.

Speaker 1 (02:01):
We got a fun one, so we also talk about big things
like big topics, big questions,big discussions, which is really
fun In a small RV.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
Big things, small living.

Speaker 1 (02:15):
So Eric came up with five questions that we want to
discuss and we wrote down ouranswers individually, and here
we're coming together.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
Correction, you wrote your answers down.

Speaker 1 (02:25):
Eric didn't come in.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
You guys should see it, because I made up these
questions for her and I'm like,hey, go into depth, write down
like really dig deep, becausewe're going to make this a
killer podcast episode tomorrowand I want to like dissect, like
deep dive, and so she has allthis.
I love you.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Eric didn't do his homework, yeah well.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
I mentally did it.
So but no, this is a fun one.
I'm really excited to gothrough it, and the title of it
is Don't Wait to Live your Life.
And the very first question I'mgoing to actually have you
answer this and then I'll jumpin.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
Oh, the pressure is on.

Speaker 2 (03:01):
Press the heats on.
Were you the one that took?

Speaker 1 (03:02):
notes and actually did the assignment.
Yeah, you're a studious.
I was an F student.
Oh, were you All the way?
I was an A student, yeah.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
But yeah, this is gonna be weird.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
This will be weird.

Speaker 2 (03:14):
It'll be fun, be a good dynamic, all right.
So, kate, here's the questionhow important is it to have a
goal or a major purpose in life?

Speaker 1 (03:23):
I said that I think it's pretty crucial to have a
goal or a purpose, because whatelse would we be living for,
Like, if we're just aimlesslygoing about working towards
nothing that's.
I mean it's kind of sad, isn'tit?
If you really think about it.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
It's weird to me because I feel like I guess this
is my own personal thought iswe kind of ebb and flow as
people like one season we'rereal excited and motivated.
Let's just use college, forexample, right Starting college.
You're like for those of youthat have gone to college.
You're so excited to start.

(04:02):
You're like, oh, I can't waitto get my veterinary degree.
And then you, and then youstart and you're like, yes, my
first class.
Well, my first week, my firstmonth.
Well, my first semester is over.
Oh, the second semester.
And then it starts to like,this grind starts to wear you
down.
If college, if you've neverbeen to college, we'll use
another one, starting a new job,exciting right away.

(04:24):
Right, it's usually so excitingand you're in your,
everything's new and fresh.
And then a few weeks go by anda few months go by, maybe your
boss talks to you and, you know,reprimands you for the first
time.
That grind starts to wear usdown and then, all of a sudden,
we find ourselves like dreadingthe goal that we had.
Right.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Yeah, and I think it's easy to get sidetracked too
, like looking at that goal too,but then like, oh, shiny object
over here.
Oh totally Like I do that a lot.
Yeah, I think that it alsochanges from time to time too,
which I think is great, becauseI feel like we're never meant to
stop growing as human beings,and not like physically, but
like spiritually, emotionally,that we just never stop growing.

(05:07):
So I think that our dreamschange too, our dreams and
ambitions and our goals.
So I think it's important toalways assess them like what
your life goal is, how it alwayschanges.
For me, that's always.
It's never like a destinationor like a certain monetary thing
of which at first it startedout that way, but then I-.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
Like you wanted a certain amount of money.
Yeah, money was what drove you.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
Yep, and I wanted to do.
I wanted to be that somebodyyou know, I wanted to be a real
estate agent or broker orwhatever it was.
When I was a kid it was aveterinarian, but yeah.
But then the more digging thatI did within myself, I realized
that it's not this title thatI'm achieving, for it's like the
inner character of who Godcreated me to be and that's kind

(05:56):
of and that takes some work,because it also takes a lot of
self-assessment too and holdingyourself accountable to who you
are as a person and who you wantto be.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (06:07):
I think.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
I think, okay, money is obviously important, yeah,
but what I've started to look atmoney as instead of a means to,
instead of like that, it'severything.
It's more of a means to an end,and what I mean by that is you
need it for stuff and money kindof is freedom.
It allows you to have somefreedom, have some time off, eat

(06:30):
healthy.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
Have a rich lifestyle .
In that I mean like richrelationships.
It's hard to be happy and haverich relationships when you're
constantly stressed and you'reconstantly worried about money
and you're constantly thinkingabout it or you've got piled up
debt.
It's so hard to be happybecause you're just so pressed

(06:53):
down with this weight.
So money is more or less like atool to be free.
So I love what you said abouthow it started out as money,
because if we're being totallyhonest which we need to be
that's a huge driver.
That's a massive motivator.
That's why people get jobs, forthe most part, to pay bills.
But I think what we wereblessed with correct me if I'm

(07:15):
wrong was we had a little bit ofsuccess in our real estate
career and we did pretty welland we basically got more money
than we ever thought we wouldget.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
Yeah.
And we bought all the stupidthings.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
Yeah.
The boats, the four-wheelers,the campers, whatever it was
Flying off boat tubing, like allthat fun party stuff it was,
but what we found was it wasnever enough.

Speaker 1 (07:40):
Yeah, even that wasn't satisfying.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
Even that wasn't satisfying.
It was like you're alwayslooking for the next thing, Like
, okay, what now?
What can I buy?
I got the boat.
No, I need tubes for the boat.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
I can get whatever skis for the boat.
Oh wow, you know what I'm donewith the boat.
I want a Jeep and that stuff isfulfilling momentarily, but not
long term.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
So it's like you really have to start to do some
intrinsic deep diving ofyourself.
Like what is it that's going toactually push me?
Because money might motivateyou and push you right away, but
it won't long term.
It definitely won't long term.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
Yeah, and it's a fleeting thing, like it will
always run from you.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
Oh, for sure.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:21):
Yeah, it's crazy.
The more that you chase it, themore the faster it runs.
Yeah, it's crazy.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
Yeah, yeah.
And I think that's where a lotof, like our discovery came into
play, like when we achieved thegoals that we wanted to, which
was great, but they weremonetary goals and then we kind
of got there and we're like nowwhat you know.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
Yeah, now what?

Speaker 1 (08:41):
now what?
So yeah all right, so let'sjump into the next question what
effect does self-discipline orlack of self-discipline have in
achieving that purpose or goal?

Speaker 2 (08:55):
hmm Well, I can tell you right out of the gate, when
we first, like, started ourcareer in real estate or
whatever it was, we didn't havemuch self-discipline.
It was kind of like a grind.
It was just like a grind and go.

Speaker 1 (09:06):
Oh, that's why we got into real estate be your own
boss.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
Yeah, hours, yeah it was like I just want to be free
and not have any Any liketie-down to self-discipline.
I just want to, you know, do myown thing, yep, which which
which, by the way, I don't thinkwe as a fault.
I think it's like human natureto kind of detest having a boss,
an authority figure over you.

(09:29):
It's like human nature, you,you want to be free, free
started with Adam and Eve.
Yeah, we want to be free.
Right, you detest it.
You're like they fought him andlike, no, I'm gonna eat this
apple dang it, we screwed up.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
Yeah, I realize that we're naked and the rest of the
world is condemned and sin.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
But there was consequences to that action,
that there was consequences tothe layer, their lack of
self-discipline.
Yes, and I think that's what wefound out pretty quickly Was
was when there's noself-discipline, when when Okay,
especially, and if you'restarting the business right, you
are the only one holdingyourself accountable.
If you don't wake up, you don'tmake money.

(10:08):
If you don't wake up on time,you don't get to the office on
time, you don't make your calls,you don't sell whatever good it
is that you're selling, you'rejust kicking yourself.
And that's where the majority,99% of the entrepreneurs fail is
because they don't have thatself-discipline.
So that I mean, it's crazyimportant, and I think the best
thing that we ever did was makea calendar on our phone is like

(10:31):
a Google calendar.
It's free, and then it's gottime blocks and we just started
plugging in there.
You know, this is what I'mgetting up, this is what I mean
breakfast.
This is when I'm Kate'slaughing at me over here because
I don't follow it.

Speaker 1 (10:42):
Eric, tell us yourself disciplines about
waking up early, every day,consistently.

Speaker 2 (10:47):
Yeah, I know, I know you're so true.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
That's right room for improvement.
You know you can't be perfect,because then you've got nowhere
to go.

Speaker 2 (10:55):
So really, you're saving yourself.
Okay to tag on to that.
I think we find ourselveslooking for Something that we
really value the most.
All right, so what I mean bythat is I like to work out, and
I've made that a priority in mylife.
Yeah, so my self-discipline onworking out is like I don't miss

(11:17):
a day?

Speaker 1 (11:17):
No, he does not, folks, he does not miss a single
day.

Speaker 2 (11:21):
But if you, if you say okay, I'm gonna start waking
up at 5 am Every day.
Well, I might do that for oneor two days, and then it's 5, 15
minutes, 5, 30 and eventuallyit's 6 30 right, but it's not a
huge priority.
So it's like you almost have toreally dig deep and say what is
it that I actually want?
Like you have your prioritiesand they're vastly different
from mine.
Yeah and I think, as a, as a, asa team, if you will, or husband

(11:45):
and wife, it's okay to havedifferent priorities, you know.
Would you agree with myanalysis on self-discipline?

Speaker 1 (11:52):
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
Okay totally.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
I just like to give you a hard time, because, yeah,
you preached that for a longtime of get, especially in the
real estate days, too, in whichyou are better at that.
Yeah, I was, I was yeah, butnow not so much.
Well, today was 6 am, but yeah,I guess the point I'm trying to
make is that our work hours aredifferent too, though, like a
lot of times you're working intolike 10 11 o'clock at night

(12:16):
right?

Speaker 2 (12:17):
So yeah, and you're, you're sleeping by 8.

Speaker 1 (12:19):
Yeah, you know passed on the couch by 7, right.
Yeah, exactly, simply tiredguys.
I'm not.
I'm not boosting it up everynight.
Yes, she is I think.

Speaker 2 (12:30):
I think that's another good point, though,
where it's like your prioritiesmay be different from your
spouses, but to have a similarlike goal, similar long-term aim
is Is important, but but itmight look differently.
It's gonna look a little bitdifferent.
Shouldn't look exactly the sameas your spouse, or not the same
people?
Yeah, exactly, yeah, right.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
Yeah, and I feel like a when we first started working
together to realizing that ourstrengths and weaknesses
actually played off of eachother and Did well like in
contrast to one another, ratherthan trying to fix you and make
you exactly like me, which wasyeah not fun and impossible,
dare I say.
Our breakthroughs happened whenwe realized that our

(13:12):
differences were actually ourstrengths.
Oh yeah, rather than ourweaknesses for sure.
Mm-hmm I.
And then we started reallysynergizing, like that's when we
really like our relationshipwas happier because we're not
always on each other about youdon't do this and you need to do
that, and oh yeah, and you needto be more like me, and why
don't you think this way and doit that way, and yeah.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Yeah, that made me think of this too, where, like
knowing your strengths and yourweaknesses, and my strengths and
my weaknesses like a business,you don't need two people in the
driver's seat, you don't needto have the exact same strengths
and you don't need twomarketers.
That that's all they're good at, but then they both suck at

(13:56):
sales.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
Right.
How much more powerful wouldyou be if one person's really
good at marketing but sucks atsales?
But the other person's reallygood at sales but sucks at
marketing?
Well, you put them in theirseat, you put them in their
place and then they synergizethe marketer does their job, the
salesperson does their job andthey both succeed, versus two
marketers do really great buteveryone sucks at sales.

(14:18):
You'll get nowhere.
So the strength and weaknessesI mean, they just.
They just work when you canfigure out what it is that
you're good at.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
I was just about to say is it okay to change our
plans along the way?
So say, if you're like dead seton this life goal of doing, or
being, or having this thing, andthen you know, you know, yeah,
a side turn, a bend in the road.

Speaker 2 (14:42):
Are you asking me?

Speaker 1 (14:43):
I think so.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
Yeah, is it okay to make, is it okay to change our
plans along the way?

Speaker 1 (14:49):
Absolutely freaking lute I sure hope, so we've made
a couple changes, yeahabsolutely freaking lute.

Speaker 2 (14:55):
You know, I think, what we struggle with this
because we make changes quiteoften.
However, how important is it toto do that?
Because I always make thisanalogy, like, let's say, let's
say you're working towardssomething, right?
I picture a field, field oftall grass, and you can barely

(15:15):
see over the grass.
It's like eye height, right?
So put yourselves in this fieldwith me.
It's grass, it's eye height,you can barely see it over it,
but you know where you're headedis this you're trying to get to
this stream because you needwater and there and there's clay
on that stream so you can builda brick house or whatever, okay
, but all you can see right nowis grass, primarily.

(15:36):
And so you stick your head downand you just start and you're
just cutting grass, just cuttinggrass, swinging your axe or
what your swath, or sickle.
Thank you, sickle swinging andif all you do is cut grass and
cut grass and get up and grindevery day and go to do the same

(15:56):
thing every day and you justkeep hammering, hammering,
hammering and you never look upto see where you're going to to
sickling, sickling, sickling,not hammering and you never look
up to change course.
And all of a sudden you look upand you're like whoa, I was
trying to go north where thewater was.
But now I'm headed east and I'mheading straight to the desert.

(16:18):
But you didn't look up, younever, you never took time to
assess your direction in lifeand you end up somewhere you
didn't mean to go.
So is it okay to change course,change plans?
Absolutely I mean you have to.
You got to look up and say, or.
Or you, you got to the waterand now you're not really
satisfied with them.
Maybe it wasn't what youthought it was.
You got to that job, you gotthat amount of money you got,

(16:41):
you finally made it to thatposition in your career and
you're like man, this is notwhat I wanted.
Or or or now, what now?

Speaker 1 (16:49):
what now that I did this and you know, built up this
lifelong dream and maybe ittook you an entire lifetime to
finally get there.
And then, yeah, now you're likenow what that's not.
I think that's why a lot ofretirees like we are all working
towards retirement, but a lotof retirees go back to work
because it's not what theythought that it was yeah, oh, so

(17:11):
true.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
I feel like, as people, as human beings, we're,
we're meant to.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
I hate using the word work do something with our
hands or with our time andtalents, and yeah, we're meant
to expend energy.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
We're not meant to sit on couches and watch tv all
day and flip through channelsand get angry at the news and
then scroll our phones like,unfortunately, that's kind of
what's starting to happen.
Or I think people's mindset ofretirement is I'm going to get
to this certain point.
I'm going to get to 65 yearsold, get my pension and then do
nothing.
Yeah, I'm going to do nothing.

(17:45):
It's in your DNA to do things,to just sit around and do
nothing as such a waste of yourbreath in your life and that's
why?
I think that's why a lot oftimes, when people retire, they
die yeah you hear that all thetime yeah, it's sad, but yeah
because they're doing nothing.
They don't know, what to do.
Yeah, okay.
So in your opinion, whathappens, like when we finally

(18:07):
make it, like when we finallyreach the thing that we've been
trying to reach?

Speaker 1 (18:13):
life, then you're dead life, and then you're dead
yeah, because we're all tryingto like accomplish life right.
So if we've, if we've made itand lived life and we finally
made it to the finish line,wouldn't we be dead?

Speaker 2 (18:29):
that's fair.
I mean, I would think so yourpurpose is over your mission's
done right, yeah, you're deadand you know it's a tragic, you
know it's like such a tragedy isOkay.
So I got to lay this foundation.
We got to all understand ourtime here on earth is is rented,
it's, it's borrowed.
It's not forever and I think wemake the mistake of Going

(18:52):
through life just kind offorgetting that.
I think we all know it in theback of our mind.
We know that we know we're gonnadie, but we forget it in the
mundane day-to-day stuff.
And how tragic is it in lifewhen someone loses their life at
a young age?
I mean, death is tragic in andof itself for the most part, but
when a young person dies, whensomebody just gets hit by a

(19:14):
drunk driver or or they get likea cancer, and it's suicide or
commit suicide and their, theirlife and their purpose is cut
short.
And so, for anybody listening,well, that's one of the things
that I think about often, and Ihammer it on myself too, and I'm
a little hard on myself.
I'm like Eric, you've got alimited time to do something, to

(19:36):
do the thing that you want todo.
You've got Very limited time.
Your time here on earth is notforever.
So, unless you're waking upevery day, make moving, than
mark just an inch forward.
It doesn't have to be every dayyou're doing some crazy, but
just move it an inch at a time.
Every day, you should be doingsomething towards your purpose

(19:56):
making yourself better, makingpeople smile, being a good human
, because you're not giventomorrow.
You know Well said so the lastquestion I was gonna ask you is
Do you think that journey or thedestination is more important?

Speaker 1 (20:18):
Hmm, I Didn't write this one down because I think
I'm still, and you could seeit's right here.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
Number five yeah, she does.

Speaker 1 (20:25):
She have number five and it's blank blank, and then I
started writing other stuff,and Addie's drawings are there
too.
I Think it largely depends onyour faith of where you're going
for eternity, because life isso short Compared to the rest of
eternity, and my faith is thatI will get to meet my creator

(20:45):
someday when my Journey here onearth is over, and I think
that's true for you too.
So, but I think that what youdo on this earth is meaningful
and it's impactful, and you'reDoing something towards the
kingdom of God.
But I also think that thedestination of being in eternity
with my maker is probably alittle bit more important to me,

(21:09):
at least then living here onearth With not God, you know.
So I still think that there, Imean, I think that they're both
important, because he certainlydoes say don't waste your time
down here, you know, and whatyou do on here, you gain riches
in heaven you store treasures.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
He says store your treasure up in heaven.
Yeah, not on earth, yeahbecause on earth Moths eat and
destroy.
Things get rusty and decay andhe's breaking and steel.
But in heaven there are nomoths that destroy Things don't
decay and rust away and thievescan't break in and steal.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
How do you, how do you store your treasures in
heaven, though, like in yourmind?
What are you?
What are you doing every day?
Because, because clearly youknow, the question was is a
journey or the destination?
And, more important from whatI'm gathering, is your faith
kind of dictates all of that.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
I Think it's the, the people that I meet along the
way, like the seeds that I planthere for other people's faith.
Those are the treasures,because if I get to meet them in
heaven some day and they'rejust like man, kate, like
because you told your story,because you shared that with me,
because you spoke truth into mylife and Shared your faith now

(22:22):
I get to be up here with God aswell.
So, that just makes me emotionalthinking about that, because
those are the treasures thepeople.
People will be the treasuresmore people that we could add to
the kingdom of God.
It's worth far more than rubiesand gold and anything that you
can store up here on earthbecause you don't take it with

(22:44):
you.

Speaker 2 (22:45):
Yeah, we all end up in the same, physically anyway.
Same location, six feet underyeah and no one is better or
worse Than the, the person nextto them in the grave.

Speaker 1 (22:56):
Yeah, in terms of what they had, what they, how
much money they made our bodieswill all decay and yeah and die,
but our spirits go on they doand if I think and if I could
help and spirits To meet God andto meet Jesus, that's, um,

(23:18):
that's a pretty cool goal and apretty awesome destination to
look forward to yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 2 (23:24):
You know, I read this , this book recently and they,
they had this.
This image of it was a pictureof a dot, just a small like a
period, and then next to it aline that went across like two
pages and he said oftentimes Ithink of my life here on Earth
as this dot.

(23:44):
It seems like a long time, 70,80, 90 years, but that line is
what's after and that line isexponentially never-ending.
It's so much bigger, it's huge,it's unfathomably long compared
to the dot and that line iswhere you spend eternity and
what you do here on Earthdetermines how you spend
eternity.

(24:05):
And that really messed with meand I kind of pondered that for
a while.
And here on Earth matters, whatwe're doing now matters, but
it's all, for it depends on yourfaith.
Really, when are you going?
I feel like just having faithin something bigger than us is

(24:25):
so important because it helpsdrive us.
The thing about faith is it'sthe most powerful human emotion
next to love.
Faith is so powerful.
I know because at one point Iwas kind of a non-believer, I
was like a lukewarm.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
I was like I kind of believe?

Speaker 2 (24:41):
I kind of don't, but I didn't have any driver.
I didn't have this like you gotto get moving.
You got to get moving becauseyou're only here for a certain
amount of time before you meetyour maker and he casts judgment
on you.
It's so powerful to have faith.
I can't explain that enough, soyeah, Should we wrap this up?

(25:02):
Yeah, okay.
I hope that there was somethingout of here that you're able to
kind of a nugget, that you'reable to apply and take from it
and say you know what this hasreally helped me.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
And even fat-provoking questions for you
to answer as well of you.
Know how you live your life anddon't wait to live your life,
because it is living with orwithout you.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
Yeah, absolutely, and real quick, guys.
If you liked this, I'd love itif you shared it with somebody,
because you never know, youmight be able to help change
someone's perspective and reallyswitch their life around.
So thanks a lot for listening,guys.
We'll see you next time.

(25:47):
You just start.

Speaker 1 (25:51):
Sickling, sickling, sickling, sickling sickling,
sickling, sickling sickling,sickling, simply tired guys.
I'm not, I'm not boozing it upevery night.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
Yes, she is.
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