Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You know when he sometimes I wish that I was
more of a man. I'm well, I'm enough man for
my wife. And be clear on that. What I mean
by that is I never learned how to do man
things when I was younger, not just that even before.
I mean I had a good childhood. You know, my
parents did their best. I had really no complaints. Everything
(00:22):
that I did was bad was by my own accord.
That wasn't you know. There were some contributing factors, but
I didn't do things like fish or hunt or whatever.
You know, And I went to school, and you know,
you learn things in school, but you don't learn how
to fix things. We talked about the construction business on
(00:42):
the show today. So you know, I checked my tire
on Sunday. I was pumping gas and I looked down
at my tire and my car is brand new, it
only has four thousand miles on it. And what do
I see in the tire is a screw. Now I'm
not losing air, it's just like in this. So then
I remember that my friend Zeb made a video on
(01:03):
his Instagram of him patching a screw, taking it out
and patching it. I have no idea how to do that.
So I text him and he said, send me a
picture and he says, oh, that's easy. Where the location
is Tomorrow, I'll fix it for you. So I met
him at the gym yesterday before we worked out, and
in his car he had a whole kit with all
these tools. He pulled it out, boom, put the patch in,
(01:24):
and he's like, you're good to go. And I'm watching
him do this, and I'm like, what this is? That's
so hot? This is a man.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
I love men like that.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
Yeah, now mind you, okay. Zeb who was homeschooled, and
when we first met him, we would make fun of
him about that. We'd say things like, you know, he
had seven brother or whatever, brothers and sisters and we'd
be like, they were homeschooled. We'd be like, what happens if,
like you're in school and you had a crush.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Oh, you're such an ass You're an asshole.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
But so in his school at home to graduate homeschool,
he had to do things not past SATs. Okay, I'm
sure he learned some of that stuf up. He had
to do things like change a tire, build a staircase.
That right, and in my case, patch a fucking hole
on a tire. Billy and Lisa in the Morning present
(02:13):
a behind the scenes look into Boston's favorite morning show.
That's a little too much.
Speaker 3 (02:17):
Information guys the after show podcast Who Appears?
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Just so I say all that whinny to say that
I said that to him yesterday when he was done,
I go, remember when we met you and we made
fun of you for being a little weird and being
the homeschooled Kate Christian kid, And now here here I
am calling you for help because I don't know what
to do with the screw of my tire. Yeah, you know,
so sometimes I wish that I learned those things.
Speaker 2 (02:43):
There is nothing harder than a guy that can do that.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
Stuff handy, guys, I was, Yeah, And that's just one
of many things that zeb has done for me. You know,
I'm not He's like, he's just like knows how to
do life life things.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
Yeah, And and part of that's where the his you know,
whole crap you should know comes from. Yeah, it's just
things that he's learned or looks up and then there
he is. So anyway, welcome and everybody. It is Tuesday.
Today is September seventeenth, Winny or five days out from
my birthday. It's on a Sunday this year, Saturday night.
I think we're gonna go to dinner, so and then
(03:19):
and that's the kids are you know, me, Jen and
I And then I think our friends are gonna come,
another couple, so we'll go out and have dinner. And
that's it. You know, I don't I don't really do much. Yeah,
you know I don't want gifts. Oh well actually yeah,
I don't. Do you something little you want for you? Now,
you can get me a coffee. I don't want any monetary.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Ok, I don't have monetary to gave right now.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
Good, I'll take a monetary from Uncle Bill. I'll take
that monetary, but from you nothing. I would take a
black coffee from Duncan Friday. Yes, that's all I want.
And I said that to my wife too. I'm at
the point where I really want I love money and everything,
of course, but.
Speaker 2 (03:59):
Like rocket, just eighty tons of it. So what do
you need money from me?
Speaker 1 (04:01):
What does that mean?
Speaker 3 (04:03):
But the way did your money get get put back
in your under investigation?
Speaker 2 (04:07):
Really?
Speaker 1 (04:07):
Yeah? It takes ninety days?
Speaker 2 (04:09):
How many has it been?
Speaker 1 (04:10):
Sixty?
Speaker 2 (04:11):
Have been.
Speaker 1 (04:14):
Fifty?
Speaker 3 (04:15):
No?
Speaker 1 (04:16):
Happened July thirtieth.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
Oh oh my god, it's only been like forty Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
It takes it takes, it takes time. So yeah. So
I mean I like money, but what I really like
is more sentimental gifts from my family. I mean, yeah,
you know, pictures, cool things like with my son or whatever.
You know, I don't know. So yeah, Birthday's coming up
on Sunday, so that's that's exciting for me. And you know,
(04:43):
not going to a Ruba whitty Oh good, all right, bro.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
I actually I was on a little tirade during the
show about the Ruba families.
Speaker 2 (04:51):
It's funny. I got multiple dms like yeah, telling me
how right I am.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
I did get both sides. So you either if you
love a Ruba, you have a Ruba psychos. I mean
I went once and I loved it, and I'm like,
of course we're going to go back. But people love Aruba.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
I would just like Winny to know in nineteen days
I will be in Aruba for my two weeks that
we go every October. Yep.
Speaker 3 (05:13):
We love Aruba.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
We love our Ruba. So there's plenty of those people, right,
and then there's the other side.
Speaker 4 (05:18):
Hey, Lennie You're so right about Aruba. It's a long
flight with a crazy airport to just get a really
nice beach with good weather.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Yeah, so my thing with I understand both sides. I
can see that, especially for people that you know, they
go all the time. It's very touristy. I like, obviously,
I love the beaches, which you can get at a
closer place like Miami. I like it that you can
go around the island. I do like that, And yeah,
I'm a fan of the island. I had a really
really good time. So I think we'll go back, maybe
(05:51):
bring the kids. But it's so funny that people either
love Aruba or they're so friggin sick of it.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
Well, I think maybe for me, it was like the
cool kids used to like in like elementary school or
middle school, like they all went and like you had
to be invited on like the little family like cause
my I mean, my mom and dad comes from her. No,
I don't give a fuck, But like my parents were
never like they were never groopy parents, like they didn't
like just they just weren't like we did our thing
(06:20):
as a family, you.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
But they weren't those we all have to get together
with like forty five parents and their kids, and you know,
those little cliques were like the parents would be clique
and the kids would.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
Be little assholes. You know what I'm talking about? Oh
my god, yeah, all over the girls.
Speaker 3 (06:35):
But like I was always like the you know, I
was left out a lot, Like I wasn't in the
cool group in elementary school and shit. But my mom
was not that mom that like try to like be
friends with the other moms so that like we could
all like hang out with their loser.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
Kids, right, you know what I mean?
Speaker 3 (06:50):
Like the kids like like they thought their kids were
so fucking cool at seven, It's like what they doing now?
Speaker 2 (06:54):
Fucking nothing?
Speaker 1 (06:55):
Okay now I'm just saying.
Speaker 3 (06:56):
And then like a ruber Bermuda or something and Bermuda
cruise from from from Boston and Bermuda that.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
Cruise and you were left behind.
Speaker 2 (07:04):
My mom and.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
Dad were not those like group of people were like,
oh but cloud go on a trip with eighty seven people.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
I don't really like.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
Yeah, you know, it was it that you weren't invited
or that your parents just didn't take you.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
We went on vacations, but we never actually my parents.
We we went to we've been to like with my family.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
Yeah, san Diego a bunch of times, right, Uh, Portland, Oregon?
No Islands, No, my no, my parents would go without
us to the cruise, right, but no, they weren't.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
They never took us Disney obviously, such a sad child.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
No, I went.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
I traveled every year, but it just wasn't to fucking Aruva.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
It was to it doesn't have to be fucking.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
We went to like we went on baseball tours.
Speaker 3 (07:47):
For your brother, Well for like my mom and my
aunt too, like a Cooper's town, my mom and her
sisters Cooper's town. When I was growing up, we went
to a new park everything. So I've been to both
parks in Ohio, both parks in PA. I've been to Baltimore.
(08:08):
I've been to Seattle. I've been to San Diego, La.
Speaker 1 (08:12):
Like we would just go on baseball. Are you a
baseball fan?
Speaker 3 (08:18):
Well, baseball was cool, like big Poppy era, remember when
like we were winning that you're talking about like the
mid two like two thousand, you know.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
So it was around the time they won.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
Oh yeah we went, well, yeah, we went like when
I was like in middle school and high school. But
we would go on road trips or fly somewhere basically
where the baseball park was.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
They check off a baseball park. So you have your mom,
your dad, Then you have your brother, your brothers into baseball,
yes okay, Then you had you and your sister.
Speaker 3 (08:45):
Yes, sisters, so three sisters. Yeah, don't care about baseball.
My dad wouldn't come. It would be my mom and
my auntie Winnie and my auntie Nancy because my dad
works in construction, so summers were hard for him to
get time off.
Speaker 1 (08:59):
See this is where the anger comes from for Aruba.
While everyone was on the beautiful beaches of Aruba, you
were in some I was in Ohio, Pittsburgh. Yeah, out
of park.
Speaker 3 (09:08):
But again yeah, no, I mean, and I mean, I've
gone on plenty of family trips. I've been taken to
plenty of nice places. We don't you know, we travel well,
But the Oruba of session just I've been.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
It's been a thing for decades. I just can't well,
if it.
Speaker 1 (09:22):
Makes you feel any better, I didn't go into those
places either. I got all our vacations were in New England,
so it was Maine, New Hampshire. You know, I didn't go.
We didn't go anywhere. I mean, I didn't get on
a plane until I was three years clean. I was
like twenty nine years old when I got on a
plane for the first time, so I get it. But yeah,
we had a great time in a rub But and
(09:42):
I think part of that too is it was our one.
It was our trip alone with no kids, five anniversaries,
so there was all that played into it. But yeah, yeah, yeah,
that's what I hear. I mean, we went to Saint Lucia,
and Saint Lucia was you couldn't go off the resort.
A lot of these places you can't. Jamaica, you know,
you really can't go off the resort. I might, of
course you did. I would expect nothing less, you know,
(10:04):
but Turks and Kkos, you can't always go off the resort.
I mean you can go off the resort, but it's
kind of frowned upon. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:11):
No, I did go off the resort with a tour
guide and then I went off the resort with not
the tour guy, and I was a little nervous. Yeah,
but because you hear these things about you know, girls
go down to you know, you know Nelly Hallway or something.
Speaker 1 (10:28):
Yeah, that was that was unfortunate.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
But no, it was fine. Everyone I met in Jamaica
was really nice.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
Okay, did you mean the guys there in Jamaica? Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Oh my god.
Speaker 3 (10:38):
I was like, okay, Jamaica. I have never been hit
on so much of my life than in Jamaica.
Speaker 1 (10:42):
I bet.
Speaker 2 (10:43):
One guy told me he wanted to use his.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
Can I say it, it's unregulated. Okay.
Speaker 3 (10:50):
We're walking at the pool, in the pool, I'm a
guest the pool, he's an employee. Is this in the resort, yeah, okay, okay,
And he told me he wanted to.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
Use his stiff tongue you.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Know, oh on you, Yeah, yeah, on you. I get
I get yeah, I get it. I guess I was
just walking by, didn't you a couple of them?
Speaker 2 (11:09):
Not him? No, I hooked up with somebody else.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
No, you hooked up with one of the workers, the lifeguard.
Oh the lifeguard. Yeah, yeah, I doesn't.
Speaker 3 (11:16):
He still hit you up, Oh my god, all the time.
And I'm like, sir, you were the lifeguard Jamaica. Like,
I'm never going to see you again. Oh yeah, the
vacation hook ups, I'm never going to.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
See you again.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
And he was so sweet, like he's he's a really
sweet person.
Speaker 1 (11:33):
But like I was in.
Speaker 2 (11:34):
Jamaica on vacation with my best friend.
Speaker 1 (11:36):
You just move on. Yeah, it was, it was what
it was.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
We had a little fling for a couple of days.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Yeah, did you have dreadlocks?
Speaker 2 (11:44):
No?
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Shaved head like a you know, you love a good
set of dreadlocks.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
I used to Oh my god, I used to have so,
oh my god. Like, don't say it, don't say something ignorant.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
I'm not. I'm not, Okay, your dad, I'm not. But
what do you put your hands through them?
Speaker 2 (12:00):
You wouldn't through You would put it like at the
base of it.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
Yeah, you can't go through their dreadlocks. Well you know
what I mean, Like you could. What I mean is
like can grab them.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
Yeah, oh no, but you would grab more of their head,
like how like the base of the hair, you know.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
Grab the actual dreadlock.
Speaker 2 (12:16):
Well, we're gonna try to hurt the guy.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
Oh if it's a crazy night, you know, you.
Speaker 3 (12:20):
Know, I'm more of a like I grabbed like the
you know, the base of like the skull.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
There's an ongoing thing in my house right now. It's
been ongoing for the last several months. My son, he
wants dreadlocks very bad, and he just doesn't understand. I'm like,
and then he found out through his friends that there's
you know, places in Lawrence that will dread his hair.
So he's growing his hair out in anticipation of getting dreadlocks.
(12:46):
And I'm just like, dude, are you no, I'm not
gonna He's like, never at hounds. He wants to look
like lil uzivert Okay. That's and it's hard to explain
to a seven year old like that. My biggest concern, well.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
Why don't you just be honest with them, say that
his type of hair won't lock.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
I did, I did, but he's seen it might not
well other white people that do it. He's seen pictures
of all the kids that have dreadlocks like that. My
concern is getting them for him. And then he goes
to school and gets made fun of.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
No, I don't first of all, like African hairstyles or
you know, Caribbean hairstyles or whatever, like braiding and dreadlock
locking or whatever like those are like legit.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
It's a lot of work. Yeah, I know, and it's
to help preserve.
Speaker 2 (13:36):
You know, hair that's a little bit more difficult to
deal with on it deal.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
So it's more not just for style.
Speaker 3 (13:41):
It was like back in the day, it was more
for like like okay, unfortunately with like slaves like they had,
they had to braid their hair because they couldn't brush
it every day or they didn't have access to hair
care or what you know.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
What I mean, So they braid it to kind of
less make.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
Very cultural like you know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
It's it's actually a lot of it's rooted in some
fucked up ship back to slavery.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Yeah, yeah, like.
Speaker 3 (14:02):
You know, like it's locking it because then yeah, you know,
don't you think there is to be a cultural appropriation
view of it?
Speaker 1 (14:10):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (14:10):
So you know again, but you guys live where there's
not a lot of people of color. I'm assuming I
don't know what his school looks like. Yeah, like yeah,
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
I just feel bad because he doesn't really understand all that.
Speaker 3 (14:24):
And I always love an opinion of, you know, people
of color, because some of them don't care and other
people like that's so like why would you do that?
Like for instance, like sleeping bonnets, right, you know what
those are? No, you know, you put your it's like
it looks like a shower cat, but it's like silk.
Oh yeah, okay, so I so I bought one recently,
and I like, just because when I curl my hair
(14:44):
or you want to get a couple of days out
of your hair, it's those sleeping bonds help preserve the
curls or whatever.
Speaker 2 (14:49):
Hairstyle that you have.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
Right.
Speaker 3 (14:52):
And some people will be like, oh, white girls shouldn't
wear bonnets, and I'll be like, girl, go ahead, get
a bonnet, like I got bonnets. Like, you know, it's
great for your hair, no matter what about hair you have.
So I think it's also what person you talk to,
how they feel about it too.
Speaker 2 (15:05):
You know.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Yeah, you have to remember that if I get them
for him and there ever is an issue of appropriation
or whatever, it's going to reflect on us the parents. Yeah,
he's not going to walk again.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
I don't think that.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
I think maybe he'll just grow out of the hopefully
of wanting it.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Hopefully well, like what what?
Speaker 2 (15:26):
How much? Does he ask?
Speaker 1 (15:28):
A lot? A lot? He when I take him to
get a haircut, he asks the barber, the same barber
every time, they don't you dredge there? Every time? Can
you give me dreadlocks? And he just laughs now, and
then he found out that they do it in Lawrence,
and he's like, I want to go to Lawrence. Why
can't I get Why won't you let me get dreadlocks?
Speaker 3 (15:45):
Yeah, it's I also think it's so sweet how kids
just they don't think of like like that, right, because
they don't look at color or they.
Speaker 1 (15:54):
Don't look Ye, he doesn't exactly. Yeah, yeah, I don't
want to.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
Oh they hate that's like, oh I don't see color,
but like kids really.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Don't, No, they really don't. It's behavior. Yeah, he doesn't,
he doesn't at all. You're right, you're one hundred percent.
Speaker 2 (16:06):
It's great you're raising him right that he doesn't think that.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
Yeah, you know, he loves the music, he loves watching that's.
Speaker 2 (16:12):
Half the problem. Okay. First of all, no seven year old,
she was listening to half the shit he listens to.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
When you know that, Yeah, well that is something.
Speaker 3 (16:19):
It is the clean versions, okay, but how clean is
clean with these with those lyrics?
Speaker 1 (16:24):
I beat them, beat the bitch instead, I beat I
will say that that he does not because we had
this discussion a long time ago where I said, you know,
if I hear you using swear words and everything, and
he doesn't. He's very he's very good. He doesn't he
watches his mouth, so that's good. And you know, you're
trying to shield your kid from as much as you can.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
But I don't know how your parent in this day
and age, with all the technology.
Speaker 1 (16:47):
That's what I mean. That's what I mean, karrent ing
has always been hard.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
And then add that.
Speaker 3 (16:51):
In yeah you know, yeah, I mean I was talking
about last night because I you know, I nanny right now.
And he's a nice kid. I mean he's sweet, like
he's not that. I mean, he's quiet five actually want well,
he's Kate Verdiean, so he could get great dress.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
If you want to.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
But no, and he he's a very sweet kid. We
get along fine, but like we're still getting to know
each other. I've only known him a few weeks or whatever,
and I'm trying to like, yes, I took him to
the library and then like I took him to Target
the other day because his birthday was on Friday, so
I got a little birthday present.
Speaker 2 (17:19):
I just met him.
Speaker 3 (17:19):
But I feel like it's good for us to like,
you know, bond and build and kids love toys and shit.
Speaker 2 (17:24):
But I'm like, this may not cost me more than.
Speaker 3 (17:26):
I'm making anyways, So he fell asleep in the car
and the way to the library yesterday, and I drove
around for like forty five minutes because.
Speaker 2 (17:33):
I didn't want to wake up.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
Right then I finally got the courage to pull over,
hoping he didn't wake up when the car stopped, and
he slept another like fifteen minutes, and I was like
so thankful because he didn't wake up to like four
And then I only had him for like an hour,
and I was thinking the whole time, like I don't
think I want kids, because like I only spend two
two and a half hours with him three days a week.
And I was like, if I have something going on
in my life, or if I'm stressed or if I'm annoyed,
(17:56):
I don't want to hang out with this kid. And
I feel committed to his parents, So that's why I
do that. I would never like be like, oh, I'm
having a bad day. I'm not gonna, you know, show
up and babysit. I'm an adult, right, but I'm thinking
about parents have bad days too, right, Yeah, And you
got work sucks, life sucks, relationship issues with your whoever?
Right And you're like, damn, I gotta go fucking show
up for these two little fuckers.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
There's no days off.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
And I was even thinging with my parents.
Speaker 3 (18:20):
All of their kids are between twenty eight and thirty five, right,
and I feel like my parents' parent more now than
they probably ever had, because now we all have real
life problems bills and mortgages and rent and relationships and
marriages and raising children.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
And now they're like, you know.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
What I mean, the problems never go away.
Speaker 3 (18:40):
I call my mom crying more now than I ever did,
because when I was younger, you know, you're a teenager
or whatever, you don't want to share with your parents.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
It's going on. Now I'm like, oh my god, Mom, like,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
And I'm like I at my age. I lean on
my parents more now than I did when I was fifteen.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
Yeah, it's it's a four life job. I always say,
you really learn when you've become a parent what it
means that to love your child no matter what, but
not always like your child.
Speaker 2 (19:08):
Oh yeah, my mom always said, I don't have to
like you, I just love you.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Yeah. I love my son, you know, but he drives
me absolutely.
Speaker 3 (19:16):
I understand like, when you have a child that's yours obviously,
whether it's adoption or whatever, foster or you know, biological
or whatever, right, you do take a different time of
ownership than I'm babysitting, right, But I was thinking, I'm like,
I take it very seriously.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
And I'm annoyed.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
So I can't imagine when you take parenting or something
so seriously and then you still have a.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
Bad day or whatever.
Speaker 3 (19:35):
You're like, Okay, yes, I love you and I'm going
to do right by you, but like, I can't do
this right now.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
Yeah? Or how about when you work very hard in
life to give the child, you know, all this great
life and then they're an asshole. Yeah, it's like you
little asshole.
Speaker 2 (19:49):
I can't imagine.
Speaker 3 (19:50):
And I think about that and I'm like, damn, I'd
rather regret regret not having kids than having them.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
How about this one? This happened the other day. He
has an Xbox that he plays with his friends. Right,
they live down the street, two brothers, they're about the
same age, and he plays in person and they'll play
Fortnite together. So he has the Xbox. My brother got
him for Christmas. Then my dad he wrote my dad
into getting them in a Nintendo Switch. He's never played
it once. It literally sets the cabinet. I know, no,
(20:16):
I mean, hopefully he'll play it soon. And then my
brother this year got him a VR headset, which he
doesn't really use. Right well, because they're his, I'm not
going to sell his gifts. What are you talking about,
you're not using them. I know he don't use them.
They're going away anyway. So those three things he has
(20:36):
in the house. He comes home the other day and
I said to him, how is it over there? What'd
you do? He's like, we played a little bit, played
played games. I said, oh, that's cool, and he's like, yeah,
they have they have they have the best stuff. They
have so much stuff. What do they have? He goes
they have Xbox, Nintendo Switch, a VR headset. I'm looking
(20:58):
at him, like you have all that stuff? What are
you talking about? And he's like, oh yeah, just like yeah,
down the down the street, two boys live. We actually
like that. He goes there now because the mother is
the school nurse. Ah, so yeah, so it's cool.
Speaker 3 (21:16):
Yeah, well yeah, it's a good and to have him
go there is much better than the kids come to
your house.
Speaker 1 (21:21):
I know. Well, he invited the kids over, they should
come over. They did not because he just started going
back there when the summer was ending. But he's he legit,
comes home, eats and goes there until like six sixot
thirty when he has to come home. And so my
wife no, it's like it's like one street over down
the street. But my wife's like, it's like I don't
know what to do. I feel bad, like I don't know.
(21:43):
She's texting her like send him back whenever, like, and
she's like she's like, no, he's great. He's not bothering anybody.
And she's like, we're like, is he really.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
Street angel?
Speaker 1 (21:53):
Yeah? I think so too. I think I think he's behaving.
But I said to her Jen last night, I go
listen text it and say, hey, anytime the boys want
to come to here, they're always welcome. We have a
hot tub, they can go in it. And then she
said that, and the and the and the mom grows,
Oh okay, yeah, they'll be coming over soon.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
Well when's pool closing?
Speaker 1 (22:14):
It's closed?
Speaker 2 (22:15):
Oh yeah, well I guess what last week?
Speaker 1 (22:17):
Once?
Speaker 2 (22:18):
When's last time you used it?
Speaker 1 (22:19):
We used it, you know, we used it up until
it closed. But well you don't have a heater when
it get cools down at night. Now it broke. We
never replaced it because it's a lot of money I
don't want to spend.
Speaker 2 (22:30):
Especially because you're only going to use it. Went extra
few weeks.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
Yeah, yeah, and that, and then if you don't have
the heater over you know, it's hot during the day.
Towards the end of August September, it's cold at night,
so when it cools down, the water cools down, and
then when it's hot the next day, the water is
really cold, which people don't love. I don't mind it.
Speaker 3 (22:45):
I'd be The whole point of a pool is to
be cool and refreshed.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
That's true. That's a great point. Tell tell everybody that
comes to my house because they they'll put their foot
in the pool. Oh that's too cold. I wish you
live closed.
Speaker 2 (22:59):
I would come more often.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
Hey, the pool is always open.
Speaker 2 (23:02):
Yeah, until I say, hey, on my way.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
Oh we're not home, all right, everybody. That's been a
fun one. Twenty three minutes on this podcast.
Speaker 2 (23:10):
Split it up half of it on Friday
Speaker 1 (23:12):
I know, but we'll talk tomorrow after the Wednesday Billy
and Lisa show, We Love You and goodbye