Episode Transcript
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(00:11):
Hi, Ri Paul. We arehere again the clearest Hugo in our episode.
That' s lost in our episode, on our stage three hundred forty
- two, because it' sliterally the eighth. We' ve changed
from this recording, but we've wanted to do more, pro más,
crap, try. With this pieceof sign we find ourselves at home
on holiday, in fact, inmallorca. It makes me record it sour.
(00:35):
Well, it' s okay.A little, a little. You
see, we have to work becausewe get older. That' s where
it comes from. So it's been the reflection that we feel like
we' re older now, older, that means in my vocation, older
in feeling, in feeling, orin that sense that people will say this
I' m going to tell youfive years, but the feeling of saying
(00:59):
that there are things that are nolonger there. I would no longer make
it with eighteen ah te like twoor three years, it still made it
clear that with twenty- three I, as an interest, felt that I
had a young spirit was to turntwenty- four and already began to enter
into more of old age. NowI feel completely old, with ever spikes
of adrenaline of youth, but veryscarce. It all came because last weekend
(01:21):
we' ve been in the vegaand we' ve made tipi plan of
lords, i e, all thefriends together in a Muod house eating as
a fucking mother who makes with Mailisas a fucking mother. Of course no
party is just because I took awhile or ate your noodle wa to have
(01:42):
a Newtonnik later. I mean,everything like in a mood that I'
m sure at twenty- three yearsold would have seemed like a shitty plan,
and now it seems to me likethe biggest plan in history. I
mean, there' s nothing betterfor me than to forgive me. I
' m laughing. We have aguest to spice that month you are looking
at and that he witnessed the eventsof the vega, that the poor little
(02:04):
guy flipped not and is that attwelve o' clock tonight it is okay
Vale says that yes plan you willsee how we were blinder than anyone,
which old ones, which people wecried in the house, we were not
in bed, that is to sayI go to that one. That'
s the point of the point thatall those people say older and tell you
to be, is that they're blind at seven o' clock in
the afternoon. It' s us. It' s us, because of
(02:25):
course you have to turn clear andgo to sleep. You have to sleep
the minimum eight hours. I'm not fucked up. I can'
t stand the hangovers I can't stand the discotheques. There are so
many things that were literally in mylife. Yeah, and now think about
it, you, when you werelittle and you were banging, I don
' t know five or six hoursinside a nightclub. You can explain to
(02:45):
me what the fuck in the flamesand that we were with a running corronia
to enter the discotheque and to beas many hours as possible that are to
put you close the r with closingthe discotheque, really, you always more
with closing, I have been moretype at 4 o' clock, already
as if true and to leave alwaysthen if I always little, Grandma always,
but now clearer, now some thangrandmother with support, with support,
(03:06):
because I would not have anything support. Now I' m ultra mega support
for old people' s plans.We were in flaws and bad tells me
You No, You, don't get so upset that when you want
to leave, we leave and I' m telling you. You seriously,
you know when it was the typicalbaby we come stand at seven in the
morning that you have to drink comewin Bebe keeps doing it, but in
a more paused way. You know, he does it to you at 10
(03:27):
00 p m to finish at
12
her at 1 (03:30):
00 p m. It' s not literal, but
it' s kind of and youthink something happened, because I just think
we' ve lived a lot inthe times we had, because imagine that
you and I would have gone tosee us, we wouldn' t have
left home, we wouldn' thave been at best. You start him
a little longer. That' sbecause you' re more in your routine,
like we' ve done. Man, I think so many heavy changes
(03:53):
are already like living in the momentswe have to live in every time.
But you don' t know thosemoments are always getting ahead of themselves.
But yes and like we have starteddoing everything long before our parents and now
surely our little brothers are starting littleshifts, long before coughing, because we
go. I remember my older cousinsperfectly by telling me the sooner you make
(04:15):
things clear, that means wanting tostop making them read like you' re
gonna get tired, partying. Butif I thought about it and said no
pussy, I' ll get youtired of that party lyre if it'
s the best thing in the world. And indeed, but because, yes,
I don' t understand. ButI' m starting to understand a
little bit the times, because ofcourse, as youth seems to be,
we seem to live in an eternalyouth and we think that going out to
(04:41):
party, making plans continually travel,doing everything crazy, sleeping four hours and
it seems like it lasts forever.And the moment I ask for this phase,
you start to understand a little asmore the concept of life and say,
everything has lids. There is amoment that we will also tire of
doing maybe late and prefer to doit only twice a month. You understand
me to become more of a continuum. Of course and now I can understand
what my parents say that every timeor every moment has its time. But
(05:08):
it gives me, I' mvery curious that it happened to us a
little at a time, or everythingaround. I' m not saying I
don' t fancy a Saturday amonth to, give it all you know
and party. But it' skind of on time. Indeed, it
is no longer and in fact Iwas worried because I thought it was happening,
because I was in Australia and becauseAustria' s pace of life is
(05:30):
much calmer in quotation marks. Iremember talking to him a lot, as
an atheist to say, but I' m going to get to Spain and
I' m not going to beable to keep up with my friends or
pussy, because I was already ina mood, because that' s very
saying that I don' t wantto, that' s to think ufff
is that if it' s something, I' m going to lose all
day tomorrow and I don' twant to lose the day. I want
to take advantage of it. I' m old, taro, I'
(05:51):
m totally old, because what thefuck do I care about spending the whole
Sunday of Hangover, because I don' t care now. It' s
like I say I don' thave to take advantage of the day,
I have to do things. Imean, it' s like it doesn
' t get in my head.And then I was worried when I saw
Spain and to say bu I'm going to be unable to keep up.
And I' ve found that everyonehas come to their own decision to
(06:11):
embrace the old rag. It's true. It' s true,
except for someone else who' sgoing to be crazy. Most of it
' s car of the life weknew before that we' re talking like
me, that be good and thatI said it' s okay. And
if we follow this podcast and weare fifty years old, that is,
what we said at twenty- five, it will seem to us that we
(06:36):
were girls talking about something that nobut well, that yes, but that
I do not know what I seeso many evolutions in plan I that I
know the evolution of when you startto drink voodcas of colors, yes,
when from the search of colors yougo to drink already, Geneva whiskey such
(06:57):
cheap, with a juice of shitthat tastes like suckchev already from there you
pass already to fanta of lemon andI believe that already the summun of Ellingtonic
no and since I am the badone, I feel well, do not
buy me larios, eh, buyme yes grams like haja valero t enough.
I understand we' re at thispoint, but I' m good
to go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go, let' s go, let'
s go, let' s go. I don' t know what,
but it' s true when youstart drinking because you want to drink,
when you like to drink and youwant to take your gin tonito by playing
(07:23):
cards, you see how literal Iheard not old people and you don'
t know anymore. That' sbecause when you did the seagrams and the
drinking thing, well, literally,now I' d never get a lollipop
out of my palon. Not thisthing that we did of mixing in the
bottle of fanta or the bottle offresh juice, all hot and in the
(07:43):
parkin start to drink like this tosee in plan, to mener, for
faster, to be fast the discoand ices without shits. Like we'
re crazy, you' re calledsome cambicafs. Like what the hell happened
to us, I mean, butif you hadn' t lived that,
you wouldn' t appreciate this rightnow. If you hadn' t got
everything that came out, you wouldn' t have enjoyed everything you' d
have said. Right now you'd be twenty- five years old living
(08:09):
your most discotheque moment of watching inthe parks and everything you know like me.
I think in the end, it' s kind of preparing your life.
But to me, for example,my mother also one thing I was
saying the other day is wow.I' m twenty- five. Such
is true that I think about itand say it already today. It'
s someone I know who' sgonna get married about and it' s
like I' m not ready forthat moment, because there' s gonna
(08:31):
be a moment in three, fouror five years or something or so we
' ll say what we saw ascrazy with twenty- five is real and
we see it normal, you know. I say this example, for example,
an example of the feeling of gettingolder. You know, the same
thing happens to us in the end, because now, obviously, we look
back and think about the eighteen.Or what you think and say is worth
a lot of years ago, butseven years ago. Uh, yeah,
(08:52):
yeah, okay, but I seethat we' re seeing it as such
you know, but it' sthat maybe a thirty- five person from
this podcast and he says but thesechicks who are twenty- five, boy
I' m already living it likethat, but don' t get into
my thoughts and feelings and I'm feeling like I' m an old
woman leave me alone. I don' t bother anyone, no, but
(09:13):
it really seems like we' renot seeing it very dramatic, but it
' s that really everything I sayI' m sorry, I mean,
I' m not making it up, I' m not exaggerating it and,
in fact, braase of pross ofgetting older, because I' m
enjoying it. I mean, Ireally like it. Yeah, yeah,
I love it. I love thatmy friends are getting a little older.
Like you man, I was eighteenand to see that I was going out
(09:35):
was not such, but I alwayshad that one, that I felt more
out of place, because I havealways been to finish the party soon not
to go out so much and allthat and in fact, I think you
give him mus is like the highpoint and from there everything has gone down.
Yes, that is to say,we started towards the arrival of Erasmus
was the point where we went outthe most, where we vetoed it the
(10:00):
most, where we got the mostsordid, where our body was most shattered,
where we slept the least. Itwas the top of absolutely everything.
And from there everything got down,slowly, but down. And now,
four years later, four years agowe' ve been lasting it, no,
not so much three, three,two thousand nineteen, two thousand twenty,
eleven, because there are four otheryears, the mother who bore us
clear and there Malin and I toldit the other day, for example,
in faults that we went out suchand eight I don' t know how
(10:24):
it lasts worth Erasmos and I swearthat Asmus there I wasn' t grandmother.
I went out there on Monday Wednesdayand I played live and I,
Lily Wons and I live Lilly OanYou know, I mean and I remember
we were talking about faque saying,okay, we' ve been out for
two days, we' re deaderthan alive. It' s okay how
we were able to put up withthe trouble that Erasmus gave us, which
I don' t know, butokay, but I' m raising this
(10:48):
energy of clarity here in the debateor that capacity that we' re talking
about being able to get out ofso many days in a row and drinking
so much. You think it's physiological or you think it' s
attitude, that is, because Ithink it' s a little bit of
both. I mean, I mean, they go hand in hand, I
guess,' cause you' reyoung, you' re more agile.
You have so much hangover, youdon' t need, I don'
(11:11):
t know so much recovery period and, besides, you also have a desire
to eat the world that doesn't exist effective right now. No,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, but I think it' s a
little bit of a hand. ButI think it' s more attitude.
Hey, there' s a partbecause I mean me. If we were
forty or fifty, I say toyou today the body is no more than
forty and fifty. Today, you' re young, you' re not
old, older, but it's true that when you' re eighteen
(11:35):
to thirty you still have the sameenergy. I think it' s more
because of the attitude part, becauseif, for example, from the twenty
- two, people already start tohave a partner, people already start to
earn their money because they have theirfirst jobs, such also accompanies you hear,
because you' re going to valueto know faith and spend the money
traveling than not going all the goodsto buy alcohol and babies. Tonces it
(11:56):
' s like everything goes along.I, who know a good point,
have also changed our theorian priorities,that is, before we didn' t
have that much scope to do thingsat best. It is better than going
out partying, as a clear jar, and now that we can, then
it is no longer that it isnot saying that we don' t want
it anymore, but that our prioritieshave changed, It is what I told
you, but you would have.Our abilities have also changed, because,
(12:18):
for example, this can no longerbe a matter of attitude. The hangovers
that I have now have nothing todo with the pulls, but because you
drink good alcohol, no, no, no, the other way around,
you have more of a pull.I got her a few hangovers before she
couldn' t get out five daysin a row and she had the next
day. Ah, I don't share it in that, and I
' ll tell myself I' vegot good hangovers. You always go good,
because I haven' t had thatmuch, but I' m a
(12:39):
little drunk. I have hangovers now, I mean, when I look strong
and I get up like what myshit I' ve done, I don
' t want to see it,or we make up for that' s
your head. She tells you why, because I' m going out now
and then to put up with herhangover every now and then. But it
' s not always pia. It' s good, but that physiologically my
ro you get worse now than before. So there' s something that'
s changed my body so I can' t handle the poison alcohol pokecid so
(13:03):
well the truth. Yes, itis. Another thing that I think has
also done to our generation is thesubject of what happens from the newspaper that
I am going to point out isthat you do not see these things because
obviously we will have cut it.But it' s things that happen in
(13:26):
the middle of podcasts that then noone sees that but maybe we' ll
stay blank. Either it happens allof a sudden or someone doesn' t
go there, I don' tknow what we at the time of making
it look like nothing happened and doingjust like it did to me. Thank
you very much for talking continuous ornothing, which is that the covid also
(13:48):
I think has changed our forms ofroutines from the best of getting out of
everything, for example, because Iin the covid, when they were giving
us as freedom you also valued,because the fact of hearing leave us until
twelve, because we are going totake advantage of it we leave late or
we will take advantage of that conceptthat we liked because we felt, after
(14:11):
a closed pandemic, that feeling ofnot being able to go out and so
on, suddenly they let you out. It also gave a little stuff.
You were a little bit like uff, too, not now, party chalice.
It' s like you were disturbedthen to go progressively. He has
therefore made us do everything as ifwe were to dry up that accelerated life
that we were gradually taking. Andthat little by little we have realized that
we like, that we like theafternoon that we like to enjoy, that
(14:33):
we like to go early to sleep, because the next day we want to
do something else again. Of course, and then I believe that in our
generation too, it has helped usso much to make the transition. Yes,
make the transition percent, because nowI plan, I kind of think
about it and say value much more, because it is going out to eat
and then have coffee and read thefaith splicing with drinks. Of course,
(14:54):
yes, yes, yes, orwhatever comes out also clear and there they
plant you in that you have startedto drink at three o' clock in
the afternoon, that in front theyare seven o' clock, from eight
o' clock to nine o'clock and you already have almost six or
seven hours of party, because theparty, what the hell is the party,
is where you have a good timewith your colleagues. So, like,
all of a sudden do your wholeday and wait for dinner, do
(15:16):
the digestion and at twelve o'clock drink. It' s one thing
I don' t understand how thefuck it makes me anxious on time.
I do have to wait until theones that start bringing me the dream.
You know or I want to stayin a series is that, besides I
really didn' t get it outof my head the discotheque theme, because
to see me now I get intoa discotheque and I just think how many
people ay, they' re pushingme, how hot and the more up
(15:39):
my ass plan that like there areso many annoying agents inside the discotheque that
I really love. You' resome annoying, annoying, participative people,
so I' d love that,instead of having ana here like having my
20- year- old self,and asking her what the fuck you'
re doing in a nightclub. Iexplain yes, plan what it is that
does s s s s ngo alsothe masses see that your friends do it
too, because you also see thatother people also like it, because that
(16:03):
also helps you to say, becauseit is fun. It' s fun.
So you kind of end up generatingthat you like that, too,
as much as you did when yousaw yourself thinking about you and me out
of twenty, what the hell isthe club doing if you see that you
like her friends come out discotheques thateverybody else. Such that in the end
also caused you to like it.You know. Obviously, now, like
we' re all in the samefucking disco. I' d rather drink
(16:25):
at six in the afternoon and startlike that. I think that' s
also why it accompanies everything, thatis, the eye. And this doesn
' t mean that in general nodiscos anymore. We went out to discos
and I had a good time.I keep having a good time, then,
but every now and then, andI also have a good time when
I' m alone two or threehours at the discotheque, at most the
last time we left ana york hada flaws and we were, I think
(16:47):
an hour and a half two hours, of course it' s over and
this shutting you down from three inthe morning and going out at eight o
' clock. It' s notlike I' m thinking like that.
If you can' t talk insidea discotheque, no, you can'
t, don' t go isfull of drunk people, precitos, things
are expensive and fcima is that ricotectasare common airport pussy. They take advantage
of a dick. It' snot really that I don' t even
feel the water. The other oneyou' re not what I say to
(17:07):
you as a water guy, yougo out to a discotheque. Now this
is seniority. Yeah, and yousay, guys, I' m,
uh, I' m running outof night, and this is already under
the nose of the cubata. Don' t ask for a water, because
it won' t nail you threeeuros. Almost what it costs you a
quack to ask for tap water you' re going to stay a little as
it says to good. And ifyou can put a little bit of ice,
(17:29):
you know the other plan and I' ve been asking for it several
times and they have to give itto you for a lens what they have
to n then if you want tosave yourself in your night trips do this
guy, if it' s oldthis guy, but it serves me and
it' s going to save youa lot of money during the night.
I think they' re people.You don' t spend the money just
on water. Hey, I thinkthat' s something else. Not anymore,
but also but then you say thatthen it hurts to pay three euros
the twenty- five jackpot, whichyou say to see where we go with
(17:53):
twenty- five tera. I'm not still dehydrated, but I'
m telling you, now with thewater trick. I haven' t done
much, I mean, he doesn' t do much forgiveness. I went
out with alcohol in the bag that' s like a half- old gave
me, like he told me becauseyou' re sick that he wants to
be enough for you. I don' t get it with lais motherfuckers and
(18:14):
a friend of mine put a bottleof water in her bag that she was
carrying vodka. Yeah, and thenwe hid the bottle behind the back,
between the pants and the jacket.That' s very allecent, very total
teen. But it was like youare that I will be charged ten pados
for every drink I want and let' s say to the bathroom filled and
that it said that of course Iam here now in a mix between the
(18:34):
young male and the old male,because what the fuck do I do in
a bathroom in a disco club puttingme in because now you have made me
remember something else that I feel thedifference between when I was eighteen when I
was now. Now I sweat likea dance, I sweat to make a
fool of myself when you' reeighteen, you go in a group to
(18:55):
dance to an area with your fiveor six Torato friends watching now. No.
Now it' s the crazier youcan do in the protection, the
more, the more, the morecomfortable and the better I spend it.
And that' s age. That' s the age, because to see
to beat that if you go outone day because you want to flirt or
whatever it is better to dance inanother way, that neither can be natural
and you can better flirt more.But you don' t understand me.
But you' re ridiculous. Yeah, 100%, because it' s
(19:17):
true that I think that before,when we were smaller, that is,
you want or not in hormones,everything is made for that is because you
' re not what you want.I' m planning on mating you with
an opposite gender. It is indistinguishablya reality. It' s true as
it is that now I think it' s clear that we' ve been
at the disco for so many hours. We were all flirting, but for
a physiological matter, not a questionof what. So it' s like
(19:38):
if I know you have the hormonesaltered, you don' t feel like
a lot. It' s likeyou feel ta or look at you,
that you do, yeah, yeah, while state is there doing a little
mating, some dancing, a fewlooks, some things. Now you don
' t give a shit. Nowhow you dance is worth me now,
now thinking about time. It's also something that a little bit and
(20:00):
you know before, when we weregetting cold to wear I know an or
or the skirt of typical, skirtor such if they go up his ass
and now I do them with these. This with holes, come on,
I don' t care about hair, but it' s different. It
is true that the priorities are different. That' s why and as I
also accompany you out like this ifI, for example, keep fixing myself,
such that in the end your environmentalso helps you take that step.
(20:22):
And it' s true that inour environment, as we are, I
look at myself so much that itsweats all over us. And so,
imagine it' s not our besttime. It' s going to be
twenty- five. Ah not ahundred at last and I' m going
to do something very good year.Tell me, I' m gonna tie
this podcast to the next ticket,so you guys are gonna try two weeks.
We are going to record it nowthat, besides, I also think
(20:45):
that by not wanting to go outto party and not wanting to be in
discos, it also has a lotto do with that right now, when
we get older, it gives youa lot more laziness to meet new people
effectively, and that' s new, our next podcast, which is that
it goes hand in hand, wego to part of the brother, that
(21:08):
you will see him, you willhear him next week, not in two
weeks, and hopefully you liked thisone, that you tell us and that
you share there in yours, yourexperiences as young, young people is that
you listen to these aunts with thirtylaughs. You don' t know,
it doesn' t show what they' re saying, but, well,
follow us in clearer way ago topodcast on social networks and we' ll
(21:29):
see you next chapter.