Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, luck and load. So Michael
Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
People always asking me, miss Nikot, do you support the
police and all this?
Speaker 1 (00:25):
Do you help a crime investigate?
Speaker 2 (00:27):
I don't get nowhere near them, Damn people, Why you
think I'm on nerve pills? Now if it wasn't for Popo,
you know, the other day they stopped Beverly Bud Wearing
down here by the circle and her purple buy hang.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
They claimed she had made a rolling.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Stop or something like that. She said, how I'm supposed
to stop all this damn car and roller journey at
the same time.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Now.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
Hell Now, in Texas they had these canine units and
they go big old German shepherd go through your car.
But in Louisiana they use extra live raccoons. They put
a whole load up in your car. They will tell
your upholster out. I had one in Raccoons completely ate
one of my.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Bare white eight tracks. Honey way back in.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
The older times, it used to be a bumper sticker
and it said on that if you don't like the police,
then next time you get robbed, to call a hippie.
Honey back then if I needed somebody to help me
get revenge or something. I just call my cousin fruit Bowl.
You remember, fruit Ball never said nothing, He just made
them clicking sounds. I hate when the police, she was
the abbreviation something sitting there talking about we're gonna have
(01:29):
to take you in for FTA and all this dr
I want you all to spell it out for me.
I want you to go on and say failure to appeal,
because by the time you get through that being said,
I'd be done. Slipped out them handcuffs and ran halfway
down the street. Honey, I may be so fatty, take
me two minutes to get off the couch, but when
that popo pull out them cuffs, honey, I can sprint.
Okay you anyway? Now back to the Grizzly Adams show.
(01:53):
I mean Michael Barry, Oh my god, that beard looks
so nasty. Fee if it needs oops steams, come here
and do something with it.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
The filing period for the spring primary, which is to
be on the ballot for next November, is Saturday, November
eighth through Monday, December eighth. Now, what ends up happening
(02:26):
is that most folks don't pay attention to what's happening.
Until the primary is upon us for the March primary,
that means say February, and then people will wake up
and they'll say, wait a second, how how come? How
(02:50):
come that? Guys? Is what are we? What are we doing?
What are we doing? And the reason is politics is
not for the meek, and elections are not left to say.
Like coaching t ball in a small town where the
(03:12):
league has a meeting and the parents come and they go, hey,
we're gonna we got enough teams for eight kids here.
We need eight dads to step up in three or
just gung ho. And then they go, all right, we
need five more coaches. And everybody's looking around. Hey, Bobby,
(03:32):
didn't you play in high school? Yeah, but I'm working
a shutdown these days. I can't do it. You gotta
do it, dude, you gotta do it. No, you gotta
do it. No, I can't. I'm traveling. They got me
on the road all the time. And somehow, some way,
maybe one of the moms steps up. You end up
with eight coaches. Okay, they're gonna do their best. They
do the right thing for the kids, and you know, y'all,
(03:54):
other dads are gonna have to We're gonna need dugout dad,
y'all gonna help it, help me out here. I don't
want to have to do this by myself. That is
not what politics is today. Politics is an industry. So
just as you don't show up, you know, for the
Christmas season and they throw some clothes on the on
the hangars, no, no, they've been planning all year long
(04:18):
for what that rollout is going to look like. By
the time you see the ad for American Eagle and
Sidney Sweeney, they have test focused this thing, they have
negotiated deals, they have made it. This has been going
on for months and months. So when it shows up
on your screen and you think, wow, this is a
(04:39):
hot new no no, no, no no. The movie didn't just
appear at the theater or on your screen today. You
saw it and all of a sudden, the whole country's
talking about it. That thing's been two years in the making.
Well that all of that is true of the political process.
So if you want to be on the ballot next
November again as the Democrat, you first have to win
(05:02):
the Republican primary, and filing for positions begins Saturday, November
eighth and continues for a month. Precinct chair candidates may
begin filing on September ninth. That will be here tomorrow.
We need good, honest, honorable, selfless folks to take over
(05:27):
the Harris County Republican Party. Investigate see if you have
a precinct chair. If your precinct chair is not America First,
If your precinct chair does not share your values, run
against them. I will not do your research for you,
so don't even bother to send me an email. Hey,
(05:49):
I live over here in Braburn. Should I run. That's
a decision you have to make. I can't help you.
I would tell you when I was in college, I
had a buddy who decided he was going to run
for state rep. And so we schemed and planned. I
was suited by president. So I had an office and
(06:10):
he would come in every day and after hours after
earth and we'd sit down and scheme and plan. Back then,
if you had data, it was a big deal, because
you know, there would no we didn't have We weren't linked.
You know, this was ninety two. We weren't linked into things.
We weren't. You couldn't just buy lists so easily. He
(06:31):
ran knocked on every door mailed the whole thing and
ended up winning his precinct. Cham went on to be
a political consultant and made a lot of money as
a political consultant in the region. Anyway, but this is
the time to do that, and this is the time
to be looking at which candidates you're going to support.
(06:53):
We got the new congressional maps out, which are going
to be very interesting. Trump is planning on us picking
up five Republican seats. Democrats are going to fight back.
We've got to win that. If we win that, it
makes a huge difference for us in Congress. What I'm
hearing is that Dan Patrick is not healthy. I don't
know if this is true or not. There are some
(07:14):
lobbyists who've been spreading that message for years that don't
like him. I don't know if they're just making that
up or not. I am telling you what I'm hearing.
I don't I cannot say that I know that to
be true. I'm telling you that I'm hearing it from
some folks that I don't that that are somewhat loyal
to him. I don't think they're making it up, but
that's but I don't know that. I've not seen a
(07:37):
medical report, and what I'm hearing is that Dan Patrick
is not running for reelection, and that on filing day,
which is how this works, an hour before filing is over,
he's going to everybody thinks he's going to file. He
pulls his name off the ballot and puts Brandon Crayton
(07:58):
in there. Brandon Crayton is his choice to succeed him,
which is fine. He can support someone, he can say
that'd be a great lieutenant governor, but not to do
it to keep other people from running, because that doesn't
mean the people didn't choose the candidate, because nobody wants
to run against the incumbent. So whistling bomb spleen splitters,
(08:18):
whisker biscuits, Honkey riders, hooskerdoes, Whosker don'ts, Nips and dazers
with without the scooter stick or one single whistling kiddy
chaser League is over? What are we doing right now today?
What is actually happening? You were popping atop Well, that's
(08:43):
good to know. That's that's good to know. Ramon made
some pork chops yesterday. He loves to cook. He does
most of the cooking. His wife makes the money. He
does the cookie and his wife also programs the computers.
She's an IT expert, and he loves to cook, so
(09:05):
I will often ask him during the break, what are
you making for tonight? And they go out a lot,
but he cooks a lot. And he said, I'm making
pork chops. I said, oh, how what are you gonna do?
He said, I'll put some fieta rub on them. And
then I wished I hadn't asked, because it bothered me
all day. Why would you put fieta rub on pork chops? Anyway,
(09:27):
he sent me a picture. I posted it. I don't
know if it's if it's made it to the site yet,
but it's the best looking pork chops I've seen it
in a long time now. I don't know how they take.
They might taste like mud, but boy, did they ever
look good. I like a little band of fat around
the edge of mine, don't you. I love a good
(09:47):
pork chop. Problem with pork chops is too many people
overcook them and dry them out, And especially with a
thick one, I think they worry they don't want it
to be undercooked in the middle, and so they end
up drying them out. And you got to have that
port will dry out so fast. Let's go to Adam. Adam,
(10:09):
I am informed that you just got out of prison.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
Defined just from you got three uh three weeks ago Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
What were you doing?
Speaker 3 (10:25):
Man? Trying to say out of trouble, that's all I'm
trying to do.
Speaker 1 (10:28):
I'm pretty much no, that's not what you were trying
to do. Adam. I'm gonna ask you questions and you
just answered directly. I want you just answer it directly.
So why were you sent to prison?
Speaker 3 (10:40):
Oh that's a kind of a touchy subject that way.
So yeah, that was a terrible and I'll tell you
that touchy said, I see what you did there?
Speaker 1 (10:50):
Yeah? Yeah? How long were you in?
Speaker 3 (10:56):
Twelve and a half years?
Speaker 1 (10:57):
Sir? Holy was the victim underage?
Speaker 3 (11:03):
Unfortunately? Sixteen?
Speaker 1 (11:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (11:11):
That was oh female that way.
Speaker 1 (11:16):
I'm your questions and how did you how did you
know this person?
Speaker 3 (11:23):
So I had well I really didn't you per se
what happened?
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Was I.
Speaker 3 (11:31):
Had? Uh? I had some additions to pornography and stuff,
and man, I just I wasn't really I wasn't where
I would wanted to be in life and restaurant. I
don't want to tell was I was thirty and I
was irresponsible and all that kind of stuff, and h
(11:55):
I was in a chat room and met her. I
didn't realize she was that age at the point in time.
And then it's coming from the toss real quick and
then that Yeah, it terrible season. So how old sixteen?
Speaker 1 (12:12):
Okay? Yeah, and so how did you get popped? Well?
You know, I don't really no, no.
Speaker 3 (12:26):
No, no, no, Like I think she may have ended up
telling her mom, or she told her friend and her
friend got it. I don't really know exactly how that
went down, but I know her mom found out and
the cops got hold of it. Right, That's that's all
I really know that.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
And what they get hold of chat logs, chat logs.
Please tell me you didn't take a picture of me Johnson?
Speaker 3 (12:47):
Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, that I mean we
actually had physical contact. So yeah, it like you're at Yeah,
well did Joe?
Speaker 1 (13:01):
Where did y'all? Oh?
Speaker 3 (13:06):
So I'm apparently prone to risky behavior. And uh I
met up with her at her house when everybody was gone.
So that was really dumb idea. Maybe I'm disclosing too
much on the radio because.
Speaker 1 (13:18):
You've already done your time you've already know. Maybe you
can help. Yeah, maybe you can help somebody you want
to ride the gain and raise you up. Alt, we'll
probably better to hear you let me so. So it
was completely consensual.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
Yeah, other than her age.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
Yeah, no, I understand a minor cannot illegally give consult.
Speaker 3 (13:41):
Right, trust me, I'm very well aware of.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
And you were thirty Yeah, okay, what's what's the moment
you realize you got a problem?
Speaker 3 (13:54):
Well, yeah, well, I mean other than when I got arrested.
I mean I felt like when I was driving over
to meet her, like, I just felt like, something's not
that this, something's not going to work out right here.
And uh it was. It was a bad deal, you
(14:18):
know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
Were you arrested when you went over to see her?
Speaker 3 (14:22):
Oh? No, no, no, I was arrested actually a work
It was like two months after the incident occurred.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
Yeah, And and so you're at a what was the
nature of your job? You don't have to tell the company,
but what were you doing for a living? Oh?
Speaker 3 (14:40):
I was a technician, So I worked in the aviation
industry at that point in time. I would like to
go back to the aviation industry, just in a different area.
So I didn't actually work on aircraft. What I did
was work for an FAA work workstation and we did
(15:00):
uh we resurtified, rebuilt, and uh tested uh pressure vessels
and valves and stuff like that, so we would take
My personal job was that was a hydrotest technician. And
basically that it is taking a big steel pressure vessel
or stainless steel pressure vessel and filling up with the
(15:22):
water and lowering it down into a water jacket and
putting more water into it so it pressurizes it and
expands it and you measure that expansion of the cylinder.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
Did you have to do that? Now?
Speaker 3 (15:37):
No, you had to. You had to take some Yeah,
so you have to do some stuff online and continual
turning with the D O, T and F A A,
but nothing like real specific.
Speaker 1 (15:52):
All right, so tell me my whole unders. Michael yells
kind there, Adam, Have you ever heard of the Peruvian
(16:12):
spider pagan? Have you ever heard of a Peruvian spider?
Speaker 3 (16:20):
A Pollugian spider?
Speaker 1 (16:22):
Peruvian? They're from Peru.
Speaker 3 (16:25):
Oh, no, Peruvian. I actually knew a Peruvian on the
but no, I have never heard of a Peruvian spider.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
The Peruvian spider builds a lifelike replica of itself within
its web. It looks just like itself. It uses stuff
it gathers, and it builds what looks like itself in
its web so that when a predator comes in, it'll
(16:55):
think that's it and it'll attack that and allow it
to get away. Stress. Yeah, amazing, all right, So tell
me about who shows up to arrest you? Tell me
what what are you doing when you notice? Oh, there's
cops here. Taught me through that.
Speaker 3 (17:14):
So so I was at work. Uh, like I said,
about a week before that, they came over and wanted
to question me right about this whole issue and all
that they weren't there quote unquote, Now you're a roastue today, Okay, whatever,
they can do whatever. So, I mean they can't, but
(17:36):
they can't, you know what I'm saying. They're the authority.
So anyway, after that, about a week a week and
a half later, I'm at work and my manager, I'm sorry,
I'm ahead. They call people over the intercom right now,
and and I just got called. I think it's pick
(17:57):
the mail up, but I think I kick the mail up.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Conversation here. Yeah, all right, go ahead, oh.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
Yeah, I know it's my cash app card, Sir, I
kind of need that all anyway, I'm i'm a word
like I was saying, and uh, I go in. I'm
actually wanted a test at that point, found and my
(18:29):
manager comes up, uh shop form. My shop foreman comes
over and says, hey's sony, sure to see you.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
And I see two.
Speaker 3 (18:38):
People, but I don't really recognize my first and uh
I want to get About halfway down the shop, I'm like,
uh hill and uh that's what happened, and yeah that
was m C. S O and uh an FBI officer.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
All right, so you walk up and do they just
like that you're under arrest. They start reading your rights.
You turn around. Yeah I got it, I got a TV.
I know what you mean. Yeah, exactly walked me out and.
Speaker 3 (19:10):
Then I got booked in. Uh that they took me
because I worked in Harris County, so at the I
officer had to come with me to Transit Counties and
in pso it took me over to uh uh the
Metomery County jail and uh that was that. Got booked
(19:32):
in there, stay there for fourteen months and then finally
made my plea agreement So.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
Did you have a quarter pointed attorney? Yes? And what
did you think of that person?
Speaker 3 (19:46):
Uh? Miller? What did I think of them? M Well,
at first I thought it was all right. Then uh
not so much afterwards. I think there was some thinks
he wasn't exactly or right with me on but that's
(20:06):
neither here nor there. It doesn't really matter so to
that I did that.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
So, yeah, you pat guilty. You got twelve and a
half years, no, fifteen.
Speaker 3 (20:18):
I saw him roll.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
That's a pretty stiff sentence. You first, that was your
first time offense. Yeah, wow, that's that's a pretty stiff sentence.
I'm not saying it's okay to do. But if you
were to line up, if you were to stack up
every prosecution out there and that you plied, you did
(20:43):
more time than than some people who commit murder of
a sixteen year old girl. Wow, that's all right? Okay,
So then you for you got credit for your fourteen
months at the local jail and then they send you off.
You're right, all right?
Speaker 3 (20:58):
Right?
Speaker 1 (20:58):
So tell me that.
Speaker 3 (20:59):
Yeah, So all I did the first place I got
to wash the holiday unit. You know, that's basically intake.
I was there only five months and then I got
got shipped to the George Bido univer for about the
next five years.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
That was a little rough. I'm not a big dude.
Speaker 3 (21:18):
I'm only you know, five to six, and I've peaked
out about one sixty. I'm a little less than that
right now because they don't feed. It's a whole lot
of food at the Samthway House. They feed, all right,
but it's just not a lot.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
So uh.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
Yeah, so I've lost a little weight. I'm probably about
one forty five right now. So I've never been big
and uh so I just stayed out the way and
uh yeah, went went and got my associates three while
I was there. I didn't have a degree. I just
had graduated high school and got a certificate from a
(21:56):
trade school way before I got locked up. But that
I didn't really have any other education.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
And then go ahead, I'm sorry, ahead, Oh my bad.
Speaker 3 (22:09):
Then after I graduated from Trinity Valley Community College, they uh,
my parents, my parents, they all they all live in
Lake Charles. My dad was really tired of driving all
the way to the Palace thing. So I got transferred
down to the monk Wunk Styles and that place is nuts.
(22:33):
They're all nuts, but that yeah, yeah, all right, and
then what Charles, sorry.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
Go ahead, and then what well then?
Speaker 3 (22:52):
Uh so right after I got to Donald, that's when
I came up for parole the first time. And I
didn't didn't have any disciplinary record. I think I had
one white minor contraband case like we had. She was
kind of a Nazi, the UH property officer over at BIDO.
She was pretty crazy. And one day when we went
we were on lockdown, we went my wing went in
(23:15):
to get shook down, and I had something in there
that like I didn't have my name in a book
or something, and she wrote me up four. It's a thing,
it happens, but anyway, it's really stupid. So that's like
the only that was like the only discipline or anything
on my record. When I top role, I had nothing.
You know, I had a college degree by this point
(23:36):
in time, and all this and that it gave me
a three year set off, so I did in another
three years I came up and I finally made parrole
and once my little program that had to do over
here in Dayton, and then finally got out July eighth.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
And what'd you do the first thing when you got out.
Speaker 3 (23:59):
Well, I mean, for thing I did was report the
halfway house. It felt so weird to get on the
bus because there was some not very savory people on
the bus. The one woman that was sitting next to
me kind of smelled a little bit like, hey, I
think probably didn't take a shower very well or something.
I don't know what was going on. It was pretty gross,
but then it was wild. And then I get here,
(24:21):
and when I called, I was actually the the other
day I was actually walking back from actually just walking
around by myself. All right, hold, show what you do.
Speaker 1 (24:58):
OK. Rules for the very bricade catches lies that the
last suggery for we the lean cards call those tubise
(25:20):
me of fan need richel and enjoy my wise held
Tom Held of Tom Adam is our guest. He served
twelve and a half of a fifteen year sentence for
(25:43):
improper relations with the sixteen year old girl when he
was thirty. So then are you still in the halfway house, Adam?
Speaker 3 (25:57):
Yeah, I'm still here, like I just got here, you know,
three weeks go and uh this is uh as a
new or all detail, I get some mind to get
out of here.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
Uh, but you know, it is what it is, so,
so what do you do other than be there?
Speaker 3 (26:09):
Do you go?
Speaker 1 (26:10):
Do you go apply for jobs? What do you do?
Speaker 3 (26:13):
So? Uh, I mean we're allowed to have cell phones
and everything, so I'm allowed internet actually can have social
media for obvious reasons. So I just uh, I apply
on places around the area I can walk to because
I don't have a vehicle or uh yeah I bike
or anything. So yeah, I've got I'm on indeed, I'm
(26:34):
on the recruiter right. Just downloads the other day and
it's now a good job, I think. I think, uh,
some other places self applied. It's about really, to be honest,
probably twenty to thirty different places. But yeah, I haven't
really got any callbacks. I did the other day, but
I was actually supposed to go to an interview and
I miss it, and I was really jacked up about
it because, like I was really trying to do the
(26:56):
right thing. I was walking there and even though I know,
go mind, I don't know what like super well, I
don't know the service freaks very well. I know you
know what I'm saying because I've never lived here. But anyway,
I was walking away. I was supposed to go and
then Google Match took me someplace I really wasn't necessarily
supposed to go, you know what I'm saying, and it
freaked me out really bad. And then there was a
(27:16):
train on two train stuff on the track there, and
I'm like, I didn't know how to get around turning
to backtrack and I just ended up going back to
halfway out. I was just I was kind of freaked out.
So that's is where it is. So I can't I
can't hear very well right now. It's just an air
(27:37):
compressor running right here. Yeah, but uh yeah, man, twelve
and a half years so I pretty much try to
say uh busy, either in school or when I was
on Stinals. I was in one of the church band.
(28:01):
I played guitar, so I played there for a while.
In fact, they need to give a shout out. If
anybody's listening, they're probably I will probably practice right now.
My boy Roberto Torres, they're on the on the Basilver
the Styles unit, and uh, I'll say hi to Holiday,
even though he's not my favorite person in the world.
I don't know if he even listens to show there
does so, but uh yeah, man, it was it was
(28:25):
hard and I've got two sons. They and I went in.
Speaker 1 (28:29):
They were.
Speaker 3 (28:31):
Eight years old, eight nine years old, and then uh,
now they're about to be twenty two. So you know,
they went from being short of me, I don't know,
way taller me. They're those over six batall. But good
thing is I saw them pretty often. Now I text
him all the time.
Speaker 1 (28:48):
So, yeah, do you keep in touch with your parents?
Speaker 3 (28:59):
Excuse me?
Speaker 1 (29:00):
Do you keep in touch with your parents?
Speaker 3 (29:04):
Did I reconnect with any friends?
Speaker 1 (29:06):
Do you keep in touch?
Speaker 3 (29:07):
Hang on me gets Oh yeah, yeah, I talked to
them pretty often.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
Yeah, they're.
Speaker 3 (29:18):
I'm just right here by this air compressor and my
phone's kind of shouldn't see you, fel I keep there
very well, I thought it.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
So when you go to a job, I mean, how
early in the application do they say, did you just
get out of prison three weeks ago?
Speaker 3 (29:34):
So, like I said, I've been applying online, so I
haven't actually gone in for an interview or just walked
down in someplace to apply. Because we can't just leave.
We have to have a reason to leave, uh the
halfway house. And that's for anybody. I'm on ankle monitor,
but that's for everybody that make us schedule every dingy
and ankle mondor is a little worse, I guess, and
(29:54):
it's hard to just get out of here without being
scheduled for something. So they make your apply online.
Speaker 1 (30:03):
Do you think you'll reoffend?
Speaker 3 (30:06):
Oh no, I'm not going to do that again. That
was That was literally the worst decision of my life.
That was. Man. I regret that I miss I missed
up my life and I missed out on a lot
of my kid's life. Obviously, the whole whole freaking world changed.
You know, I was in here twelve and a half
(30:26):
years a little minute, so everything's different. How many kids
do you have, I've got twenty sons.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
And how old are they now?
Speaker 3 (30:38):
They're about to be twenty two and am still oily
twenty two.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
How long has it been since you've seen them?
Speaker 3 (30:45):
It's been a few years. That came up to visit
me when I was at finals a few times. That
I haven't seen them a while since. I've been down
a video called them a few times. But I text
them pretty I text them just about every day. Sometimes
it ghost me though, that's okay, they're you're an adult
kind of How that is?
Speaker 1 (31:07):
How did they deal with this whole thing? I mean,
Obviously they were pretty young at the time, seven years old,
I suppose, or what nine, ten years old at the time.
That's pretty tough.
Speaker 3 (31:18):
Yeah, it's and nine, ah and nine were you Were
you still with their mom at the time or oh no,
we've been split for a while. We've been split for
a while. In fact, when when I got arrested, like
three or four months after I got arrested, h she
(31:41):
had gotten divorced from the guy that she had got
together with after after we split up, and she moved
back to the louignand she was living on Washington. So yeah,
it's a it's a whole mess.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
I'll tell you.
Speaker 3 (31:58):
I would with that whole thing. I would. We were
both young and stupid, so that wasn't Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Well, let me just say this, Adam. I don't know
why you called. I don't know what you hope to accomplish.
I don't know what's what's really in your head or
your heart. But you have one life. You've made some
you made a really stupid mistake. You know that better
than I do. You've suffered the consequences of it. You've
(32:31):
done your time. If I had a daughter, I wouldn't
want to be around her, but by the same token
you have. You have done your time and now it's
time to get by a living and maybe, just maybe
you can do some good.
Speaker 3 (32:47):
In uh in this world.
Speaker 1 (32:50):
First, you got to get back on your feet. You've
got to be able to take care of yourself before
you can think about anything else. You've got to wreck recognize,
as we all do, that you have temptations that can
absolutely destroy your life and those are a lot of
other people who suffered alongside you. And don't make excuses.
(33:12):
Bust your ass, fix your life, and be a better
person who looks back on this and learnch from That's
my prayer for you.